jfm
Well-Known Member
Please can you keep it on open forum as far as possible. It's interesting info and very useful to get insights from Hurricane and others on this.There is lots of help out there but PM me if you would like to know more.
Please can you keep it on open forum as far as possible. It's interesting info and very useful to get insights from Hurricane and others on this.There is lots of help out there but PM me if you would like to know more.
In theory, DDNS should work but with a complex VPN like OpenVPN connecting two routers, I wouldn't want to introduce the complexity of DDNS - see above.
However if someone just wants to connect one of these cameras remotely, DDNS would be quite suitable.
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Having said that, I was fiddling around with mine the other day and it seems that there is are P2P and ONVIF options.
I've not looked into it but it may be possible to connect to this camera without using a static IP or DDNS.
I don't want to fiddle too much with mine as it is working well remotely at the moment!!!
Positively +1! :encouragement:Please can you keep it on open forum as far as possible. It's interesting info and very useful to get insights from Hurricane and others on this.
regarding monitoring,
at Mets in Amsterdam, I discovered the new Yacht Sentinel YS6
http://yacht-sentinel.com/
the worldwide 3G-4G connection is included in the unit,
and imho all very affordable.
installation and setup is extremely easy, (all sensors are wireless)
I'm about to order a set.
Did you get a reply?
No but I see that the download for the Pi image is working. Source code not the downloads for the server are still not there. The whole site and documentation is a complete mess though. How they can pretend that it's fit for consumer purchased is beyond me.
From the MVDirona.com blog:-
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11/25/2017: It's kind of amazing to be able to check the shore power from an airplane over Iceland when the boat is back in Dublin. N2kview on the Android works identically on any internet connection in the world as it does on the boat.
What's happening behind the scenes is pretty impressive: We're sitting on an aircraft at 36,000ft over Iceland running N2kview on an Android device communicating over the Aer Lingus WiFi system, then over a KU band satellite link to ground stations and out onto the open internet to KVH. Then out to one of the KVH ground stations, up to a satellite and back down to the KVH V7-IP systems running on board over a static IP address.
From our plane seats we can see all boat system status, start/stop the generator, turn on the heat, and even start the main engine. In this particular case we are watching the shore power closer than usual since we have been having show power breaker trips every few days to a week since arriving in Dublin. Something isn't right either on-board or on the shore pedestal.
And for the next trick: Start the main engine, retract the automatic dock lines, back the boat out, set up a dock-to-dock autoroute, and have the boat meet you at the other side of the pond.![]()
LOL, yeah, and the ultimate development is bound to be selling the boat, getting rid of all the ownership hassles, and just cruise with a playstation or similar from the comfort of your home armchair, in front of a huge TV screen...And for the next trick: Start the main engine, retract the automatic dock lines, back the boat out, set up a dock-to-dock autoroute, and have the boat meet you at the other side of the pond.![]()
Presumably Blythburgh. The trouble is that everything below the bulwarks will have been ripped off by the Bailey bridge like a double decker bus going under a railway bridge.:dread:Wondered where Coracle was off to going up the river. Where you meeting her?![]()
Presumably Blythburgh. The trouble is that everything below the bulwarks will have been ripped off by the Bailey bridge like a double decker bus going under a railway bridge.:dread:
Dirona does make our shore power monitor look a bit pathetic. Have we got a shore power monitor at the moment?
In theory, DDNS should work but with a complex VPN like OpenVPN connecting two routers, I wouldn't want to introduce the complexity of DDNS - see above.
However if someone just wants to connect one of these cameras remotely, DDNS would be quite suitable.
![]()
Having said that, I was fiddling around with mine the other day and it seems that there is are P2P and ONVIF options.
I've not looked into it but it may be possible to connect to this camera without using a static IP or DDNS.
I don't want to fiddle too much with mine as it is working well remotely at the moment!!!
I tried to download the Skippers Mate open source code but the link is broken. Emailed them a few days ago but no response.
Can it function as an anchor alert? In other words can you designate a guard zone radius around the boats current position and for the system to warn you on your mobile phone if the boat strays outside that zone?
If I install a monitoring system that relies on control "in the cloud" it actually means I am relying on the supplier's server. If I fall out with the supplier or they raise their prices or they go bust, I am stuck. The physical kit probably won't work with any other service.
Am I being paranoid?
If I'm not being paranoid the OP's choice of Skipper's Mate makes a lot of sense because they offer an open source version, or so it seems from their website.
Before Christmas, I bought a spare one of these.
Finally got round to playing with it yesterday.
I didn't want to fiddle with the other one which is working very well at the moment on the boat.
The one on the boat connects using my home VPN which is a bit too complicated for most uses.
I was expecting to set up a DDNS to get the spare one to work as a remote camera.
But I discovered that these Escam cameras use P2P camera technology.
Basically, this means that (at power up) the camera connects with the Escam servers and registers itself.
Then, using an Android app (there is probably an iOS equivalent) which also connects to Escam, you can connect with the camera.
The resultant connection is P2P - meaning that you then connect directly between the app and the camera.
Full control is available (i.e. pan and tilt) video and sound and you can also set up alarms (intruders etc)
This P2P connection is really simple to set up - either enter the UID (Unique ID) or scan a Qcode with the Android device.
The connection is then made - bypasses router firewalls - dead easy.
I'm not sure of the security implications so, for the moment, I have locked mine down by changing the default passwords but, after I've played a bit more, I might disable the P2P facility.
Security probably isn't a problem for most people though - as I said above, my boat one is on my internal LAN so, it could breach my firewall.
I'm probably being paranoid - it would need a significant hack to attack the camera firmware, especially as all the default users and passwords have been changed.
Anyway, I thought it would be interesting to report back.
Recapping - it is a doddle to set this device up.