A week under surveillance: Logitech Alert Video Security System review
Logitech dropped its Alert Video Security System on our laps just before we were allowed to tell the world about it -- not nearly enough time to put it through its paces. Since then we've spent a week beneath its piercing gaze, afraid to scratch inappropriately lest that movement be recorded forever onto the cold, merciless memory of network-attached storage. In that time we found living with Alert to be generally entertaining, sometimes frustrating, and occasionally disconcerting. How so? Read on to find out.
As we mentioned in the earlier hands-on, Logitech is offering two cameras: the $230 700i for indoors and well-lit shooting and the $280 700e for outdoors or nighttime shooting (each available as a bundle with the necessary receiver for $300 and $350, respectively). Logitech was kind enough to send us one of each and, despite both offering the same skinny HD resolution of 960 x 720, their designs are very dissimilar. The indoor model looks something like a chubby mouse, a curious look for a security camera but its light weight and threaded receivers make it easy to mount, to the wall via the included hardware, on a wall or simply with a suction cup, or simply sitting in its little holder on a shelf.
The outdoor-ready 700e, however, is a very different beast, looking rather more like a security camera and, with its metal construction, feeling beefy and weatherproof. This model adds night vision to the mix, able to see in IR and boosted by a pair of IR emitters that, on a pitch-black night, give it an effective range of about 30 feet in our testing. But, with a good bit of moonlight or even a small streetlight that range is far extended. However, those IR headlights cause some issues, attracting insects that buzz around and trip the motion detector constantly. More on that in a bit. Both cameras offer good but not great quality through their wide lenses, footage looking a bit blurry but, in general, far better than your average VGA security cam. However, neither can be moved remotely, so make sure you point them where you want them.
Setting up the cameras is about as easy as it gets. Each camera comes with a HomePlug adapter that it is connected to via a skinny Ethernet cable, providing connectivity as well as power. Plug each camera into an outlet, hang it on the wall however you like, and then plug another HomePlug adapter into your network router. This acts as the receiver, providing the camera's access with computers on your network and indeed with the internet at large. (Up to six cameras can be connected in a single instance.) After installing the software on your PC (no Mac support yet) you're well on your way to living like a prisoner in your own home.
Users of WiLife systems will probably be getting some deja vu by now, because that's basically what this is -- WiLife with upgraded hardware. Sadly, though, older WiLife cameras cannot be integrated with the new Logitech Alert software, which at this point is not perfect. In general the software acts as a sort of DVR and repository for the cameras. Each camera writes to microSD storage (2GB is provided) whenever it detects motion. When a computer running the Commander app connects it automatically starts to pull down all that footage, freeing up the memory for another night's worth of attempted break-ins.
One of the biggest problems with this software is that it is PC-only, and even then won't work when connected to via a remote desktop connection. This may seem like a minor problem, but if you have a Windows Home Server box or the like sitting in the corner that you want to act as your security clearing house, you're out of luck here -- unless you add a keyboard and monitor to it.
The software also lets you set the motion sensitivity of each camera, creating hot-spots where the camera will look and dead zones that it will ignore. This worked well in confined areas with static backgrounds, but we found it impossible to get reliable results in situations with trees or plants that move in the wind. Even when we created small hot-spots that included zero shrubberies, as the day wore on inevitably their shadows would cross those zones. Add a gentle breeze and you have cameras detecting motion constantly.
At night the situation is worse. The 700e provides good looking night imagery, but that's aided by dual IR emitters. Many insects are just as attracted to IR as light that mere humans can see, meaning our 700e would spend all evening recording the futile mating attempts of various country moths -- or maybe they're rod-shaped alien spacecraft. You be the judge.
Ultimately, the cameras are pretty dumb about movement. They can't tell a swaying branch from a burglar or a shadow from a vicious dog, and sadly there's no fuzzy logic or AI that allows you to train them on right and wrong. You can't even schedule sensitivity changes based on the time of day.
