Search Results for: eagle eye

Video Surveillance as a Service Market – Global Forecast to 2022

The Video Surveillance as a Service (VSaaS) market is expected to be worth US$5.93 Billion by 2022, at a CAGR of 22.0% between 2017 and 2022. Factors such as low initial investment required to avail VSaaS services, increasing demand for real-time and remote access for video surveillance data, and flexible scalability offered by VSaaS would provide ample growth opportunities for the Video Surveillance as a Service market in the future. This is a new market research report from Research and Markets.

BCDVideo: How to Succeed in a Fast Changing Video Surveillance Market

Jeff Burgess is the President and CEO of BCDVideo out of the Chicago suburb of Northbrook, IL. With the rapid growth of the overall IP-video surveillance market, BCDVideo is experiencing significant growth by generating a 30% CAGR over the past two years and has become one of the most trusted names in video surveillance system building. BCDVideo has been involved in some of the largest IP-based video surveillance installations with their solutions recording video on six continents, in 33 countries, and in a number of different vertical markets. SecurityHive caught up with Burgess to discuss the rise of BCDVideo and where he sees the video surveillance / physical security industry headed.

NAV To Host Las Vegas Surveillance Symposium

North American Video (NAV) will hold its second annual Las Vegas Surveillance Symposium on Wednesday, October 4, 2017 from 10:00 am PST to 6:00 pm PST at the company’s Western Regional Headquarters in Las Vegas, NV. The one-day event will assemble a wide selection of the surveillance and security industry’s leading providers and gaming security professionals to address new and innovative integrated system solutions.

Reading PA City Hall’s Video Safety Unit Helps Police Respond More Quickly

Shortly after 5 a.m. on a cold day in January, a crowd outside a club near 10th and Chestnut streets began to get unruly, pushing, shoving and yelling. Then a driver in a parked car backed it quickly, ramming another car full of people. More yelling, more pushing, more shoving – until two gunshots were fired as a warning, their flashes lighting up the darkness.Five seconds later, police arrived and the crowd dispersed before more shots were fired.How did police get there so fast?The disturbance had been caught on one of the 19 new security cameras city police installed last year. The cameras’ images were being monitored by civilians in a City Hall room full of big-screen televisions, computers and joysticks.Worried about the growing tumult, the civilians had radioed police a minute before the shots, suggesting they might want to calm the situation.The system worked.This second round of 19 security cameras, like the first round of 27 cameras, was bought with a federal grant.The entire system now costs a bit more than $300,000 a year to run, the equivalent of three police officers.Police Chief William M. Heim said it’s worth it."They don’t replace cops," he said of the cameras. "But their eyes are on the street in 46 places and record 24/7."The city police force has been cut about 20 percent from five years ago.The camera network "provides eyes in all these sections where we can’t have officers," said Sgt. Stephen Anderson, in charge of City Hall’s Video Safety […]