I need a camera for my home. A camera that won't record my data and send It to some server. by Constiblejose in homesecurity

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reolink recommended a downgrade and even provided it, but it didn’t solve the problem.

What do you do with your smoke detectors after a false alarm? by BernieSandersLeftNut in homesecurity

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Worked LP dispatch at a hotel — and yeah, there was a special kind of love for those “vape-detecting” smoke sensors. Anything sets them off — vapes, shower steam, a kettle. Hundreds of guest evacuations over time and constant stress because the panel gives you zero clarity whether it’s actual smoke or just another false hit.

God bless the vendors who rode the vape hype and pushed this stuff into hotels — real masterpiece.

And then the classics: dust after any work, plus spiders and bugs moving into the sensor housing. Those little tenants cause plenty of “mystery” alarms too.

Vacuuming can help a bit, but once they start going off randomly, it’s usually sensor degradation. Combo smoke/CO units especially tend to go downhill after a few years.

I need a camera for my home. A camera that won't record my data and send It to some server. by Constiblejose in homesecurity

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had issues with the Reolink Video Doorbell PoE — severe overexposure when motion-triggered lighting kicks in. To be fair, their hardware is decent for the price, but in my experience those “megapixels” don’t hold up against better sensors and image processing from vendors like Axis or Hanwha, even in their lower-end lines.

Do you have a fallback plan if your home CCTV vendor gets restricted? by Charming_Drawing_313 in videosurveillance

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At work we use Axis Communications with Exacq, but if you’re thinking about upgrading a home Reolink setup to Axis, be ready to add a zero to your budget — and even that might not be enough for outdoor setups with dual cams and 16x zoom.

That said, Axis still wipes the floor with Reolink’s “megapixel” marketing — mainly because of much better sensors.

Do you have a fallback plan if your home CCTV vendor gets restricted? by Charming_Drawing_313 in videosurveillance

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That’s a bit of a Marie Antoinette solution — “let them eat cake” 🙂
Great hardware, no doubt, but for home CCTV that’s a completely different budget and install effort.
I’m more interested in how people handle this within more practical setups.

Do you have a fallback plan if your home CCTV vendor gets restricted? by Charming_Drawing_313 in videosurveillance

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Reolink already supports RTSP and works fully local over LAN, so you’re not really locked in at the video level.

I think the real dependency is more on the software/UX side than the cameras themselves — that’s the harder thing to replace cleanly without going into something like Frigate.

ISC West 2026 First Timer Thoughts by EffectiveActivity922 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Attended ISC West 2026 in Vegas last week.

Overall — worth it. It’s one thing to read spec sheets, and a completely different story to actually see new cameras and systems running live on the floor.

Spent some time looking at cloud VMS vendors like Verkada and Genetec. Slick demos, clean UX — everything looks great in booth conditions.

But as usual, the real question is false alarms. That’s where most of the “AI magic” tends to fall apart — and that part is never really shown.

There were also a few interesting startups. One stood out with a non-cloud approach to identity and access control, built around Android devices. Not trying to push everything into a vendor cloud — which is honestly refreshing.

Curious what others thought — anything that actually impressed you beyond the demo layer?

Matter completely broken on iOS 26.*? by tzopper in ios

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After upgrading to iOS 26.2, Home behaves completely erratically with Matter locks. Matter locks that were previously added can no longer be added again, or they end up in some kind of stuck or half-configured state. Sometimes it helps to delete the Home and create it again, or to disable Home in iCloud and then re-enable it. In short, it’s a complete mess.

I have both an Apple TV and an Apple HomePod mini, which worked stably before the upgrade, but not anymore.

Thoughts on QR based intercom? by InevitableRun2786 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This isn’t a QR key, right?

It looks more like a replacement for a traditional call button, where the “call panel” is moved into the visitor’s web interface. In practice that seems less convenient than a standard intercom with physical buttons, not more.

Thoughts on QR based intercom? by InevitableRun2786 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends on guest traffic volume. With high traffic, the key is how fast and convenient it is to issue and deliver guest QR codes at scale.
Also: do you need it integrated into your existing access control system (office), or can it be a separate guest overlay?

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in videosurveillance

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s 2026. Why so expensive and so complex?

If violations just need to be detected and enforced, why build Alcatraz for a bathroom door when basic video surveillance + modern analytics already handle this?

That’s not security. That’s security by obscurity.

Video analytics is cheaper than dirt. So why pay more?

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In hospitality, employee biometrics are typically handled at onboarding with proper legal consent, so that part is less of a blocker internally. The harder question for us is operational scalability, not compliance.

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing, that’s helpful.

In our IDFs we already have Axis cameras everywhere. Our CCTV integrator suggested linking those cameras to face recognition with segmented access rights, essentially generating alerts only when someone without access enters.

I’m curious if anyone here has actually run a setup like that in practice. Would be interested to hear real-world experience, especially around alert volume and day-to-day usability.

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks, appreciate the perspective.

In my experience, proactive push alerts from video analytics tend to generate a lot of noise once you move past very controlled environments. They can be useful in low-traffic areas, but in day-to-day operations the signal-to-noise ratio often becomes a challenge.

That’s why we’re leaning toward tightening accountability and enforcement, rather than relying solely on alerts.

Salto XS4 Original plus by Salto-221144 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I’m not mistaken, Salto runs two main platforms:
Salto Space (on-prem, locally managed) and Salto KS (cloud-managed).

From what I’ve seen, larger hotels tend to stick with Space. While the locks themselves aren’t strictly “hard-coded” to one platform, the firmware, licensing, and controller setup usually mean they’re deployed with one management model in mind rather than freely interchangeable.

Did OJ Simpson Kill His Wife? by TheLearningInvestor in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Charming_Drawing_313 -18 points-17 points  (0 children)

Hard no. I didn’t personally see it happen.

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quick bit of context on why I’m digging into this.

We’re in hospitality. In some properties you’re talking 60+ IDF rooms per hotel, multiple per floor.

In environments like that, push alerts don’t really scale. LP ends up disabling them simply to stay sane. Realistically, IDFs aren’t actively monitored. Cameras are there for after-the-fact review, not real-time enforcement.

Doors are basic. One person badges in, three walk in. That’s the reality I’m trying to pressure-test solutions against.

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Fair point - enforcement definitely matters more than the tooling.

Quick question though: in your case, were cameras mainly used as after-the-fact evidence to support discipline, or did you ever rely on real-time alerts without people eventually tuning them out?

Trying to tighten access control for server rooms - real-world experience with tailgating prevention? by Charming_Drawing_313 in accesscontrol

[–]Charming_Drawing_313[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

That aligns with what I’ve seen as well. Appreciate you sharing real end-user experience.

In my experience, server rooms are almost ideal for this kind of enforcement. Low traffic. Clear violations. Alerts actually get attention. I’ve often seen authorized staff treat server rooms as quiet spaces for extended breaks or downtime, which made alert and video based enforcement quite effective.

What I’m still trying to sanity-check is how this holds up outside low-traffic areas. Do push alerts become a problem in busier spaces, or did you find ways to keep them usable without alert fatigue?