G
[email protected]
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
I'm a PHP web developer working with Linux by day, and I tinker with
side projects at home to see if I can get something off the ground. I
need someone to give me advice on a webcam project where I need to use
wired, not wireless, cameras to build a video surveillance arrangement
that can be used in large offices. I got excited about the idea when I
found out that my office paid $30K for their video surveillance system.
The first part of this is the wiring of the video cam. I understand
that USB requires repeater extender things to run it over long
distances, and these may require an AC input. But has anyone
experimented with switching the signal to CAT 5 and then putting it
back onto USB again? Shouldn't it then be able to go longer distances?
Before I start tearing apart a web cam's USB cable in my garage to do
this experiment to see how long the video signal can run with CAT5, I'd
like to know if someone has advice on this.
side projects at home to see if I can get something off the ground. I
need someone to give me advice on a webcam project where I need to use
wired, not wireless, cameras to build a video surveillance arrangement
that can be used in large offices. I got excited about the idea when I
found out that my office paid $30K for their video surveillance system.
The first part of this is the wiring of the video cam. I understand
that USB requires repeater extender things to run it over long
distances, and these may require an AC input. But has anyone
experimented with switching the signal to CAT 5 and then putting it
back onto USB again? Shouldn't it then be able to go longer distances?
Before I start tearing apart a web cam's USB cable in my garage to do
this experiment to see how long the video signal can run with CAT5, I'd
like to know if someone has advice on this.