One thing Alert does right -- when everything is working properly -- is providing access to your footage. Naturally there's the PC client which allows you to view live and recorded footage. But, there's also a website that serves a live view of whatever is happening on any of your cameras. Pay $80 a year and you step up to the Mobile Commander level, which allows you to view any footage still stored on your cameras remotely, configure their sensitivity, and modify alerts. Alerts can also be created from the desktop app, photos sent via e-mail whenever motion is detected, which is a handy feature if you can get that motion sensitivity dialed in right.
But, by far the most useful that we found were the suite of mobile apps, one each for iPhone, Android, and BlackBerry. These let you select from any of your cameras and view live footage -- at least they do when they're working. Unfortunately for much of our week of testing these apps have been failing to connect but, when they're working, they work well, providing a very clear picture over 3G or WiFi.
This all naturally raises the question of privacy, with footage from inside your home being pumped up to Logitech's servers and available to anyone who manages to crack your password. Someone stealing your credit card number? Scary. Someone watching you when you're jamming out in your tighty whities to Old Time Rock and Roll? Really scary, and something that will make even the most care-free of users think twice about using their old standby password.
What we have is a system that will work great for some but rather poorly for others. If you just want to point a camera at a pet or a child and keep an eye on them from afar, or are only interested in seeing what's going on at home right now, you obviously won't be too concerned with too much motion sensitivity. This is a great package that comes out of the box quickly and, in minutes, will have you watching Fluffy and Snookums romp around merrily. Likewise, if you'll be pointing this at an urban or static environment where you want to catch anything that moves, you'll have good results.
However, if you need a system that will generate few false positives, that will only alert you when something is moving that shouldn't be, you're going to want something a little more serious. A system that recorded three hours of swaying trees yet failed to notice the UPS man delivering a package is not something we want to rely on for keeping our place secure.
Update: Logitech contacted us to let us know that the downtime for the mobile apps was due to a switchover going from their beta servers to production boxes during testing, something they likely won't be doing again. In other words, you shouldn't have any concerns about downtime going forward.
Hardware
As we mentioned in the earlier hands-on, Logitech is offering two cameras: the $230 700i for indoors and well-lit shooting and the $280 700e for outdoors or nighttime shooting (each available as a bundle with the necessary receiver for $300 and $350, respectively). Logitech was kind enough to send us one of each and, despite both offering the same skinny HD resolution of 960 x 720, their designs are very dissimilar. The indoor model looks something like a chubby mouse, a curious look for a security camera but its light weight and threaded receivers make it easy to mount, to the wall via the included hardware, on a wall or simply with a suction cup, or simply sitting in its little holder on a shelf.

The outdoor-ready 700e, however, is a very different beast, looking rather more like a security camera and, with its metal construction, feeling beefy and weatherproof. This model adds night vision to the mix, able to see in IR and boosted by a pair of IR emitters that, on a pitch-black night, give it an effective range of about 30 feet in our testing. But, with a good bit of moonlight or even a small streetlight that range is far extended. However, those IR headlights cause some issues, attracting insects that buzz around and trip the motion detector constantly. More on that in a bit. Both cameras offer good but not great quality through their wide lenses, footage looking a bit blurry but, in general, far better than your average VGA security cam. However, neither can be moved remotely, so make sure you point them where you want them.
Setting up the cameras is about as easy as it gets. Each camera comes with a HomePlug adapter that it is connected to via a skinny Ethernet cable, providing connectivity as well as power. Plug each camera into an outlet, hang it on the wall however you like, and then plug another HomePlug adapter into your network router. This acts as the receiver, providing the camera's access with computers on your network and indeed with the internet at large. (Up to six cameras can be connected in a single instance.) After installing the software on your PC (no Mac support yet) you're well on your way to living like a prisoner in your own home.
Software

Users of WiLife systems will probably be getting some deja vu by now, because that's basically what this is -- WiLife with upgraded hardware. Sadly, though, older WiLife cameras cannot be integrated with the new Logitech Alert software, which at this point is not perfect. In general the software acts as a sort of DVR and repository for the cameras. Each camera writes to microSD storage (2GB is provided) whenever it detects motion. When a computer running the Commander app connects it automatically starts to pull down all that footage, freeing up the memory for another night's worth of attempted break-ins.
