It's now been over four months since I purchased my simple 4 wireless camera security system to monitor the exterior of my home since there have been a number of breakins and thefts in my neighborhood.
Things that I have learned.
1. if you live in a stucco house you will probably NEVER get this system to work correctly no matter how small the home or how close the sensors are to your main receiver.
2. if you try to find anything on the x10 website - be prepared to never find what you need. The site is basically useless unless you want to buy something, and even then finding what you want specifically is an effort in frustration.
3. if you call x10 tech support, be prepared to get someone different every time and have each one give you conflicting information as to what you need or need to do. Basically what they are there for is to SELL YOU SOMETHING ELSE.
4. the forums are a good source of info, many members have given me helpful information, but be prepared to get sent down myriads of rabbit trails if you try and figure out something on your own, and many of those rabbit trails are useless, or lead nowhere, or conflict with other rabbit trail information, or the members disagree with each other as to a solution, or HINT at possible solutions elsewhere in the forums but rarely give you the specifics of what you need to search for, or worst of all - ASSUME THAT YOU HAVE A DEGREE IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING and know what in the heck that they are talking about
5. be prepared to have to get out a soldering iron and break open hardware and void any warrenties - but also be prepared to have very vauge descriptions and sometimes fuzzy photos of what you need to do and the change actually not make much difference.
6. be prepared to have to "upgrade" to better software and or components, but also be prepared for that software to crash every single day, multiple times a day (which makes it USELESS for security monitoring), and be prepared for the new components to give you absolutely NO CLUE as to if they are working or not, since they don't act any different and you don't get any better results than the original software and be prepared for very little IF ANY documentation on the software.
7. be prepared to get sent via rabbit trails to other third party vendors for possible fixes via expensive third party hardware, but only have vague discriptions of what this hardware does, and no indication of how it actually might help you or how to integrate these third party parts in to what you already own.
8. be prepared for the email functions to NEVER, EVER WORK even when you are specifically asked to send a manual email invitation to someone else to receive the notification emails.
9. unless you have electrical outlets every few feet to constantly move modules to find the best pace for them - then you are probably SOL in getting this system to work because you are going to run out of places to put the modules
10. be prepared to spend hours and hours "testing" to find the best place to plug in modules or what settings to use or where to put your main CPU to hook them to (for the software), but also be prepared to NEVER be able to get ANY place that every function will work. At least one piece of the required software or hardware will not work correctly in every configuration and that can also change BECAUSE OF THe WEATHER where something that was working will quit working if it rains.
So basically I have a nice laptop that I can watch video of one are of my home on occasionally while I'm actually at home, but as a security system it is USELESS.