Müller
Active Member
The Viofo dashcams have [...]
Hello Nigel,
Thank You for taking your time. That was VERY helpful!
The Viofo dashcams have [...]
2. Yes, the A229 and A329 series could access a cloud service. There are a few issues, such as currently, if the app downloads a video from the camera, it first stops recording, presumably for reliability reasons, or maybe performance reasons. If you had automatic file uploads to a cloud server then you would not want it to stop recording while uploading, so there might be some work to do on performance and reliability. The app already works remotely, so there would not be much work to do on the cameras.
the existing smart home network vendors have already been into this for years ... rather than dashcam vendors re-inventing the wheel, it might make sense to work together on this? But there's always the issue that the dashcam has to live in a car without reliable power sources, internet access, shade or ventilation, - unlike home systems.The world is changing though, many people now have doorbell cameras live over the cloud, and they expect the same in a dashcam, and they expect it to be just as easy, even thought the doorbell always has access to your home wifi network, which makes things easy.
My car spends a lot of time at home, it would be nice if it could talk to my smart home network. Then when a house motion detector sees movement at night, it can turn on the driveway lights and wake the dashcam up to record the action, or when the dashcam detects an impact to the car at night, the smart home can turn on the driveway lights so that the intruder can be properly recorded and chased away.the existing smart home network vendors have already been into this for years ... rather than dashcam vendors re-inventing the wheel, it might make sense to work together on this? But there's always the issue that the dashcam has to live in a car without reliable power sources, internet access, shade or ventilation, - unlike home systems.
I was thinking more about Eufy, Arlo, Ring, etc - wireless security cameras. Indoor mains-powered, and outdoor battery ones with months between charges. Infrared and motion detection, face recognition. The apps already support live view, notifications, etc. Some robovacs let you drive it around with camera on to do roaming inspections, and I think there's mini-drones too.Smart homes are not really about video though, thread/matter networks are not designed to carry video