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High Tech Baby Monitoring?

MrGibbage writes "I'm a long time geek and about to be a first time father. I'm setting up the baby room now, and I'm looking for a high-tech (and low cost of course) baby monitoring system. I'm already running a linux web server over DSL and I'd love to push the video to that in order to see the video on my cell phone when we are out and the babysitter is home....uhh....babysitting. How will I watch the video while in our house? What about on my iPaq? Laptop? Something else? What about audio? Any systems that integrate both? The Baby-R-Us systems are ridiculously low quality and not expandable at all and therefore not really an option. The last slashdot article about video surveillance is a few years old."

8 of 481 comments (clear)

  1. Slow but effective... by MoeMoe · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I would recommend taking a look into using a VNC package. Basically it will let you see and control what's going on with your computer (the one controlling the baby monitor/webcam) from your iPaq, laptop, and even a Treo phone!

    Basically all you would be doing is opening up a webcam viewer on the computer through VNC and just watch the screen... You won't be getting super fast resolution (depending on speed of connection and machine running the client you'll be looking at around 5 FPS I think) but you will be able to see what's going on. Good luck, and congrats...

    --
    Business \Busi"ness\, n.;
    A scam in which all people involved perceive as beneficial...
  2. Ears (no, seriously - ears...) by mccalli · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "I'm a long time geek and about to be a first time father."

    Extrapolation from my fairly recent experience: "...and thus am currently dreaming up all sorts of over the top schemes to monitor the baby."

    Reality from my experience: forget it. A radio baby monitor is enough, in fact after a while we stopped using even that because our own ears sufficed just as well. The only over the top thing I actually implemented was using a camcorder's nightshot capability to see if the baby was actually asleep - allowed me to do it without going in the room and waking her up. Even that stopped after about two months.

    You won't be able to of course, and this advise will be impossible for you to take but, but...relax. Really. You'll have enough genuine stress from crying etc. without also rigging up monitoring systems which you'll barely use. If the baby is crying at night, check on it (sorry - don't know him/her in your case). If the baby isn't crying at night - leave it alone! If you need a monitoring system for during the day, you're slacking offf - should be giving the baby personal attention of some kind (yourself, your other half, a nursery...).

    Honestly - all these things sounded like a great idea to me at the time as well, but come the actual events I just abandoned them as not worthwhile. My own experience? I'm a father of two - one daughter who will be three in January, one son who will be one in a week's time. Hectic does not begin to describe the first few months of both my daugter's life but even more so my son's (when we had the both of them to look afteR), but you do work out a pattern eventually.

    Cheers,
    Ian

  3. Don't do it... by AccUser · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My wife and I decided (against the grain) not to install any kind of baby monitoring devices, hi-tech or otherwise. All our friends did. We slept, they didn't. They worried, we didn't. Maybe we are just laid back, but we never spent an entire evening checking the baby monitor for functionality, as a friend once did!

    --

    Any fool can talk, but it takes a wise man to listen.

  4. Re:No need by The+Rev · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I could not disagree more.

    The baby monitor I use has a "your baby isn't breathing" alarm.

    This means that I can totally relax unless the alarm is ringing.

    I don't need to hear anything coming out of the monitor if the alarm is silent.

    This has given me great peace of mind and helped me relax no end.

    As long as SIDS is largely unexplained, these monitors will be of great value.

  5. ...and go crazy! (Who modded as insightful?) by Burb · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Yes, sure, plan to be with your child as much as you can. But new parents need some time off to relax and socialise. A new mother of my acquaintance who is well-meaning and dedicated to her family didn't leave her son with anyone else, ever, for nearly a year, because she had extremely high (unrealistic) standards for prospective babysitters. It did them no good in the end.

    But I certainly agree with other comments that remote web monitoring is not the way to go here.

    --

  6. Re:An old standard by bwalling · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Have you thought about trying good old fashioned parenting? Perhaps "being there" is the best way to monitor your child...

    How the heck is this Insightful? This is the best way to end your marriage. You need to get out once a week with your spouse, and you'll need someone to watch your kid when you go out.

    If you have relatives in the area, they make the best babysitters. You know them, plus they probably want to see the kid as much as they can without imposing on you.

  7. Re:It's called a WIFE! by Zachary+Kessin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A friend of mine reports that her dog has been doing the job quite well. When the baby needs something the dog barks then goes an gets mom to go look after the funny looking "puppy". She didn't train the dog for this, he just took on the job.

    I skiped the whole thing and started with step kids who are already teens.

    --
    Erlang Developer and podcaster
  8. Re:Don't by jackalope · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We've adopted the practice of entering into a contract with our sitter for 1 years worth of babysitting, 1 night a week. We pay her upfront so she has enough cash in hand to buy something decent, like a powerbook.

    She's happy with the lump sum payment, and we get a for-sure babysitter for 1 year.