Recommended Posts

I have 2 of these WiFi cameras. Every time the router resets, the assigned IP address of the cameras changes, forcing me to have to go to the monitoring program and update the address so that they will display on the PC. I would love to assign them each a static IP address so this does not keep happening. Is there anyway for this to be done via the router or other method? Thanks.

1 minute ago, jnelsoninjax said:

I have 2 of these WiFi cameras. Every time the router resets, the assigned IP address of the cameras changes, forcing me to have to go to the monitoring program and update the address so that they will display on the PC. I would love to assign them each a static IP address so this does not keep happening. Is there anyway for this to be done via the router or other method? Thanks.

I think you need to set custom IP in the device settings. Wherever that is.

Usually they have a web interface on the camera. Just log into the camera by going to the camera's current IP address. Then there should be a network setting which should allow you to set the camera network address as static.

22 minutes ago, warwagon said:

Usually they have a web interface on the camera. Just log into the camera by going to the camera's current IP address. Then there should be a network setting which should allow you to set the camera network address as static.

I get this message "in message exchangeHTTP GET method not implemented", I am going to try DHCP reservation and see if that works.

59 minutes ago, jnelsoninjax said:

I get this message "in message exchangeHTTP GET method not implemented", I am going to try DHCP reservation and see if that works.

Im all on-board for the DHCP reservation too, also means that you wont potentially get a IP conflict between the camera and another device if DHCP allocated that IP (not that it should - but ive seen some terrible routers do it)

 

Your router should have an interface where you can just find the camera(s) in the list, and press the "use the same ip address each time" tick box and save..

login to cameras with old IE browser and set ip manually

 

ps: goto IE setting and disable all security for that IPs adresses

Edited by Marujan
  • Like 1
54 minutes ago, Marujan said:

login to cameras with old IE browser and set ip manually

 

ps: goto IE setting and disable all security for that IPs adresses

This! I had some janky cheapo webcams from Amazon which I had to use IE9 for, Chrome and FF wouldn't go near it.

3 hours ago, Marujan said:

login to cameras with old IE browser and set ip manually

 

ps: goto IE setting and disable all security for that IPs adresses

I get this message for both the cameras from IE:
HTTP GET method not implemented

I am guessing that they don't have a HTTP interface.

Doesn't appear that this webcam supports logging in through web browsers but uses a smartphone app for setup.  So, unless the app gives you the option of doing manual IP settings (to give a static IP) ... it will need to be done through the router.

 

As mentioned previously, assign the IP per MAC address.

 

Refer to the router's manual or at least post what router you are using.

If you dont have a server that can handle DHCP then you need a router with a firewall that has DHCP reserve setting in it since most ip cameras controlled by the app are not setup to go static so in case an outage they come back up quicker. Routers in the 150-200 range usually have this setting. I have cameras setup this way but I use a server to keep them static...... 

1 hour ago, Jim K said:

Doesn't appear that this webcam supports logging in through web browsers but uses a smartphone app for setup.  So, unless the app gives you the option of doing manual IP settings (to give a static IP) ... it will need to be done through the router.

 

As mentioned previously, assign the IP per MAC address.

 

Refer to the router's manual or at least post what router you are using.

I did DHCP reservation for both of the cameras via the router, I will have to wait and see if it worked.

1 hour ago, REM2000 said:

There is some kind of web service running if youre getting, HTTP GET method not implemented as i would expect a page cannot be found, you may have already tried this but have you tried HTTPS?

Get the can not connect if I try HTTPS, but no worries as I set the DHCP reservation for them.

  • Like 2
13 hours ago, BritBronco said:

You could use a DHCP reservation with the MAC in your router.

yes, this is called dynamic-static setup and I far prefer it to setting a static address directly on a device. doing it this way you also don't chance the router accidentally assigning the IP to another device at some point causing an IP conflict on the network.

dont waste your time for shllty trashy cameras, send it to the trash bin.

 

get new Reolink 410 model

2 hours ago, Marujan said:

dont waste your time for shllty trashy cameras, send it to the trash bin.

 

get new Reolink 410 model

I doubt he's made of money..

On 25/05/2021 at 22:09, Marujan said:

dont waste your time for shllty trashy cameras, send it to the trash bin.

 

get new Reolink 410 model

I am considering upgrading to PoE cameras.

On 26/05/2021 at 01:05, Mindovermaster said:

I doubt he's made of money..

$40 is not that expensive...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • To be fair, it wasn't going anywhere. Even when Windows Phone could run Android APKs, Google didn't want any of it so it'd never work and the same thing happened with Windows. It was never about the store or it's users, it was always the developers and who they aligned to.
    • Wake me up when this comes to PC. Until then... zzzzzzzz....
    • I was expecting the end of the world to happen before this game or elder scroll 6 to come out.
    • OpenAI and Broadcom unveil Jalapeño, a new AI chip built for LLM inference by Pradeep Viswanathan Image by OpenAI Thanks to the exponential growth of ChatGPT and other LLM-based applications, NVIDIA has grown from a $200 billion company into the first public company to reach a $5 trillion market cap. Even though hyperscalers such as Google and Amazon have their own mature AI accelerators, NVIDIA still dominates the AI infrastructure market with multiple generations of GPUs. Microsoft, OpenAI, and Meta remain among NVIDIA’s largest customers, while Google and Amazon continue to be significant NVIDIA customers as they serve AI workloads for customers on their cloud platforms. Today, OpenAI and Broadcom announced Jalapeño, OpenAI’s first custom “Intelligence Processor” designed specifically for large language model inference. The new chip is the first product from a multi-generation compute platform being developed by OpenAI. OpenAI highlighted that Jalapeño was built from the ground up for current and future LLM workloads, rather than being a general-purpose accelerator adapted for AI. Despite heavy competition from Gemini, Claude, Copilot, and others, ChatGPT remains the most used AI platform in the world. OpenAI mentioned that it leveraged its knowledge of how its models and products run at scale, including ChatGPT, Codex, the API, and future agentic AI systems, to design this new chipset. Its chip architecture reduces data movement while balancing compute, memory, and networking resources. Jalapeño will be deployed in production systems starting in late 2026; however, engineering samples are already running machine learning workloads in OpenAI’s labs at production target frequency and power. According to its internal testing, OpenAI claims this chip can deliver “substantially better” performance per watt, and a detailed technical report is expected in the coming months. While OpenAI designed the chip, Broadcom handled silicon implementation and networking technologies, including Tomahawk networking silicon, and Celestica is assisting with board, rack, and system-level integration. OpenAI pointed out that Jalapeño went from initial design to manufacturing tape-out in just nine months, which it claims is the fastest ASIC development cycle achieved for a high-performance advanced semiconductor. The company attributed the speed of development to its own LLMs, which were used during the chip design and optimization process. Broadcom CEO Hock Tan stated that the company's plan is to deploy the Jalapeño platform at a gigawatt scale with Microsoft and other partners starting in 2026. With Jalapeño, OpenAI joins Google, Microsoft, and Amazon to become a full-stack AI player. The company already develops models and products, and is now moving deeper into infrastructure, including chips, kernels, networking, scheduling, and deployment systems.
    • I'm aware. That information should have been included in the article, making it more complete and information.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Rookie
      +ChiefOfNeo went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      448
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      176
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      123
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      81
    5. 5
      Xenon
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!