Checking on a pet while you are out eases real worry, and a good camera turns that into a quick glance at your phone. We set up several smart cameras to watch dogs and cats home alone, judging how clear the picture stayed in a dim room and whether motion alerts fired on the pet rather than every shadow. Pan and tilt models cover a whole room from one spot, which beats a fixed lens that misses a pet wandering out of frame. Two-way audio lets you talk to an anxious pet, though some dogs find a disembodied voice more unsettling than soothing, so watch their reaction. Treat-dispensing cameras add interaction, but check the treat size and reliability before relying on them. App stability is the make-or-break factor, since a camera that drops its stream when you need it is useless. None of this replaces proper care for a pet with separation anxiety, where a behaviorist can help. Position the camera to cover where your pet actually spends time.

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