One of the biggest problems with this software is that it is PC-only, and even then won't work when connected to via a remote desktop connection. This may seem like a minor problem, but if you have a Windows Home Server box or the like sitting in the corner that you want to act as your security clearing house, you're out of luck here -- unless you add a keyboard and monitor to it.
The software also lets you set the motion sensitivity of each camera, creating hot-spots where the camera will look and dead zones that it will ignore. This worked well in confined areas with static backgrounds, but we found it impossible to get reliable results in situations with trees or plants that move in the wind. Even when we created small hot-spots that included zero shrubberies, as the day wore on inevitably their shadows would cross those zones. Add a gentle breeze and you have cameras detecting motion constantly.

At night the situation is worse. The 700e provides good looking night imagery, but that's aided by dual IR emitters. Many insects are just as attracted to IR as light that mere humans can see, meaning our 700e would spend all evening recording the futile mating attempts of various country moths -- or maybe they're rod-shaped alien spacecraft. You be the judge.
Ultimately, the cameras are pretty dumb about movement. They can't tell a swaying branch from a burglar or a shadow from a vicious dog, and sadly there's no fuzzy logic or AI that allows you to train them on right and wrong. You can't even schedule sensitivity changes based on the time of day.
Accessing your stream
One thing Alert does right -- when everything is working properly -- is providing access to your footage. Naturally there's the PC client which allows you to view live and recorded footage. But, there's also a website that serves a live view of whatever is happening on any of your cameras. Pay $80 a year and you step up to the Mobile Commander level, which allows you to view any footage still stored on your cameras remotely, configure their sensitivity, and modify alerts. Alerts can also be created from the desktop app, photos sent via e-mail whenever motion is detected, which is a handy feature if you can get that motion sensitivity dialed in right.
But, by far the most useful that we found were the suite of mobile apps, one each for iPhone, Android, and BlackBerry. These let you select from any of your cameras and view live footage -- at least they do when they're working. Unfortunately for much of our week of testing these apps have been failing to connect but, when they're working, they work well, providing a very clear picture over 3G or WiFi.
This all naturally raises the question of privacy, with footage from inside your home being pumped up to Logitech's servers and available to anyone who manages to crack your password. Someone stealing your credit card number? Scary. Someone watching you when you're jamming out in your tighty whities to Old Time Rock and Roll? Really scary, and something that will make even the most care-free of users think twice about using their old standby password.
Wrap-up

What we have is a system that will work great for some but rather poorly for others. If you just want to point a camera at a pet or a child and keep an eye on them from afar, or are only interested in seeing what's going on at home right now, you obviously won't be too concerned with too much motion sensitivity. This is a great package that comes out of the box quickly and, in minutes, will have you watching Fluffy and Snookums romp around merrily. Likewise, if you'll be pointing this at an urban or static environment where you want to catch anything that moves, you'll have good results.
However, if you need a system that will generate few false positives, that will only alert you when something is moving that shouldn't be, you're going to want something a little more serious. A system that recorded three hours of swaying trees yet failed to notice the UPS man delivering a package is not something we want to rely on for keeping our place secure.
Update: Logitech contacted us to let us know that the downtime for the mobile apps was due to a switchover going from their beta servers to production boxes during testing, something they likely won't be doing again. In other words, you shouldn't have any concerns about downtime going forward.




























Perverts everywhere love this system.
@Sea Urchin
OMG, in the video at 0:57...it's UFO.
Also, great house and back yard. What city is this in?
@Sea Urchin In Soviet Russia, you film surveillance.
@Pizza fail
Creepy.... the UPS man didn't get noticed.... now i know why they get so frustrated!
@johnvillar the only logical explanation is that that UPS man was actually Sam Fisher.
I am not sure I like this, but still, go to know it is out there...
@serge *good to know
typo...sorry...grrrr
Was that a cat or a skunk ?
