Are you afraid that you might miss something
important? With a spy camera carefully concealed on your body, you can
enter a room and observe with your eyes, and then look over everything
else later, with the benefit of slow motion added in. A spy camera of
this sort can come in very handy, and it is easy to use and virtually
undetectable.
A spy camera that is placed on your body for
surveillance purposes makes use of a transmitter that sends the images
it captures back to a recorder of some sort. This can be a VCR or DVD,
but increasingly sophisticated technology allows it to be sent to
computers. This means that you can set your computer to record the
images from your camera, and then you can look over them later,
focusing on different parts of the images, and seeing things that maybe
you failed to see the first time with the naked eye.
There are different ways that a spy camera can be
hidden on your body. Usually they look like regular objects. For
instance, a camera can be hidden in a button, baseball cap, or a pair
of sunglasses. They can even be in common objects that someone might
carry, such as a pen, pager, cigarette pack, lighter, or book bag. Some
of them are in the form of bore scopes that also serve the same
purpose. In any case, the point of a spy camera is to be able to take
images without others knowing what you are doing.
In addition to a spy camera hidden on your body,
you might find it useful to wear a small listening device. This will
only serve to augment the visuals you capture, and can even help you
add context to what you are seeing. Additionally, it gives you the
ability to listen again for things that you might have missed during
your initial surveillance.
When you perform surveillance, it is important to
make sure that all your bases are covered. This means that you should
have a backup to your own eyes and ears. This is possible with a small
listening device and a body worn spy camera.
(c) 2005 Copyright www.spyassociates.com.
This article is about: Spy Camera.
This article was posted on October 10,
2005