For Subscribers

TeleEye 324 Internet audio/video for grown-ups

By J. W. Dysart

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Compared to Leadtek's TeleEye 324 ($350),conventional sub-$100 Internet video cameras seem like quaint toys.TeleEye's secret: Instead of dealing with the service vagariesof the Internet, it's designed to transmit over traditionalphone lines. The result: an audio/video signal that is clearer,steadier and eminently more enjoyable. Key features include theability to display on a TV or PC monitor, afull-screen/quarter-screen display option, and the ability toconnect with anyone using a H.324 videophone.

J.W. Dysart, asoftware analyst and Internet business consultant, has written formore than 40 publications, including The New York Timesand The Financial Times of London. He is also a columnistfor our sister publication, Entrepreneur's Start-Ups.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business News

'Pre-Boarding Scam': Customers Furious at Southwest Airlines After 20 Passengers Ask For Wheelchair Assistance to Board

A viral tweet is slamming the airline's wheelchair policy for boarding and disembarking.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Leadership

My Business Hit $1 Million — Then a $46,000 Mistake Exposed the Biggest Bottleneck to Explosive Growth

How a costly mistake forced me to confront the real barrier to scaling and the changes that unlocked explosive growth beyond $1 million.

Business News

Anthropic Is Now One of the Most Valuable Startups of All Time: 'Exponential Growth'

In a new funding round earlier this week, AI startup Anthropic raised $13 billion at a $183 billion valuation.

Growing a Business

My Profitable Company Is Worthless to Investors — Here's Why That Works in My Favor

My business is profitable, stable and 25 years strong — but it has no transferable value. Here's why some successful companies just aren't built to sell and why that's not always a problem.