
Weather Newslinks - Page: 15
| | Sydney Morning Herald - 29 Oct (Sydney Morning Herald)Three days of severe weather could thwart Matthew Renshaw’s golden chance to prove he warranted a Test comeback. Read...Newslink ©2026 to Sydney Morning Herald |  |
|  | | | PC World - 29 Oct (PC World)Keep the holiday spirit going all year round with help from GE Lighting’s new permanent outdoor lights, which are designed to weather the elements and work with both Alexa and Google Home.
Savant-owned GE Lighting is also unwrapping an updated version of its colored-enabled outdoor light strips, which now boast more flexible tubing that should allow for more creative designs.
Available now for $142.99, GE Lighting’s permanent outdoor lights—known officially as the Cync Dynamic Effects Outdoor Smart Eave Lights—come in a 100-foot string, with a total of 60 lights embedded onto square-shaped pucks that can be permanently screwed into place or affixed with the included 3M adhesive tape.
GE Lighting’s Smart Eave Lights come in a 100-foot string, with a total of 60 lights embedded onto square-shaped pucks.Savant
Arriving with an IP65 weatherization rating (meaning they’re dust-tight and can withstand jet of water sprayed from any direction), the Smart Eave Lights can be cut to fit, and they’re also extendable to up to 150 feet.
Meanwhile, GE Lighting’s revamped Dynamic Effects Outdoor Smart Light Strip comes in two lengths: 16 feet for $79.99 (Amazon appears to be selling the 16-foot version for half-off right now), and 32 feet for $129.99.
GE Lighting says the new, more flexible light strip is now better suited to “line pathways and decks,” as well as “bend into shape-creating festive lawn and wall art.”
Like the permanent outdoor lights, the Dynamic Effects Outdoor Smart Light Strip can be cut to fit, and its weatherproof design means it can stay outdoors during inclement weather. (GE Lighting didn’t supply specifics about the light strip’s IP rating.)
Both the Cync Dynamic Effects Outdoor Smart Eave Lights and the Dynamic Effects Outdoor Smart Light Strip can glow in up to 16 million different colors as well as white-color temperatures ranging from a warm 2,000 Kelvin to a cool 7,000K, while the permanent outdoor lights have a top brightness of 2,700 lumens.
GE Lighting’s updated outdoor light strip boasts a more flexible design, making it easier to bend the strip into creative shapes.Savant
The lights connect directly to 2.4GHz Wi-Fi networks and can be controlled with GE Lighting’s Cync app, which lets you set schedules, adjust the brightness, or select different multicolor animations (or create your own). You can even make the lights sync with nearby music sources, perfect for festive color light shows that pulse to the beat.
Both of the new GE Lighting products work with Amazon Alexa and Google Home, meaning you can control the lights with voice commands. That said, GE Lighting makes no mention of Matter, the new smart home standard that acts as the glue between the Alexa, Google Home, Apple HomeKit, and Samsung SmartThings ecosystems.
This article is part of TechHive’s in-depth coverage of the best smart lights. Read...Newslink ©2026 to PC World |  |
|  | | | RadioNZ - 28 Oct (RadioNZ) PowerNet says 3900 customers are without power in Southland and 1700 in South Otago. Read...Newslink ©2026 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | | Stuff.co.nz - 28 Oct (Stuff.co.nz) A ridge of high pressure is set to take hold over the North Island from Wednesday. Read...Newslink ©2026 to Stuff.co.nz |  |
|  | | | RadioNZ - 28 Oct (RadioNZ) The rest of the week`s weather forecast should bring some relief for parts of the country. Read...Newslink ©2026 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | | RadioNZ - 28 Oct (RadioNZ) Tens of thousands who lost power overnight in heavy wind are gradually getting supplies restored. Read...Newslink ©2026 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | | Stuff.co.nz - 28 Oct (Stuff.co.nz) A raft of weather alerts are in place for Tuesday as a stormy weather system passes over the country. Read...Newslink ©2026 to Stuff.co.nz |  |
|  | | | PC World - 28 Oct (PC World)At a glanceExpert`s Rating
Pros
Sun-tracking solar panel extends battery life
Radar-assisted motion detection reduces false alerts
Subscription-free local storage
Cons
Limited to two motion-detection and two privacy zones
No cloud backup or NVR option
Our Verdict
If you can mount it where it can harvest a steady supply of sunlight, the Baseus Security S2 Outdoor Camera 4K’s tracking solar panel makes it one of the few outdoor cameras that can run truly unattended, capturing crisp 4K-resolution video as a bonus.
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For many households, outdoor cameras are the front line of home security. The devices watch over driveways, porches, and backyards, catching activity that doorbell cameras often miss. Baseus enters this space with two solar-powered models: the S1 Lite, a budget option with 2K resolution that I reviewed in September, and the higher-end model S2 reviewed here, which is aimed at buyers who want more muscle–including 4K resolution.
The Baseus Security S2 Outdoor Camera 4K review is the company’s flagship security camera, offering sharper video, smarter motion detection, and an unusual solar panel that tracks the position of the sun to keep its battery topped up around the clock.
Design and features
The S2 is bigger and heavier than its S1 Lite sibling, measuring 6.5 × 2.8 × 3.0 inches and weighing just over a pound. The housing is made of polycarbonate with a clean white finish, and the solar surface is attached to its top (it’s not integrated into the camera body itself, as we’ve seen on some competing cameras). Baseus says the panel is coated with ETFE (Ethylene Tetrafluoroethylene), a durable fluoropolymer that boosts UV transmission, so the panel pulls in more sunlight. The camera boasts an IP67 weatherization rating—meaning it’s completely dust-tight and that it can withstand immersion in water for up 30 minutes (don’t miss our IP code decoder to learn more about ingress-protection codes). Baseus the camera has an operating temperature range of -4 degrees Fahrenheit to 122 degrees F (-20 to 50 C), making it durable enough for year-round outdoor use.
Its lens and 8-megapixel image sensor capture video in 4K Ultra HD resolution (3840 x 2160 pixels). Its 145-degree field of view is wide enough to cover a driveway or large portion of a yard, and there’s 8x digital zoom for closer inspection. Baseus claims you can expect usable detail out to about 12 meters (39 feet). In the dark, its built-in spotlight helps deliver full-color night vision, while its black-and-white night vision extends visibility even farther.
The Baseus S2’s solar panel rotates to track the sun so the battery stays charge around the clock.Michael Ansaldo/Foundry
Where most budget cameras rely solely on passive infrared (PIR) sensors for motion detection, the Baseus S2 combines PIR with radar detection. Baseus says this dual system cuts false alerts by as much as 99 percent. On top of that, the camera’s onboard AI can distinguish between people, vehicles, pets; there’s facial recognition, too.
The camera is powered by a 7,800 mAh battery that’s continually recharged (assuming there’s sufficient sunlight) by an attached solar panel. This Baseus model differs from similarly equipped cameras in that the panel will rotate up to 40 degrees to either side of its barrel-shaped enclosure to follow the sun as it moves across the day. Baseus says this nearly doubles its charging efficiency compared to a fixed panel.
Video recordings are stored locally on a microSD card in capacities up to 512GB, so there are no subscriptions to worry about. Baseus doesn’t even offer an optional service for storing video in the cloud, but you’ll need to provide your own microSD card. Baseus uses AES + RSA encryption to keep these recordings secure.
The Baseus S2 is compatible with both Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant.
Setup and performance
You’ll need the Baseus Security app to set up the S2. The app will walk you through adding the camera to your Wi-Fi network in just a couple of minutes, and it will then help you find the optimal installation location by displaying signal strength before you mount it. The cameras comes with the necessary screws, but you’ll need to provide the screwdriver or a drill.
The camera stores its video recordings on a user-provided microSD card, which slots into the underside.Michael Ansaldo/Foundry
Daytime video is crisp, with true 4K resolution bringing out details that often blur at lower resolutions. The 145-degree field of view was more than enough to cover the front gate to my yard. With spotlight motion detection enabled, the spotlight would kick on when the camera detected activity, capturing color video provided there was at least some ambient lighting. Switch to standard black-and-white night vision and you still get clear, detailed video that’s good enough to make out faces and movement, even in near-total darkness.
The dual PIR and radar system kept motion notifications manageable in my testing. The onboard AI did a solid job of distinguishing between people, vehicles, and animals, and you can further stem the alert tide by enabling activity and privacy zones where motion will be ignored, although you’re limited to two of each.
The Baseus Security S2 Outdoor Camera 4K’s solar panel is its standout feature. I was fortunate to have sunny conditions during my testing period, which enabled the battery to support round-the-clock operation. When the weather is less accommodating, you can take the camera down—it unscrews easily from its mount—and charge it with a user-provided AC adapter and the USB-A to USB-C cable you’ll find in the box.
The Baseus Security app provide camera controls and mode presets—that make it easy to change how the S2 behaves.
Michael Ansaldo/Foundry
The Baseus Security app is responsive and well laid out. Live view and replay modes load quickly, and you can toggle the spotlight, talk through the camera, or adjust notifications with a couple of taps. You also get mode presets—Home, Away, Schedule, and Disarmed—that make it easy to change how the camera behaves, or you can create your own custom modes if those don’t fit. Drawing activity and privacy zones is straightforward, and a sensitivity slider makes it easy to fine-tune alerts.
Should you buy the Baseus Security S2 Outdoor Camera 4K?
At $199.99 (discounted to $129.99 on the Baseus site and just $99.98 at Amazon at the time of this review), the Baseus S2 is priced in the midrange, but it offers more than you usually get at those prices. The sun-tracking solar panel is the most obvious differentiator, but its 4K video resolution, radar-assisted motion detection, and subscription-free local storage, are all pretty appealing. All that said, it’s worth remembering that with no backup solution for recorded video (there’s no cloud service, and the camera doesn’t support ONVIF or any of the other protocols that would make it feasible to store its video recordings on a NAS box or NVR (network video recorder), you will lose any forensic evidence if a burglar steals the camera.
If you can give the panel steady sunlight, the S2 is an appealing choice for anyone who wants sharp footage and reliable detection without another monthly bill. Read...Newslink ©2026 to PC World |  |
|  | | | RadioNZ - 27 Oct (RadioNZ) A powerful Tasman Sea storm is continuing to lash much of the country, bringing heavy rain, strong winds and snow. Read...Newslink ©2026 to RadioNZ |  |
|  | | | RadioNZ - 26 Oct (RadioNZ) It is likely the state of emergency in Southland and Clutha will remain in place into next week, officials say. Read...Newslink ©2026 to RadioNZ |  |
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