You’ll need to pay for this after the first month because, otherwise, you won’t be able to view clips after they’ve been recorded or download them for sharing to the police if you’ve been broken into. Prices start at £25 per year (or £2.50 per month), where Nest’s begin at £30 per year. One final thing to consider is the subscription fee to Ring’s online video storage facility, which is also more reasonable than Nest’s offering. All things taken into account, the Ring will probably cost you around £100 less to get set up than the Nest Hello. While this might look the same as the Nest Hello's price, remember that the Nest needs professional installation and it also doesn’t include the price of a chime. With the cost of the Chime Pro (or a new Echo Dot) taken into account, the price rises from £179 to £229. Ring Video Doorbell 2 review: Price and competition That ups the price by a not-insignificant £50. If you don’t have an Amazon Echo speaker, you’ll need to supplement the bell with the wireless chime unit (the Chime Pro) if you want others to hear the chime throughout the house. It’s also not technically a completely standalone product. I’d prefer to be able to draw a box on the screen to limit what triggers the pre-chime instead, Ring only allows you to reduce or increase the sensitivity and change the direction. In theory, you can set up motion “zones” so notifications don’t go off when you don’t want them to, but they’re not very precise. And it also works with Echo devices with a screen so you can see who's at the door without having to pick up your phone or get up and go to the door. You can set it up so that it gives a pre-chime as someone approaches the door, giving you a little advance warning that someone is about to ring the bell. Even a novice DIYer with a screwdriver and a few minutes to spare should be able to get it up and running in less than half an hour you don’t even have to own a screwdriver of your own as one is helpfully included in the box. The big difference between the Ring and its main rival, though, is that it’s wonderfully easy to set up. It records video at 1080p so you’ll be able to clearly make out faces, has infrared LEDs so it can see in the dark and its fisheye lens’ gives you a 160-degree, wide-angle view so you’ll be able to capture video to the sides of the camera as well as directly in front. In fact, this is how Ring markets the device: as a security camera and a deterrent to would-be thieves. It also uses motion sensors to trigger video recordings, so you can use it as a security camera. It has a speaker and a microphone built into it, too, so you can talk directly to the person at the door from wherever you happen to be, even if you’re halfway around the world. It combines an IP camera with a doorbell so that, when someone presses the button it rings a chime and you get a notification on your smartphone. Like the Nest Hello, the Ring Video Doorbell 2 is a pretty simple concept. It’s easy to set up and extremely easy to use – much more so than its main competitor, the Nest Hello doorbell, which we reviewed recently. It may not be the cheapest, but it delivers all the features you need for a price that’s reasonably accessible. Might as well get this out of the way early: the Ring Video Doorbell 2 is the best product of its type you can buy. READ NEXT: Nest Hello review - an excellent video doorbell, but it's expensive Ring Video Doorbell 2 review: What you need to know The appeal of such products is manifold: they let you see and speak to who’s at the door without having to actually open the door they can monitor the outside of your house like a security camera and alert you when motion is detected and they allow you to be in when you’re out – especially useful if a courier turns up with a package unannounced. Once the sole domain of the wealthy and paranoid, the ubiquity of internet connections and affordability of smart-home technology has created a new and burgeoning market for video doorbells such as the Ring Video Doorbell 2.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |