Skip to main content

Siqura pushing video analytics to network edge

Siqura, manufacturer of advanced video surveillance solutions and member of TKH Group, has announced that it is currently developing an advanced camera platform that puts entire video analytics systems in stand-alone devices at the edge of the network. The company says that taking analytics to the perimeter of a surveillance system not only enhances the overall efficiency of the system but ensures more accurate and effective analysis of critical video material.
May 16, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
572 Siqura, manufacturer of advanced video surveillance solutions and member of 2075 TKH Group, has announced that it is currently developing an advanced camera platform that puts entire video analytics systems in stand-alone devices at the edge of the network. The company says that taking analytics to the perimeter of a surveillance system not only enhances the overall efficiency of the system but ensures more accurate and effective analysis of critical video material.

The first available solution of the camera platform, which will be released towards the latter part of this year, will be the Siqura 600 series, a collection of standard definition (SD) multi-streaming fixed box-style IP cameras designed to have superior wide dynamic range and excellent image control in low-light conditions. Subsequent camera models based on this innovative new platform will be released by the end of the year as the Siqura 800 series and will offer full HD (1080p) resolution.

Siqura says that using a dedicated DSP, its 600 and 800 series cameras are embedded with field-proven analytics algorithms capable of detecting intruders as well as tracking and counting objects in both outdoor and indoor applications. These devices optimise detection performance by storing and transmitting the metadata or analysis parameters alongside the video material. This makes the output of these devices ideal for forensic examination.

“Network cameras being developed today need to be able to handle IP traffic, regardless of the medium connecting them to the network”, said Roger Decker, director of solutions and marketing at Siqura. “That is why Siqura IP solutions can connect directly to a fixed network or wireless bridge via twisted-pair, coax, or fibre optic cabling. We want customers to be able to select hardware based on its ability to withstand variances on the network and to provide high-quality streams and not because of the kind of network it can connect to.”

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Asfinag makes case for ITS-G5 over 5G
    March 15, 2019
    Asfinag’s Manfred Harrer and Peter Meckel talk to Jason Barnes about the organisation’s first steps towards C-ITS deployments - and why ITS-G5 will be the underpinning standard For quite a number of years, it was assumed that the connectivity required for cooperative ITS (C-ITS) applications and autonomous vehicle (AV) operations would be catered for by a bespoke communications solution/protocol. This would provide localised ad hoc communication in a manner similar to Wi-Fi, and the dedicated bandwidth/n
  • Mitsubishi Electric 4K-resolution display
    July 17, 2012
    Mitsubishi Electric Visual Solutions America has continued its commitment to 4K resolution with its new 56P-QF65LCU monitor. This LCD display offers QFHD (quadruple full high-definition) resolution with an 3840 x 2160 pixels, which means that more than eight megapixels are displayed on one 56-inch screen, an enormous amount of visual content on one device. The monitor allows one person to observe a wide range of data on one screen. The new QFHD monitor condenses information from a tiled display wall used
  • Advance detection plus from smartmicro
    April 29, 2013
    According to German traffic management radar sensors specialist smartmicro, its advance detection plus technology represents the first non-intrusive solution for lane specific advance detection.
  • Safelane automates work zone perimeter guarding
    June 12, 2015
    The safety of workers during road closures and working alongside, or above, live lanes is becoming an automated process. Ten workers suffered major injuries while working on or near motorways and major A roads in England in 2013, and between 2009 and 2013 eight had been killed. It was against that background that the first commercial application Safelane, the automated traffic management system designed to detect work zone incursions, was carried out during the temporary closure of a motorway.