Remote Video Surveillance
Remote video surveillance offers cost, efficiency benefits South African
organisations are starting to migrate towards low bit-rate video surveillance
products that have turned remote and centralised video surveillance across the
corporate wide area network (WAN) into an affordable and practical reality.
That’s the word from Mark Chertkow, managing director at Graphic Image
Technologies, local distributor of the SerVision video monitoring systems. He
says that South African companies are moving towards such solutions because
they offer significant cost and productivity benefits.
"CCTV surveillance video was typically run on a separate network or over ISDN
in the past, as it tends to interfere with normal data traffic by causing data and
transaction loss. However, more companies are now adopting solutions allow
them to leverage the existing WAN infrastructure without the historical
drawbacks of such an approach, which means that there are no additional
monthly costs for remote surveillance," Chertkow says.
The SerVision product, for example, is a true narrowband solution capable of
delivering video at rates from 6Kbps to 2Mbps. These systems allow operators
to deliver up to ten live video feeds over a standard 64Kbps link, finally making
centralised and remote monitoring an affordable reality.
It becomes simple and affordable, for example, for a control room in
Johannesburg to watch over video feeds from Sandton, Durban, Pretoria, and
Cape Town. The value proposition of centralised, off-site monitoring includes
saving on control room staff and better facilities management.
These state-of-the art mobile video CCTV monitoring solutions really do take
the security industry into its next phase. Apart from standard Diginet links,
companies that use this technology can access remote CCTV video monitoring
over cellphone (GPRS or 3G), ADSL, MyWireless, or any other IP-based WAN
link," says Chertkow.
Benefits associated with remote monitoring include alarm verification, improved
productivity, improved security management as well as improved management
of armed response services. By allowing management to access remote sites
on alarm, CCTV becomes a proactive response tool instead of a post event
investigative solution.
“With real-time access to CCTV video motion detection (VMD) signalling and
video streaming via PDA, cellphone and PC, one can accurately verify images
and data immediately, ensuring that you don’t waste time responding to false
alarms, which account for over 90% of alarms,” notes Chertkow.
Chertkow points out that this technology has already been used for a range of
applications in South Africa and other parts of the world. A major bank in South
Africa has already tested the SerVision SVG400 on its 64k WAN infrastructure
and approved its use in a shared-data environment.
SerVision’s SVG1000- 16 channel video monitoring system is also being used
by European observers and Israeli security officers to monitor border crossings
at the Rafah border crossing between the Palestinian Authority controlled Gaza
and Egypt.
European Union monitors who, under the command of Italian Major-General
Pietro Pistolese, will oversee security at the border crossing on SerVision?s
real-time advanced and fully integrated video monitoring systems. In addition,
Israeli security officers will be closely monitoring who and what goes back and
forth across this border via a live video-link from a nearby control post in
southern Israel.
SerVision SVG DVR’s
Remote Video Surveillance
SerVision offers a bandwidth efficient solution
for managing remote CCTV systems in both
the Security and Operational space.
Remote CCTV
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© Graphic Image Technologies 2021