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CompanyCaplan Law GroupCapWest MortgageCar. comCardinal Financial Company, LPCardinal Mortgage CardNet, LLC. CarFinance. comCarnegie Mortgage, LLC dba Ovation Home LoansCarolina BankersCarrington Mortgage Services, LLCCashCall, Inc. Castle and Cooke MortgageCastle FinancialCastle Point MortgageCastleview Home LoansCatalyst Lending, Inc. Cauldwell TrustCavalier Mortgage Group, LLCCBC National BankCedar
Mill MortgageCendera Funding, Inc.
With Frontpoint,you'renot required to have a landline phone, an internet connection, or any phone at all. The alarms from the Frontpoint control panel reach their monitoring center over a secure cellular network. Installing the Frontpoint home security system is very easy. You may have heard horror stories about other home security systems, where a technician has to visit the home, drill holes in the walls, and hard wire the system. Frontpoint heard these stories too so they developed a pre programmed, out of the box, do it yourself solution that you can set up in as little as 30 minutes. The Frontpointhomesecurity components connect
instantly to their Control Panel over a wireless frequency, which makes installation a snap.

Entry level systems usually
include some door and window sensors, a motion detector, and a hub that communicates with these devices using one or more wireless protocols such as Wi Fi, Z Wave, Zigbee, or a proprietary mesh network. You can add extra door, motion, and window sensors to provide coverage for your entire house and build a comprehensive system that includes door locks, garage door openers, indoor and outdoor surveillance cameras, lights, sirens, smoke/CO detectors, water sensors, and more. A word about wireless protocols: In a perfect world, all home security components would use the same wireless standard to communicate with the main hub, but factors such as power requirements, signal range, price, and size make it virtually impossible to settle on just one. For example, smaller components such as door/window sensors typically use Z Wave or Zigbee technology because they don't require a lot of power and can be powered by smaller batteries. They also operate in a mesh topology and can
help extend the range of networked devices. However, neither protocol provides the bandwidth that you get with Wi Fi, which is why it is usually used in security cameras to provide smooth video streaming, and in other devices that require a fat pipe.