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#1
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Delayed Re-Boot?
I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home.
Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I thought I had it licked when I put in one of those power strips that senses how much the PC is drawing and cuts power to everything else plugged in to it when it senses that the PC is no longer drawing power above a certain level. The plan was to just TeamViewer into the PC and issue a manual re-boot if/when the cam went South. But that does not work. I am guessing that a re-boot does not reduce the power consumption long enough to trip the power strip. What I would like to do is somehow have the PC shut itself down and then re-start at least 30 seconds later. The timing does not have to be that exact... just so it actually powers off and stays that way for at least a few seconds.... At 0200 in the morning, nobody's going to care as long as the sys is back up by sunrise. Can anybody point to a way to accomplish this without spending a lot of money on something like a remote-controlled power strip? -- Pete Cresswell |
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#2
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Delayed Re-Boot?
(PeteCresswell) wrote:
I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I thought I had it licked when I put in one of those power strips that senses how much the PC is drawing and cuts power to everything else plugged in to it when it senses that the PC is no longer drawing power above a certain level. The plan was to just TeamViewer into the PC and issue a manual re-boot if/when the cam went South. But that does not work. I am guessing that a re-boot does not reduce the power consumption long enough to trip the power strip. What I would like to do is somehow have the PC shut itself down and then re-start at least 30 seconds later. The timing does not have to be that exact... just so it actually powers off and stays that way for at least a few seconds.... At 0200 in the morning, nobody's going to care as long as the sys is back up by sunrise. Can anybody point to a way to accomplish this without spending a lot of money on something like a remote-controlled power strip? Timer? I have one of those old motor driven ones that can turn something off then back on 15 minutes later. Electronic versions have their own clock in case the power goes off for a while. |
#3
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Delayed Re-Boot?
(PeteCresswell) wrote:
I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I thought I had it licked when I put in one of those power strips that senses how much the PC is drawing and cuts power to everything else plugged in to it when it senses that the PC is no longer drawing power above a certain level. The plan was to just TeamViewer into the PC and issue a manual re-boot if/when the cam went South. But that does not work. I am guessing that a re-boot does not reduce the power consumption long enough to trip the power strip. What I would like to do is somehow have the PC shut itself down and then re-start at least 30 seconds later. The timing does not have to be that exact... just so it actually powers off and stays that way for at least a few seconds.... At 0200 in the morning, nobody's going to care as long as the sys is back up by sunrise. Can anybody point to a way to accomplish this without spending a lot of money on something like a remote-controlled power strip? How is the IP cam powered ? Is it POE ? A 12V adapter of some sort ? What is the make and model number of the IP cam ? Paul |
#4
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Delayed Re-Boot?
31 bucks too expensive?
http://www.amazon.com/Power-Single-O...=pd_sim_misc_1 On 5/29/2013 4:05 PM, (PeteCresswell) wrote: I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I thought I had it licked when I put in one of those power strips that senses how much the PC is drawing and cuts power to everything else plugged in to it when it senses that the PC is no longer drawing power above a certain level. The plan was to just TeamViewer into the PC and issue a manual re-boot if/when the cam went South. But that does not work. I am guessing that a re-boot does not reduce the power consumption long enough to trip the power strip. What I would like to do is somehow have the PC shut itself down and then re-start at least 30 seconds later. The timing does not have to be that exact... just so it actually powers off and stays that way for at least a few seconds.... At 0200 in the morning, nobody's going to care as long as the sys is back up by sunrise. Can anybody point to a way to accomplish this without spending a lot of money on something like a remote-controlled power strip? |
#5
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Delayed Re-Boot?
On Wed, 29 May 2013 17:05:21 -0400, (PeteCresswell) wrote:
I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I thought I had it licked when I put in one of those power strips that senses how much the PC is drawing and cuts power to everything else plugged in to it when it senses that the PC is no longer drawing power above a certain level. The plan was to just TeamViewer into the PC and issue a manual re-boot if/when the cam went South. But that does not work. I am guessing that a re-boot does not reduce the power consumption long enough to trip the power strip. What I would like to do is somehow have the PC shut itself down and then re-start at least 30 seconds later. The timing does not have to be that exact... just so it actually powers off and stays that way for at least a few seconds.... At 0200 in the morning, nobody's going to care as long as the sys is back up by sunrise. Can anybody point to a way to accomplish this without spending a lot of money on something like a remote-controlled power strip? I don't know how to do this: Power the camera through a device that the computer can shut down. My idea is like a relay that is controlled by a signal over USB. For safety, it could control the 5V (or is it 12V) side of the camera's power, rather than the 120V side. I say this because it seems clear that you are already controlling the computer from afar... -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
#6
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Delayed Re-Boot?
