- Reolink Trapleflex Floodlight Wifi is a new outdoor security chamber
- You can tame and lean to cover 360 degrees, and it has two extravagant lazy
- You can store images locally and use a search with AI to find subjects
Reolink, which is behind some of the best home security cameras that we have tried here in Techradar, has launched a new outdoor security camera with dual lenses, dual reflectors and (perhaps the most impressive) a monthly subscription is not needed to save and see its recordings.
The Wi -Fi Wi -Fi Chamber of Reolink Trackflex Floodlight not only has two lenses, but 360 degrees can panoramic for a 360 degree coverage to minimize potential blind spots. The camera uses AI to identify and track people and animals, as well as reduce false alerts that can be frustrating and cause unnecessary battery drainage.
Your videos are saved on an SD card, and you can use a search to AI to find specific moments instead of scrubbing through recording hours. For example, I could look for ‘white truck’ or ‘woman with blue shirt’ to identify a moment using a natural language.
It looks a lot like the intelligent search with AI that began to be implemented for ring security cameras and video bells in March, but unlike Ring, Reolink will not enclose the function behind a payment wall.
If you want to store your videos outside the site for additional tranquility, you can register in the reolink cloud service, which saves the company’s servers, but it is not essential. The camera is compatible with SD cards up to 512 GB, and can store even more video in a hub home reolink or a NAS device.
Detect the difference
The two rooms of the camera have a maximum shine of 3,000 lumens (compared to 2,000 lumens for the wiring flood cam ring), and the adjustable color temperature so that it can create a warm welcome shine that is activated in a schedule, or powerful white light that is triggered by the movement to illuminate and deter the possible atrespientes.
It sounds impressive, and I hope to check it soon to PakGazette, but Reolink is not the only company that competes for a space on its walls. The Swann Maxranger4K (which obtained four stars in our review, also registers in 4K, keeps its images locally so you do not have to pay the cloud storage and, unlike the Reolink camera, it has a solar panel to reduce the need to recharge.
As the name implies, the Maxranger4K has a particularly long wireless range so that it can place cameras in a wide area, but lack the bread and tile function of the Reolink Trackflex.
What will be more practical for your home? Stay with Techradar for a complete comparison of the two very soon.