Amazon Cloud Cam review: Amazon's in-home sentry is a great buy

Amazon (AMZN) has slowly taken over large chunks of my life thanks to its delivery service, Prime Video and the Echo Show sitting on my nightstand. And now the e-commerce giant has become my personal in-home sentry thanks to its $119 Cloud Cam.

A web-connected security camera, Cloud Cam has some stiff competition in Google parent company Alphabet’s (GOOG, GOOGL) own $199 Nest Cam Indoor. But with a significant price advantage and a solid set of features, the Cloud Cam makes a compelling case to hire Amazon as your own watchdog.

The setup

Setting up the Cloud Cam is incredibly easy. Simply position the camera facing an area you want to monitor, likely near a door or windows, and plug it in. Amazon includes mounting screws and drywall anchors if you prefer to screw the camera into your wall.

Once the camera is set up, download the Cloud Cam app for your iPhone or Android device, log in with your Amazon account and you’re set. The app will ask you to select the Wi-Fi network you’d like to connect the camera to and what you’d like to name it to differentiate multiple cameras from each other.

And that’s essentially it. I was genuinely surprised with how smooth the entire setup process went.

Spying … on my cats

The minute I setup the Cloud Cam, I knew I was going to use it to see what my cats do all day when I’m not home. Spoiler alert: They sleep. A lot.

The Cloud Cam’s interface is incredibly straightforward. You’ve got one large box that shows you a live feed from your camera. In the bottom right corner of that box is a microphone that lets you speak with whomever, or whatever, is in your home.

The Cloud Cam is an easy way to spy on your pets from the office.
The Cloud Cam is an easy way to spy on your pets from the office.

Below the video box is a list of the various clips the Cam’s motion detector has recorded. See, unlike the Nest Cam Indoor, which captures images when motion is detected, Amazon’s Cloud Cam captures short video clips.

You can replay up to 24 hours worth of those clips with Amazon’s free Cloud Cam account. If you want to save more, you’ll have to sign up for a subscription.

Beyond that, Amazon lets you adjust a number of settings in the app including whether the camera is on or off, its name and how often you want to receive motion notification updates.

You can enable location tracking in the Cloud Cam app to automatically determine when your phone and the camera are at the same location and switch the camera off.

Sign up for one of Amazon’s monthly plans and you’ll also be able to get notifications for whether movement is from a person or your pet and set up zones that you want to exclude from the motion detector’s sensors for things like ceiling fans.