Start up YawCam (I assume you have already downloaded and installed it). This is how everything should start:
If you see a screen that tells you to select a device, go to “Settings -> Detect Webcam.”
Go to “Window -> Motion Detection.” Here, you see a preview of what the camera detects. Motion detection can be a bit slow, so you need to make big movements that aren’t so sudden for them to register. When motion detection is enabled, you’ll even see a log of when the program registers motion.
Click the “Actions” tab. Deselect “Play Sound” if you find that annoying.
Click on the “Settings” tab. You can set the “tolerance” for the camera there to a lower level if you feel like you need it to be more reactive. The blue line under the preview is the tolerance threshold. The line above it is how much movement it sees. Got it?
Open up Notepad and write the following code in it, but don’t save yet:
Once you finish writing the code, save it as a “.wsf” file. You can do this by clicking “File -> Save As…” and selecting “All Files” under the file type drop-down list. This code tells the computer to press “Enter.” Name it anything you want, but be sure to attach “.wsf” to the end of it, telling Windows that it’s a script.
Go back to YawCam and get back to that “Actions” tab.
Select “Run .exe” and click “Settings.” In the text field, type the path where your “.wsf” file is found. Also click “Activate” under “Flood Control” to make sure you won’t run this action a ton of times when the camera detects motion. Now, whenever you need to walk away, enable the motion sensor. Disable it when you’re back. You’ll now have one of those sci-fi computers that know when you’re present. This kind of trick is mainly intended to make you feel cool about having a high-tech solution to something, but it’s more like a Rube Goldberg machine. If you have any cooler solutions to this, hit us up in the comments section! We’d love to hear what you have to say!