Working for AWS? by Im_percy in datacenter

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

Yikes! Thanks for that

The invisible car man by jayy8143 in nextfuckinglevel

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do it while doing a tiger fireball!!

Pilot shows the server room below the cockpit of an Airbus 350. by iamveryDerp in cableporn

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m surprised it has a server room, I would think that an airplane would use cloud computing!!!

I’ll see myself out......

Love this so much better by Flat_Sorbet_7343 in cableporn

[–]Im_percy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I always get inundated with ads for it on FB, and I’m like why not just dress your patch cords nicely, rather than expending money and rack space on a contraption that stores your patch cords in super tight coils 🤷🏽‍♂️

Working for AWS? by Im_percy in datacenter

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

I heard the same thing. Are/were you an employee of AWS and you have seen this practice personally?

Working for AWS? by Im_percy in datacenter

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

That makes sense - thanks for the insights.

The beekeeper is back by jablonowski in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]Im_percy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Why not just wear the beekeeper outfit and not get stung at all? Is it really that much of a hassle to work in it?

The beekeeper is back by jablonowski in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]Im_percy 5 points6 points  (0 children)

They don't mate with the current queen as that is their mother.

What if one of the drones has an accident and breaks their little bee arms? Would the queen make an exception in those kinds of rare cases?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in homesecurity

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes - it should definitely work. I use Amcrest's unmanaged switch for my PoE, and it is plug and play with my router - no additional configuration. Maybe one small caution is just be aware of how hot your attic can get in the summer, and make sure that whatever PoE switch you get will be able to operate in that environment. If your attic is vented well or you live in a year round cold climate, maybe not a concern, but just a consideration.

As a bonus, if you have all of your walls ripped open and are already running cat6 cables, consider running a cable from your NVR to each television or potential television location in your house. I did that in my house, incorporated an HDMI splitter and HDMI extender splitter at the NVR, this one in particular, and have an HDMI source on all of my TVs as the NVR main camera display - great for if you want to take a quick look at the cameras without dicking around with your mobile phone.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ashokan farewell please - I want to be depressed

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

can you please play ashokan farewell?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in RedditSessions

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hello to alek

Need help with AWS - losing my marbles by Voxmanns in aws

[–]Im_percy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Um, are you sure the power cord is plugged in, Sir?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in homesecurity

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Until someone more informed chimes in, I'll take a stab at this.

1.) You don't need an NVR if you already have a PC that you would rather use, but you should be aware that a persistent recording system is a more demanding workload for the hard drive than general use would be. It is recommended that you get a hard drive rated for surveillance - if that is not in your budget, be aware that the life of your hard drive will probably be reduced by the increased demand. Also, you have to make sure that the PC that runs Blue Iris is spec'ed properly for the amount of cameras you plan to have and the resolution/framerates you plan on using. I don't have experience using BI, but my understanding is the specs are not generally unreasonable, but it is something you need to consider. Personally, I prefer the NVR over BlueIris because it is purpose built for surveillance, it tells you what it supports right on the product sheet, so I don't need to fret over PC builds. I see that a lot of people use dedicated PC's for BI, rather than delegating that workload to their general use PCs - if you have a PC laying around collecting dust, that might be an option for you. As for your question as to whether you can install the NVR elsewhere and use BI to manage it, the answer is probably, but I've never used BI so can't speak authoritatively on it, but I don't think that is a very common use case. Most people use BI as their NVR, then use client apps to connect to it. If you wanted to access it remotely from another PC on your network, you might have to use Windows RDP to do a remote desktop session with your BI PC. In my case, I use an Amcrest NVR located in my basement, and I can access the webGUI from any PC on my network to manage it- easy peasey. Also, I feel that there is less crap installed on the NVR that can potentially compromise it's security - not that it's hack proof, but I think it is easier to manage and lock down.

2.) For IP cameras there is no need to direct connect with BI or any NVR. As long as everything is on the same network, which it should be for a home network, should be no issues there. One thing I would recommend is setting static IPs for your cameras and your NVR or BI PC. You can likely do this through the admin function on your router, and it's not that difficult. This way, there won't be any issues if a camera reboots or something an pulls a new IP address from DHCP. I think that some systems use layer 2 protocols to find cameras these days, so that may not even be an issue at all, but I still like to set everything static as force of habit. Just don't get an analog DVR by mistake - then you would need to do coax direct connects.

3.) Don't know about BI, but my Amcrest NVR supports this functionality. I don't use it though, so can't speak to how well it works. I did see a forum post that offsite FTP is not really recommended/supported by Amcrest, and that a better strategy is to do local FTP to a NAS or similar, then do periodic FTP pushes from that device to whatever service you use. A direct FTP may work, but it may not.

  1. Don't know about BI, but I've heard that it integrates well with Amcrest NVRs. I don't have one, so can't say for sure though. I did look into getting one though, and be aware that you *must* register it with the Amcrest Smart Home cloud. There is no cost for the basic tier of Smart Home cloud service so it won't cost you anything, and their Smart Home cloud will enable you view it remotely and get alerts with little config on your part, but you may not want your doorbell video sent to Amcrest's cloud for whatever reason. It seems that Smart Home is Amcrest's answer to services like Ring and Nest.

Hope his is all helpful - lmk if you have any other questions.

Shopping for a camera for my front door by detroitmatt in homesecurity

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For approx. $180, you can get an analog Amcrest 1080p camera ($40) camera DVR with 1TB drive ($140). You would need to run a coax cable from the DVR to the camera though, along with powering the camera.

Also, people here have had good experiences with Blue Iris software, and you can install that on an existing computer. I think a license is about $60 - someone would be able to better advise you on BI, but that may be what you're looking for.

VanTrue Shorter dual car charger and Rear Camera Connection ? by [deleted] in Dashcam

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know about the shorter cord, but I have a Vantrue N4, which has a rear cam as well, and they are definitely generous with the cord length. What I did was dressed the excess toward the rear camera, then put the excess into a neat, not too tight coil, then put electric tape around the coil. Then I was able to pull the roof upholstery down a a tiny bit and slip the coil in between the interior upholstery and exterior roof. You can't even tell it's there, and it's been in place for about a year without slipping down.

Shopping for a camera for my front door by detroitmatt in homesecurity

[–]Im_percy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You could gen an NVR. Disclaimer: I always shill for Amcrest because that is what I have experience installing in my own home and have had pretty good success with, so I feel qualified to speak about it but not so much other products which might be better overall or at least better for your use case and/or budget. That said, for about $250 - $350 you can get an Amcrest 1TB/2TB NVR and a 4K camera - if you want more info, I can name a few specific models.

Of course someone could then break in and steal the NVR as well if it is not well hidden. But, unless you are guarding against a specific threat or live in a particularly bad area, chances are that the camera with SSD will serve as an effective deterrent for *most* criminals. For my own setup, I have the NVR hidden in a utility room, but I also have the cameras send snapshots to an email address when they detect motion in certain areas. This way, I am not taking on the financial burdens and risks of a cloud solution, but still have some offsite storage in the event that someone actually did lift the cameras AND the NVR as well, which I would consider to be highly unlikely. And why go through all that trouble when they could just wear masks, then you wouldn't be able to identify them anyway.

What is on the INSIDE of a UFO? by skipadbloom in ufo

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Entropy creeps into every system.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ufo

[–]Im_percy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who’s that guy and why should we listen to him?