Skip to main content

Capita and Morphean to partner on video surveillance

UK professional services company Capita is to integrate Morphean’s software into its CloudVision platform, a hosted video surveillance and analytics service using automated technology to simplify security management and intelligence gathering. The system’s sophisticated analytics include cross line detection, which detects moving objects that cross a virtual line, and digital auto tracking, which automatically detects and follows moving objects such as people and vehicles. CloudVision also offers intrusi
July 21, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
UK professional services company 4056 Capita is to integrate Morphean’s software into its CloudVision platform, a hosted video surveillance and analytics service using automated technology to simplify security management and intelligence gathering.

The system’s sophisticated analytics include cross line detection, which detects moving objects that cross a virtual line, and digital auto tracking, which automatically detects and follows moving objects such as people and vehicles. CloudVision also offers intrusion detection and a people counting facility, allowing retailers to monitor customer traffic.

The agreement enables Switzerland-based Morphean to expand the use of its solution to the UK market and will enable Capita’s customers to benefit from all the advantages of the cloud and latest analytics tools for smart video surveillance and efficient business intelligence analysis.

According to Capita, working with Morphean will complement the company’s CloudVision managed service offering and pay-as you-go system, allowing it to provide complete integrated solutions. By utilising Capita’s networking business Updata and cloud infrastructure, the company is able to offer a strong proposition in smart video surveillance to the market.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Atlanta ponders Mobility as a Service for seamless transit
    June 29, 2018
    Drivers in Atlanta spent 70 hours in peak-time traffic jams last year. As the MaaS Market conference moves to the US’s fourth most congested city, we ask how Mobility as a Service can help. Colin Sowman winds down his window to listen. It is not by accident that ITS International’s first MaaS Market conference outside London is being hosted in Atlanta. The event is being supported by Georgia State Road & Tollway Authority and the City of Atlanta – and again not without a reason as metro Atlanta is looking
  • AV/ridesharing mix wins major auto investment
    May 5, 2016
    The US has a new trend in personal mobility and David Crawford takes a closer look. US automaker General Motors and ridesharer Lyft’s announcement of a strategic partnership aimed at delivering, over time, an integrated network of on-demand autonomous as well as conventional vehicles has taken the nation’s car industry from traditional manufacturing to new arenas.
  • Artificial Intelligence applications for commercial vehicle operations
    December 28, 2021
    The combination of machine learning, deep neural networks and computer vision provides opportunities to address in new ways an increasing range of functions that are a part of commercial vehicle operations. Here, IRD’s Rish Malhotra details how.
  • San Francisco bans facial recognition
    July 23, 2019
    San Francisco has become the first US city to ban facial recognition software – and it is a move which has implications for transit agencies as well as police forces worldwide Big Brother is watching you’, goes the famous saying. Well, not in San Francisco he isn’t. Legislators in the Californian city – home to the tech gold rush and embracers of all things forward-looking – have decided that, after all, there should be limits to technology’s hold over us. By a margin of eight votes to one, the city’s