iCam Featured on the Today Show, CNN, and Good Morning America!
I want to occasionally use iCam as a simple security system. I was concerned that in the event that someone broke into my house, one of the first things they'd go for was my computer. So, other than anything I was able to snap of the iCam data stream on my iPhone (assuming I acted on a push alert), the record of the burglary would be gone. I wanted some way to backup the data stream other than on the machine running iCam Source, so if the computer is stolen you can still get the perp’s picture.I've been playing around with Dropbox, and I think it’s a killer solution. Note that the MJPEG images comprising the iCam stream are stored in Pictures are presently stored in:[user]/pictures/iCam source motion events/[gigantic hash sequence]/[date-time stamp].If you make an alias of the [gigantic hash sequence] folder you can drop it in the Dropbox, which might be on your computer desktop. Do not rename the alias! Any images that appear in the [gigantic hash sequence] folder are immediately reflected in the Dropbox Cloud server, as well as anyplace else you have a synchronized Dropbox. This updating is continuous and does not wait for the motion trigger event to be completed!The mirrored Dropboxes will show the JPEGs in the Dropbox files, just as they do on your computer. However, if you throw away the file from the alias in Dropbox, the file is gone for the Mac as well – so be careful.This seems to be an ideal solution to remote backup of the MJPEG stream. I've tried it and it works! Best of all, Dropbox is free for up to 2GB storage. And, thanks to Stefan for doing a sanity check on my ideas!
I corrected this in the original thread, and am posting it here again since many people read new items. Basically, this works very well, but one must not change the name of the alias of the iCam data in the Dropbox.QuoteI want to occasionally use iCam as a simple security system. I was concerned that in the event that someone broke into my house, one of the first things they'd go for was my computer. So, other than anything I was able to snap of the iCam data stream on my iPhone (assuming I acted on a push alert), the record of the burglary would be gone. I wanted some way to backup the data stream other than on the machine running iCam Source, so if the computer is stolen you can still get the perp’s picture.I've been playing around with Dropbox, and I think it’s a killer solution. Note that the MJPEG images comprising the iCam stream are stored in Pictures are presently stored in:[user]/pictures/iCam source motion events/[gigantic hash sequence]/[date-time stamp].If you make an alias of the [gigantic hash sequence] folder you can drop it in the Dropbox, which might be on your computer desktop. Do not rename the alias! Any images that appear in the [gigantic hash sequence] folder are immediately reflected in the Dropbox Cloud server, as well as anyplace else you have a synchronized Dropbox. This updating is continuous and does not wait for the motion trigger event to be completed!The mirrored Dropboxes will show the JPEGs in the Dropbox files, just as they do on your computer. However, if you throw away the file from the alias in Dropbox, the file is gone for the Mac as well – so be careful.This seems to be an ideal solution to remote backup of the MJPEG stream. I've tried it and it works! Best of all, Dropbox is free for up to 2GB storage. And, thanks to Stefan for doing a sanity check on my ideas!
Quote from: Zarkov on March 10, 2010, 10:09:23 AMI corrected this in the original thread, and am posting it here again since many people read new items. Basically, this works very well, but one must not change the name of the alias of the iCam data in the Dropbox.QuoteI want to occasionally use iCam as a simple security system. I was concerned that in the event that someone broke into my house, one of the first things they'd go for was my computer. So, other than anything I was able to snap of the iCam data stream on my iPhone (assuming I acted on a push alert), the record of the burglary would be gone. I wanted some way to backup the data stream other than on the machine running iCam Source, so if the computer is stolen you can still get the perp’s picture.I've been playing around with Dropbox, and I think it’s a killer solution. Note that the MJPEG images comprising the iCam stream are stored in Pictures are presently stored in:[user]/pictures/iCam source motion events/[gigantic hash sequence]/[date-time stamp].If you make an alias of the [gigantic hash sequence] folder you can drop it in the Dropbox, which might be on your computer desktop. Do not rename the alias! Any images that appear in the [gigantic hash sequence] folder are immediately reflected in the Dropbox Cloud server, as well as anyplace else you have a synchronized Dropbox. This updating is continuous and does not wait for the motion trigger event to be completed!The mirrored Dropboxes will show the JPEGs in the Dropbox files, just as they do on your computer. However, if you throw away the file from the alias in Dropbox, the file is gone for the Mac as well – so be careful.This seems to be an ideal solution to remote backup of the MJPEG stream. I've tried it and it works! Best of all, Dropbox is free for up to 2GB storage. And, thanks to Stefan for doing a sanity check on my ideas!It is a great solution. This is something I've thought for a long time and could not find solution.I recently install the Dropbox and this program is very useful to complement the ICAM but I have a problem with dropbox on th ipod.If you try to access the alias floder from the dropbox app or from safari using the ipod, you can not see the photos.in fact, if the alias folder has pictures inside this folder on the iPod stops being a folder. its strange...Please, can you try to access to your Dropbox account using your ipod or iphone and tell me if you have the same problem as me? thanks, and once again, great idea!
Quote from: kirshley on May 02, 2010, 01:19:57 PMQuote from: Zarkov on March 10, 2010, 10:09:23 AMI corrected this in the original thread, and am posting it here again since many people read new items. Basically, this works very well, but one must not change the name of the alias of the iCam data in the Dropbox.QuoteI want to occasionally use iCam as a simple security system. I was concerned that in the event that someone broke into my house, one of the first things they'd go for was my computer. So, other than anything I was able to snap of the iCam data stream on my iPhone (assuming I acted on a push alert), the record of the burglary would be gone. I wanted some way to backup the data stream other than on the machine running iCam Source, so if the computer is stolen you can still get the perp’s picture.I've been playing around with Dropbox, and I think it’s a killer solution. Note that the MJPEG images comprising the iCam stream are stored in Pictures are presently stored in:[user]/pictures/iCam source motion events/[gigantic hash sequence]/[date-time stamp].If you make an alias of the [gigantic hash sequence] folder you can drop it in the Dropbox, which might be on your computer desktop. Do not rename the alias! Any images that appear in the [gigantic hash sequence] folder are immediately reflected in the Dropbox Cloud server, as well as anyplace else you have a synchronized Dropbox. This updating is continuous and does not wait for the motion trigger event to be completed!The mirrored Dropboxes will show the JPEGs in the Dropbox files, just as they do on your computer. However, if you throw away the file from the alias in Dropbox, the file is gone for the Mac as well – so be careful.This seems to be an ideal solution to remote backup of the MJPEG stream. I've tried it and it works! Best of all, Dropbox is free for up to 2GB storage. And, thanks to Stefan for doing a sanity check on my ideas!It is a great solution. This is something I've thought for a long time and could not find solution.I recently install the Dropbox and this program is very useful to complement the ICAM but I have a problem with dropbox on th ipod.If you try to access the alias floder from the dropbox app or from safari using the ipod, you can not see the photos.in fact, if the alias folder has pictures inside this folder on the iPod stops being a folder. its strange...Please, can you try to access to your Dropbox account using your ipod or iphone and tell me if you have the same problem as me? thanks, and once again, great idea!It's me again. I try to access my Dropbox account from another computer and is similar to that from the ipod. if the alias folder has pictures inside this folder changes to a file and I can not log in to view images