Connect with us

CBS News

Keep an eye on your home with these Blink video doorbells and outdoor camera deals

Avatar

Published

on


Blink Video Doorbell

Amazon


Fall is here, and that can mean something potentially spookier than Halloween: The threat of home invaders. Now that the seasons are changing and fall travel is in the offing, you might want to consider grabbing a video doorbell or security camera

One great option is a Blink home security device to help keep your home, family and important items safe. The Amazon brand offers indoor and outdoor cameras as well as video doorbells that you can mix and match to work with your home and budget. No matter which equipment you use, they all come equipped with night vision, a live video feed and motion alerts that go straight to your smartphone so you can see what’s happening at home or on the go.

Tap the button below to see all the current Blink deals at Amazon and check out our top Blink deal picks and bundles. 


Blink video doorbell and outside camera bundle: $160 

Blink Video Doorbell + 1 Outdoor 4 smart security camera

Amazon


The Blink video doorbell is a great option to help protect your home (and your packages) by using your smartphone. It can even be used in tandem with other easy-to-install home security cameras from Blink for additional coverage. 

This bundle deal serves up the bestselling Blink video doorbell and one Blink outdoor video camera for comprehensive coverage outside your home. This way, you can keep track of everything that goes bump in the night.

Even if you leave home, you can keep tabs on what’s going on. Plus, you can answer your door regardless of where you are, be instantly alerted if the doorbell picks up any motion near your door, and even communicate with people via the app’s two-way comms system. 

Need to save footage? You’ll get 1080p resolution recordings with both the doorbell camera and a separate outdoor camera, so nothing will go unseen if you need to be extra vigilant. 


Blink Mini cameras (set of three): $70 (12% off)

Blink Mini set of 3

Amazon


The Blink Mini is a compact version of the Blink camera, and it’s small but quite mighty. 

Unlike the larger, battery-powered versions, the Mini needs to be plugged in, but that doesn’t mean it skimps on functionality. You’ll still be able to view your surroundings with live video as well as two-way audio and night vision.  

The Mini can also chime and provide alerts from the Blink video doorbell if you have one. That makes it a great companion option to go with your main camera setup or if you have larger areas in your home that need satellite cameras. 

Right now, you can get this set of three Blink Mini cameras for 14% off, which makes them just $70. 


Blink Outdoor (4th generation) 5-camera bundle: $400

Blink outdoor bundle

Amazon


Secure your home with this set of five Blink Outdoor cameras at a significant discount. You get plenty of cameras to post up across a large home and beyond, so you don’t have to deal with as many blind spots. 

The Blink Outdoor is a water-resistant security camera designed to monitor the outside of your home. It features two-way audio, motion detection and a live video stream. It’s also battery-operated and has a two-year battery life, so you don’t have to worry about finding somewhere to power each camera.

You can get all five cameras right now for $400. If you have a large home and need additional coverage for every nook and cranny of your property, this is an excellent deal.


Blink whole home bundle: $190

Blink Whole Home Bundle

Amazon


Secure a bundle with everything you need to keep a watchful eye over your home: the Blink video doorbell, Outdoor 4, Mini, and Sync Module 2.

Set up the Blink video doorbell to interact with whoever is at your door, and set up the Outdoor 4 to catch everything that happens beyond your front porch. You can set up a satellite camera view with the Mini, and use the Sync Module 2 to control everything from one central hub.

This bundle is available right now for $190. If you’re not sure which devices to buy, start with this package for whole-home protection and you’ll be doing just fine. 


Blink video doorbell and Sync Module 2: $70

Blink Video Doorbell and Sync Module 2

Amazon


Don’t need anything complicated? Get a wireless Blink video doorbell bundled with a Sync Module 2 and you’ll be set to see anything that happens outside your door, night or day.

See who’s at your door (and answer if you want to) anytime using your smartphone with this crystal clear, battery-powered camera. It offers custom alerts, a variety of privacy settings, and other convenient options.

Plus, the Sync Module 2 connects to your Wi-Fi network to handle your doorbell’s activity (and up to 10 if you have them). That means you can save clips from your doorbell without needing an additional subscription — and handle multiple devices if you need to.

You can get this bundle for just $70. 




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Whooping cough wave now worst in almost a decade amid back-to-school surge

Avatar

Published

on


South Jersey family shares scary experience with whooping cough


South Jersey family shares scary experience with whooping cough

02:12

This year’s resurgence of whooping cough cases has now accelerated to the fastest pace on record in nearly a decade, according to figures published Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as pertussis infections are now again climbing around the country during the back-to-school season.

A total of 291 cases were reported for the week ending on Sept. 14, the CDC says. New York has reported the most cases this week of any state, with 44 infections. Ohio, Pennsylvania and Oklahoma have also reported at least 38 cases each.

This now marks the most infections of the bacteria Bordatella pertussis reported to the CDC in a single week since 2015, when the country was coming off a resurgence of whooping cough cases that had peaked the year before.

Whooping cough disease, caused by the pertussis bacteria, typically starts around a week after people are first exposed to another contagious person. Symptoms can last for weeks to months, typically with the disease’s infamous “whooping” as patients struggle to breathe after facing a burst of coughs.

So far this year, 14,569 cases have been reported to the agency, more than four times higher than the number of infections reported by this time last year. 

Cases are also higher than the more than 10,000 cases that were reported by this time in 2019, before COVID-19 pandemic measures also caused plummeting cases of pertussis and other infections that spread through the air.

The need for better whooping cough vaccines

While unvaccinated young children and newborns delivered by unvaccinated moms remain at the highest risk of infection and severe disease from whooping cough, federal health officials have warned for months that the U.S. was likely to see a resurgence of breakthrough infections in older children and adults.

