If you are in the market for a mini spy camera you might be interested in a new piece of hardware which is now available from Adafruit and is capable of capturing photographs with a resolution of 1280 x 960 pixels or video footage at a resolution of 720 x 480 pixels.
The Adafruit website explains a little more about the new mini spy camera which is now available from their online store priced at $12.50 and comes complete with trigger.
Is your house haunted? Or, rather, are you convinced that your house is haunted but have never been able to prove it since you’ve never had a camera small enough that the ghosts wouldn’t notice it? Or maybe you want to put a camera on your cat to see what she’s up to during the day. Or make a ‘life capture’ camera that takes a time-lapse of your day. A tiny little camera is whatcha need!
This Mini Spy Camera is smaller than a thumbnail with a high enough resolution to see people, or ghosts, or whatever it is you’re looking for. It’s fairly high resolution (720p video and 1280p photo) module, with a driver board that is about 1 square inch in size, with a microSD card holder. The image module is about the size of a cell phone camera – the body being just 6.2mm x 6.2mm – and has a stick-on back so it’s easy to mount in a doorbell or behind a teddy bear’s eye (might as well be creative). There’s a power LED and an ‘activity’ LED that lets you know what its doing.
We don’t have a real datasheet, we think these are just ‘guts’ of some low cost keychain camera. However, it’s not too hard to use. Connect the red wire to 3.7V-5VDC and the black wire to ground. Then use the white wire to control the camera. When touched to ground for under half a second, the camera will take a photo and stick it in a PHOTO folder on the SD card, numbered from PIC000.jpg up to PIC999.jpg. The red LED will blink briefly. When the trigger wire is touched for over a half second, it will start taking a video clip with audio from the mini microphone. The LED will stay on during the entire recording. Touch it again for half a second+ to stop.
What we like about this module is it’s simplicity and good quality. Best of all, there’s no overlay text like most other cheap modules. It’s really easy to make a micro-timelapse device (see the video above for a timelapse we made with a simple Arduino pulsing the trigger pin every 30 seconds), or make little videos from the point of view of your robot! Note that there is a microphone but the audio quality is a little buzzy, it works but we’re not going to replace our cellphone camera here.
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