@bufbarnaby That would be the viscous dog mentioned in the article.
@TimStevens Erm, do you mean "vicious"?
The dog seemed to have the consistency of any other dog :P
@Omega192 No, he's actually entirely comprised of liquid.
I have also fixed my regrettable typo.
@Omega192
nah, I think the dog was quite runny.
a little thinner than most dogs, I'd say.
okay, I'll stop with the puns now :D
IP cameras are one of those things where standards compliance is very important. You should have tested other software that relies on the camera to properly handle http connections or even UDP streaming. Does it use MJPEG or some wacky format?
Nobody ever uses that disc in the box.
@dougdeep No way. If you're spending this much for this system you're not just doing it for the cameras. You're doing it for the services surrounding those cameras.
And the resulting files are .mp4's.
Man, the night scenes are just down right creepy. Just think PARANORMAL ACTIVITY especially part two thats comming out soon.
"A system that recorded three hours of swaying trees yet failed to notice the UPS man delivering a package is not something we want to rely on for keeping our place secure."
I should have skipped to the end. That's one heck of a statement for a system that costs this much. Thanks E!
Pricey for one camera... geez. I'll just buy some Chinese one's off eBay if I need a security system... they're wireless and still a 6th of the price. I'm sure they're not as good, but all I need to do is see if there's someone outside...
perhaps the UPS guy was a vampire?
Pretty badass when you compare it to the cost of getting a "professional" security cam system installed.
Def. "Viscous Dog". A canine with low fluidity. A dog having the property of viscosity.
@raidah Yeeeah... fixed that. Thanks.
Shame there is no Mac support. I'd buy one today.
@eliotw They have support via the "web commander" premium service, according to their website.
@dan828 That does not allow archiving of the recorded footage from the cameras, only viewing of what's currently stored on their memory. It's very limited compared to the desktop software.
TrendNET TV-IP312W. Wireless, IR, stand alone server, motion detection, etc.
Why would you spend over $200 for this Ligitech?!?!
Looks cool and I would like to be able to keep an eye on my dogs, but at the price and with the lack of Mac support I'm going to have to pass.
RAHH! ALLIEENNSSS
That car sounded like an Impreza
@captaind172 You got it.
@TimStevens
WRX?
@Slick Aye, a bugeye.
@TimStevens Someone on the internetz procedes to identify the make/model of your car at night at what looks to be 30+ feet. Seems pretty good to me.
@captaind172 I saw the article before I went to work, but didn't have time to complement him on his WRX. By the time I got home, someone had beaten me to the punch. I miss my bugeye.
@modulok A true Subaru fan can identify an Impreza just by the exhaust note :)
Huh? What was that noise?
SNAKE?! SNAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAKE!!!!!!
is that a lancer evolution driving in the background? :]
$80 per year...??? Sigggh. If you have multiple cameras, is it just one fee?
It's funny how the software is PC only (ie Windows), but the mobile apps don't include windows mobile. You'd think it would have been easier to make an effective winmo app for a windows only program. I'll stick with my PC camera streaming on my private UStream channel or my Cyberlink Live account. It doesn't offer multiple camera options, but at least it's all free and I can watch it from any system with an internet connection including winmo phones. I can even view the feed on a camera controlled over RDP
This Logitech system is nearly as expensive and deficient as its predecessor. So unimpressed.
I can do all the above and more, do it better, and more elegantly but most of all, more cheaply, with my two Y-Cam Blacks. One is mounted in an external enclosure that is much smaller and much more discrete than this one, and it's all via WiFi.
Seriously, Logitech, you're really late to this party, and you're not even a very good partier. Maybe you leave it to the pros.
@darex I forgot to mention: Y-Cam DOES support Macs
No mention of the audio capabilities so you can remotely listen in to your kids or the pool guy and your wife while you're at the office :).
Also countdown timer on the webapp. No good.
Thanks but I'll pass. Panasonic makes great network cameras that cost a lot less (under $200) and actually have motor in them so you can control it remotely. Security features and software are not as good, but great for monitoring pets.