Pertussis cases have largely grown over the past few decades, after the U.S. and other high-income countries switched to pertussis vaccines after the 1970s that triggered fewer side effects but also are less effective at guarding against disease and spread.

Officials in Pennsylvania, which has seen one of the country’s largest pertussis outbreaks this year, say that many outbreaks have been fueled by high school students.

“Cases and outbreaks have continued throughout the summer even though most schools were closed,” the department said in an alert to doctors in the state this month, urging doctors to prepare for the possibility of a “continued increase” as schools resumed.

In New York, 40% of their cases this year outside of New York City have been in teens ages 15 to 19 years old, according to figures the state’s health department shared with CBS News. 

“[W]e are not seeing evidence of a specific cluster or location or event. Cases have been identified all over the state and among children and adolescents in various settings,” a spokesperson for the New York State Department of Health said.

In Oklahoma, which has seen one of the steepest increases in cases of any state over recent weeks, cases have been seen in people as old as 86 years old. The median age of cases is 9 years old, the health department said.

“Since Jan. 1, 2024, there have been 162 cases of whooping cough in Oklahoma, which is the highest number of cases since 2017 when 207 cases were reported,” Erica Rankin-Riley, a spokesperson for the Oklahoma State Department of Health, told CBS News.

Talks on new trials

The resurgence comes as the Food and Drug Administration is now weighing the prospect of human challenge trials – studies intentionally infecting vaccinated volunteers with the bacteria – in the hopes of accelerating the development of more effective shots to fend off the bacteria.

A panel of the FDA’s advisers are scheduled to meet Friday to discuss the trials, which could lead to vetting “new pertussis vaccines for booster vaccination of adults.”

The CDC currently recommends a number of pertussis shots for children and adults, including boosters of the Tdap vaccine – which contains antigens designed to protect against pertussis – for all adults every 10 years. 

Around 39% of adults have gotten a pertussis booster in the last 10 years, CDC survey data from 2022 suggests.

Other factors may also be contributing to rising cases, the FDA said, like mutations in circulating pertussis strains and the “rapid waning” of immunity.

The current generation of “acellular pertussis” vaccines are still believed to “provide a significant public health benefit by preventing disease,” the FDA said in briefing documents published ahead of the meeting.

“Despite the resurgence of pertussis, current rates of disease are very low relative to the rates reported during the pre-vaccine era,” agency officials wrote.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

These major employers are making workers return to the office

Avatar

Published

on


Amazon sent shockwaves through its ranks — and corporate America — Monday when CEO Andrew Jassy told workers they will be expected to report to the office five days a week starting in January. 

The decision represents one of the most stringent return to office policies from a major corporation since the pandemic, when offices were suddenly shuttered and many employees shifted to remote work. Amazon’s move is also unusual for a business in the tech industry, which has largely embraced remote and hybrid work arrangements. 

Under the company’s current mandate, Amazon workers have been reporting to their physical offices three days a week, although that will expire by the beginning of next year. While advocates of in-office work argue that showing up in person helps foster collaboration and feelings of connectedness, skeptics say Amazon could be imposing the mandate to reduce headcount, as some employees may search for more flexible jobs and depart, without having to lay off workers. 

For his part, Jassy said the move is designed to improve company culture. But Amazon workers are reportedly grousing on internal forums about the move. 

Amazon isn’t alone in reining in remote work. Here are a few of the major employers that have summoned workers back to the office. 

Amazon

CEO Andrew Jassy said the back-to-the-office decision is based on his observation that collaborating and brainstorming work better when people are together in the office.

To foster a culture of collaboration, “we’ve decided that we’re going to return to being in the office the way we were before the onset of COVID,” Jassy said in a memo to employees posted on Amazon’s website. “When we look back over the last five years, we continue to believe that the advantages of being together in the office are significant.”

Disney 

Disney mandates that employees work in the office four days a week, typically Monday to Thursday. 

“[I]n a creative business like ours, nothing can replace the ability to connect, observe and create with peers that comes from being physically together, nor the opportunity to grow professionally by learning from leaders and mentors,” CEO Bob Iger said in a 2023 memo to employees. 

JPMorgan

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is a staunch advocate of in-person work, and once blasted remote work as a policy that “does not work for younger people. It doesn’t work for those who want to hustle,” he said at a business forum. He was among the first leaders to summon employees back to the workplace. 

As of April 2023, workers have been reporting to JPMorgan offices at least three times a week. The company is reportedly tracking attendance, too. 

Starbucks

While the coffee giant’s new CEO Brian Niccol will commute to Starbucks’ Seattle headquarters from his Newport Beach, California residence, most other workers likely live in closer proximity to their offices, given that they must be at their desks three days a week. 

Niccol is not exempt from following the mandate, according to the company. 

X owner Elon Musk has consistently opposed remote work, saying he believes workers are more productive when working from a corporate office. 

In 2022, he said all X workers would be expected to report to the office on a full-time basis, and that he would interpret a failure to show up as a resignation from the company. 

Zoom

Even pandemic icon Zoom, one of the companies that benefitted the most from remote work, last summer told workers who live near a company office to report to their desks at least two times a week, a company spokesperson told CBS MoneyWatch. 

The mandate applies to its roughly 7,400 workers who live near a Zoom office, the videoconferencing platform said at the time. 



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

White House hasn’t weighed in on Iran hacking Trump campaign

Avatar

Published

on


White House hasn’t weighed in on Iran hacking Trump campaign – CBS News


Watch CBS News



The White House has not weighed in on reports of Iran hacking the Trump campaign for sensitive information that apparently was offered to President Biden’s campaign in the summer. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe reports.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.