Traffic enforcement officers in Manila’s financial district are using live-streaming, body-worn cameras in a bid to improve their own safety and to respond quicker to accidents. Adam Hill reports    
 
Makati, the financial centre of the Philippines, is home to just half a million residents. However, the daytime population of Makati - one of 16 cities that make up the metropolitan Manila area – is estimated to be more than three times that. Home to the highest concentration of multi-national and local corporations in the Philippines, it is a commercial hub: 600,000 vehicles are thought to move through downtown Makati on a typical weekday. Maintaining traffic flow and responding quickly to incidents is therefore vital unless the entire area is going to grind to a halt. 
     
In a bid to ensure a swift response – and to improve their own safety – traffic officers in the City of Makati are now equipped with live-streaming, body-worn cameras. Made by Digital Barriers, the cameras send images to a central control room and are able to run for a full shift of eight hours. They are also – in a perhaps disturbing sign of the times – equipped with a panic button which the manufacturer says creates an extra layer of personal security. The city authorities hope to deter attacks from violent motorists.
 
Live-streaming technology
“Due to the wide spread of the traffic enforcement teams, and the major road networks that run through Manila, having technology that supports Makati’s people was a key driver for the modernisation of their systems – both in terms of fixed surveillance and ensuring that they have coverage in areas where having fixed infrastructure is more challenging,” explains Steve Wood, VP of Asia Pacific for Digital Barriers. Previously, the option would have been to rely on a legacy, record-only body-worn camera solution. “Using live-streaming technology to communicate video to a command centre is an unparalleled way of providing advanced situational awareness that can help protect both traffic officers and the public,” he adds.
 
The company’s EdgeVis Live platform allows fixed and mobile surveillance  units, including the body-worn cameras, to be integrated into a control  centre. It provides secure, scalable video transmission to users over  static or wireless networks, he goes on.
     
“EdgeVis  Live is designed to provide users with military-grade security,”  continues Wood. “Conventional video streaming codecs, such as H.264, are  not designed for transmission over constrained networks, and they  typically suffer from image break-up or latency.”
 
Variable bandwidth
The  company says its patented TVI video compression technology means video  is delivered with less than 0.5 seconds of delay: TVI monitors the  variability of bandwidth on wireless constantly, and uses this  information to adjust the amount of image detail - so that it never  exceeds available bandwidth. “This enables a constant frame rate and  avoids missed frames or a build-up in time delay,” Wood adds. “Uniquely,  TVI can stream real-time video over wireless networks at under 9Kps per  second.”
     
Given the  ubiquity of wireless technology, this sort of performance is attractive  to customers: the system can also save data costs by using 60% less  bandwidth than standard technologies. “The implementation of the first  live-streaming, body-worn cameras has been a success and our officers  are already enthusiastically utilising this technology in order to  ensure their safety and support the disaster management in the city,”  says Abby Binay, mayor of Makati.
     
“Users  are able to obtain real-time video from anywhere delivering vital  information and invaluable situational awareness,” concludes Wood.  “Having a view of the scene beforehand can be the difference between  arriving prepared or needing to spend time assessing a situation on  arrival, which can introduce critical delays to operations.”
     
    
        
        
        
        