On Wed, 29 May 2013 19:18:43 -0500, Bob I wrote:
31 bucks too expensive? http://www.amazon.com/Power-Single-O...=pd_sim_misc_1 You sure did a great job of making my post redundant :-) Talk about timing... I good a good laugh out of your reply - and you make me wish I had a need for one of those! Maybe I'll just order one and hope I come up with a plan... On 5/29/2013 4:05 PM, (PeteCresswell) wrote: I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I thought I had it licked when I put in one of those power strips that senses how much the PC is drawing and cuts power to everything else plugged in to it when it senses that the PC is no longer drawing power above a certain level. The plan was to just TeamViewer into the PC and issue a manual re-boot if/when the cam went South. But that does not work. I am guessing that a re-boot does not reduce the power consumption long enough to trip the power strip. What I would like to do is somehow have the PC shut itself down and then re-start at least 30 seconds later. The timing does not have to be that exact... just so it actually powers off and stays that way for at least a few seconds.... At 0200 in the morning, nobody's going to care as long as the sys is back up by sunrise. Can anybody point to a way to accomplish this without spending a lot of money on something like a remote-controlled power strip? -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
#7
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Delayed Re-Boot?
On 29/05/2013 5:05 PM, (PeteCresswell) wrote:
I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I'm thinking your choice would be to put the PC into a hibernate state, and then reawaken it with Wake-On-LAN command? The hibernate is nearly identical to a power-off. Yousuf Khan |
#8
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Delayed Re-Boot?
In Yousuf Khan
wrote: On 29/05/2013 5:05 PM, (PeteCresswell) wrote: I have an IP cam hanging on a Windows 7 box about 80 miles from home. Every so often, the cam goes brain-dead and the only way to get it back is to cut power to the cam and then restore power - causing the cam to do a cold start. I'm thinking your choice would be to put the PC into a hibernate state, and then reawaken it with Wake-On-LAN command? The hibernate is nearly identical to a power-off. Then he might just as well do a full shutdown of the PC. He'd trade the small additional time it takes to boot compared to recovery from hibernation with the advantage of cleaning out the cobwebs that accumulate in a machine that's been running too long without being rebooted. Maybe Windows 7 doesn't suffer from this the way XP did, but I wouldn't bet on it. On the other hand, from the description I'd bet that this requires "Wake On WAN" rather than "Wake on LAN," since the PC sounds like it's probably on another network segment from the poster's other PCs. The process for Wake on WAN is slightly different from Wake On LAN. -- St. Paul, MN |
#9
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Delayed Re-Boot?
Per Paul in Houston TX:
Timer? I have one of those old motor driven ones that can turn something off then back on 15 minutes later. Electronic versions have their own clock in case the power goes off for a while. That was going to be my fallback position: timer that cycles power once every 24 hours. But this thing is in somebody's home office and all the timers I've used make some noise... so I was avoiding it. ALso, the brass ring is to be able to do it on command - although that's probably far from necessary. -- Pete Cresswell |
#10
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Delayed Re-Boot?
Per Paul:
How is the IP cam powered ? Is it POE ? A 12V adapter of some sort ? What is the make and model number of the IP cam ? ACTi KCM-5311. POE. Great cam so far. No night vision to speak of, but we only use it during the day. 32x zoom gets used continually. ExtremeSurfCam.DynDNS.org:8080 -- Pete Cresswell |
#11
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Delayed Re-Boot?
Per Bob I:
31 bucks too expensive? http://www.amazon.com/Power-Single-O...=pd_sim_misc_1 I think we may have a winner!! Thanks. -- Pete Cresswell |
#12
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Delayed Re-Boot?
On 5/30/2013 7:08 PM, (PeteCresswell) wrote: Per Bob I: 31 bucks too expensive? http://www.amazon.com/Power-Single-O...=pd_sim_misc_1 I think we may have a winner!! Thanks. Welcome! |
#13
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Delayed Re-Boot?
On 5/29/2013 7:27 PM, Gene E. Bloch wrote: On Wed, 29 May 2013 19:18:43 -0500, Bob I wrote: 31 bucks too expensive? http://www.amazon.com/Power-Single-O...=pd_sim_misc_1 You sure did a great job of making my post redundant :-) Talk about timing... I good a good laugh out of your reply - and you make me wish I had a need for one of those! Maybe I'll just order one and hope I come up with a plan... These are more fun but overkill for Pete, but maybe what you could use. http://www.x10.com/products/x10_ck11a.htm |
#14
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Delayed Re-Boot?
(PeteCresswell) wrote:
Per Paul in Houston TX: Timer? I have one of those old motor driven ones that can turn something off then back on 15 minutes later. Electronic versions have their own clock in case the power goes off for a while. That was going to be my fallback position: timer that cycles power once every 24 hours. But this thing is in somebody's home office and all the timers I've used make some noise... so I was avoiding it. ALso, the brass ring is to be able to do it on command - although that's probably far from necessary. The digital electronic ones should be silent unless they have a relay. I don't have one so can't verify. We use cheap plug in timers in some of the computer equipment that locks up during lightning storms to reboot them every 24 hours. |
#15
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Delayed Re-Boot?
(PeteCresswell) wrote:
Per Paul: How is the IP cam powered ? Is it POE ? A 12V adapter of some sort ? What is the make and model number of the IP cam ? ACTi KCM-5311. POE. Great cam so far. No night vision to speak of, but we only use it during the day. 32x zoom gets used continually. ExtremeSurfCam.DynDNS.org:8080 Is there such a thing as "managed POE" ? If so, you might be able to turn POE on and off on an individual port of the switch. But that would cost a fortune. The USB to AC outlet switch is likely cheaper. Paul |
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