Posted September 01, 2006 09:05 AM
Filed under:
Car Security
By fixing the Alltrack’s car chip in vehicles, parents can monitor the movements of their children from anywhere, anytime. This is made possible by the global positioning system technology, which sends the location of the car (or vehicle) every minute. The Alltrack USA's car ship costs a few hundred dollors, plus a monthly fees.
Features of Alltrackusa's car chip
a. The price of the low end model of the car chip starts from $115 to $179
b. Installation of the car chip is very easy
c. Comes with a software which lets you view your teenagers trip summary and detail reports for each trip, with time, date, speed and distance.
d. The car chip is compatible with any car that is manufactured after 1996
Posted August 28, 2006 09:13 AM
Brinks home security company is delivering caution notices to its customer via their monthly statements. The reports of its competitor companies sending their sales teams in the name of Brinks Home Security, and these pseudo-salesmen on the pretext of upgrading the alarm system are canceling the monitoring contract. This unknowingly is leading to switching over from one company to the other. The company declared that these deceptive salesmen do not belong to Brinks, and advised, its customers to ask for the ID and report the same to customer service.
Posted June 30, 2006 11:04 AM
Filed under:
Surveillance
Secure your property with the indoor outdoor night vision video system, which has all the sophisticated features. The remote control enables you to view 4-cameras displays, which produces color pictures. The audiovisual switch easily plugs into any television for viewing.
All the cameras have built in microphones, enabling to hear everything. Cameras are weather resistant. A touch panel and 30 feet cable are included in the video surveillance system.
Posted June 29, 2006 07:39 AM
Filed under:
Surveillance
Motorola's Home Monitoring and Control System Easy Start Kit ( HMEZ1000), records, stores and sends sensor-triggered still images and video clips with sound, and is easy to use. It requires no real installation, the Motorola HMWL1010 wirelessly transmits color still images or video with sound to the Base Station via a built-in IR (InfraRed) motion detector and microphone. The HMEZ1000 lets you check on your baby without disturbing nap time, keep an eye on the kids during backyard play, or see who is at the front door while you are at home, at work, or practically anywhere in the world.
Technical Features:
• Range: 250-feet outdoors, 60-feet indoors
• Sensitivity: minimum illumination of 3 Lux
• S/N ratio: minimum of 48 dB
• Resolution: 360 TVL
• Camera operating temperature: -10 to 40 degrees Celsius
The Motorola HMEZ1000 is the easiest and most economical monitoring solutions available, especially for parents with play areas outside the home that are in need of surveillance. The Easy Start Kit includes one wireless camera, a base station, and all the necessary power adapters, mounting hardware, and software to get you up and running with your in-home surveillance. The camera’s CMOS image sensor will be damaged if exposed to long hours of direct sunlight or halogen light.
Posted June 29, 2006 06:32 AM
The German maker of high-resolution, full-frame-rate digital security cameras, Mobitix has brought the high-resolution, low-cost addition to its IP camera line. The M22M camera has the ability to monitor sounds and video images and deliver up to 30 frames per second at 640-by-480-pixel resolution. The camera can also deliver a slightly slower frame rate at 1,280 by 960 pixels, or nearly the same resolution as HDTV. The new camera is tough enough to work in extreme hot or cold temperature. Each camera has a terabyte of storage thus the images can be kept for later viewing. Mobitix M22M is priced at $698.
Posted June 28, 2006 03:58 PM
To study, Human behavior, researchers have conducted a sly experiment on their colleagues at the University of Newcastle, northeastern England. The university's psychology department put "honesty box" in which academics were urged to pay for using tea, coffee and milk. Up to 10 weeks, the researchers placed a sign on the door of the cupboard where the honesty box was located. Pictures of flowers alternated weekly with pictures of eyes -- male or female, with expressions that ranged from alert and watchful to manic. Every week, the money collected in the honesty box was counted and the resultes showed that on weeks when the "eyes" image was shown, the money collected was 276 percent more than during the "flower image" weeks. People are "strongly attuned" to subconscious cues about behavior that could tarnish their image, the study suggested.