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Logitech Alert 750e |
The most
impressive feature of the $350 Logitech Alert 750e system is the quality of the
camera, in terms of its video output and its physical construction. At 960 by
720 pixels and 15 frames per second, the video-capture resolution of the Alert
750e is lower than that of competitors, but the video quality is exceptional.
In addition, the camera's exterior is made from zinc, not plastic. The
drawbacks are the relatively high cost and the fact that you can't install and
monitor more than six cameras.
The setup I
tested uses HomePlug AV powerline networking, in which electricity and
ethernet data packets travel over the same cable. This arrangement means you
must have an AC outlet within the vicinity of each camera, but you don’t need to
string cable from your router or your PC; you just insert a Logitech HomePlug
AV adapter (included with each master system) into an outlet near your router.
Each camera also comes with its own HomePlug AV adapter.
If your home
or office has poor electrical wiring, power line networking might deliver
spotty performance or fail altogether. Logitech also sells the same outdoor and
indoor cameras configured to run on Power over Ethernet.
The camera
saves motion- triggered video recordings to a MicroSD card (a 2GB card is
provided, but you can use cards as Large as 32GB). In addition, you can set the
750e to transfer recordings to your Dropbox account.
The Logitech
Alert 750e system is top-notch in nearLy every respect: The camera is rugged,
it produces great quality footage, it records audio, it doesn't rely on a host
PC, and it's easy to install and configure. If you don't mind the six-camera
limit, you won't find a better choice.
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