Posts Tagged ‘camera’

Wirelless Spy Camera Kit

Monday, April 28th, 2008


This clever set comprises a wireless spy camera AND a excellent 2.4GHz handheld receiver with built in 2.5″ LCD screen WITH digital recording facilty, it means you can spy, watch and record easily and simply!

With 4 channels receiver, you can control up to FOUR 2.4GHz wireless spy cameras - both video and audio. The monitor has a built-in rechargeable Li-battery for completely wireless functionality, however you can run the receiver/monitor directly from the 5V mains power adaptor supplied.

The recorder has a built in 64MB internal recording space to capture your wireless camera images. The unit is fitted with an SD memory card slot so the memory can be increased to over 2GB allowing for the capture of up to 12 hours of video footage (additional SD card not included).

The unit has a built in speaker for audio monitoring and a “Video OUT” port so that footage can also be recorded using a standard VCR, DVR, camcorder (camcorder must have phono video input) if required.

Boombox : Mini Phone GSM

Thursday, April 10th, 2008


This cell phone features a built in MP3 playing boombox that gets shockingly loud. The good thing is you don’t have to forsake your existing cell phone (unless you want to). Just pop the SIM card out of your current cell phone from AT&T/Cingular or T-Mobile and insert it into the back of the Mini Boombox Cell Phone and power it up. Make call to your existing cell phone number and your Mini Boombox phone starts ringing.

Like other cell phone you are also get all the standard cell phone features you would expect including a 1.3 megapixel camera, voice dialing, SMS/MMS messaging and WAP Browser.

This mini phone also has the ability to read aloud the numbers of incoming calls using voice synthesis. The Mini Boombox GSM Cell Phone comes with 256 MB of built in memory to store your MP3 music files or videos, and the storage is expandable up to 2GB via a Micro SD card slot. Now you can share your musical tastes with everyone around you without making your old phone mad.

Security Camera with Blinking LED

Sunday, March 30th, 2008


Someday security is designed to be barely noticeable, so as not to detract from the main event or draw any attention. The other times, it is deliberately obvious to tell would-be wrongdoers “don’t even think about it”. The Dummy Security Camera with Blinking LED lets any hooligans know that someone could be watching their every move or at least taking some video footage of their devious deeds.

With changeable point of view bracket, authentic cable and included “warning” decals give the dummy camera with LED a realistic appearance. Its weatherproof anodized aluminum housing is rust proof and lasts for decades. Five times smaller than most simulated cameras, the unit will not detract from your property’s appearance. The flashing LED operates for 2 years on a set of batteries.

Olympus E-3 Digital Camera

Saturday, March 29th, 2008


The E-3’s photos look great. Especially, the colors are gorgeous: saturated, yet some of the most precise we’ve tested in this class (at low ISO sensitivities, at least), with impressive automatic white balance. The camera has a slight tendency to underexpose, but you can easily compensate for that.

The camera disappointingly maxes out at ISO 3,200, but its noise profile looks pretty good; I printed some 11×15 shots taken at ISO 2,000 inside Grand Central Station and found the noise pretty subtle. Nor do Olympus’ noise suppression algorithms overblur.

With the exception of its somewhat awkward design and interface, the Olympus E-3 stands up quite well to competitors such as the Sony Alpha DSLR-A700 and Nikon D300. But if you’re buying into a system, think carefully: Olympus currently offers only 13 pro-quality lenses, and the gap since the last pro dSLR release was about four years. Will that translate into problems for you down the road? Consider it before committing.

Detect from Your Under Cloth Camera

Thursday, March 13th, 2008


Thats true, now you can get camera that can detect weapons, drugs or explosives buried under people’s dress from up to 25 meters away in what could be a breakthrough for the security industry.This camera developed by British company.

Created by a company called ThruVision, T5000 camera uses what it calls “passive imaging technology” to identify objects by the natural electromagnetic rays — known as Terahertz or T-rays — that they emit.

The high-powered camera can detect hidden objects from up to 80 feet away and is effective even when people are moving. It does not reveal physical body details and the screening is harmless, the company says.

The technology, which has military and civilian applications and could be used in crowded airports, shopping malls or sporting events, will be unveiled at a scientific development exhibition sponsored by Britain’s Home Office on March 12-13.
“Acts of terrorism have shaken the world in recent years and security precautions have been tightened globally,” said Clive Beattie, the chief executive of ThruVision.
“The ability to see both metallic and non-metallic items on people out to 25 meters is certainly a key capability that will enhance any comprehensive security system.”
While the technology may enhance detection, it may also increase concerns that Britain is becoming a surveillance society, with hundreds of thousands of closed-circuit television cameras already monitoring people countrywide every day.
ThruVision came up with the technology for the T5000 in collaboration with the European Space Agency and from studying research by astronomers into dying stars.

The technology works on the basis that all people and objects emit low levels of electromagnetic radiation. Terahertz rays lie somewhere between infrared and microwaves on the electromagnetic spectrum and travel through clouds and walls.