Thursday, 29 June 2017

video door phone suppliers

Global Smart Video Door Phone Market by Manufacturers, Regions, Type and Application, Forecast to 2021
Smart Video Door Phone Market report provides overview of Smart Video Door Phone market, including classification, application, manufacturing technology, industry chain analysis and latest market dynamics. Smart Video Door Phone market report also explores future trends for supply, demand and market growth rate, market size, prices, trading, competition and value chain as well as major vendors’ information with forecast to 2021.

Smart Video Door Phone market report analyses the market overview for business growth with the help of market development trends along with Import/ Export Market across the globe. The process of Smart Video Door Phone Industry is analysed thoroughly with respect three points, viz. raw material and equipment suppliers, various manufacturing associated costs (material cost, labour cost, etc.) and the actual process.
Smart Video Door Phone Market split by Application -Application 1, Application 2, Application 3 Smart Video Door Phone Market Segment by Regions– (North America, Europe and Asia-Pacific) and the main countries (United States, Germany, United Kingdom, Japan, South Korea and China).
Through the statistical analysis, the Smart Video Door Phone Market report depicts the global Industry Analysis, Manufacturers Analysis, Smart Video Door Phone Industry Development Trend, Sales Demand and Forecast to 2021.
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Table of Contents:
Chapter 1 Smart Video Door Phone Market Overview
1.1 Definition
1.2 Classification Analysis
1.3 Application Analysis
1.4 Smart Video Door Phone Industry Chain Structure Analysis
1.5 Smart Video Door Phone Market Development Overview
1.6 Global Smart Video Door Phone Market Comparison Analysis
1.6.1 Global Import Market Analysis
1.6.2 Global Export Market Analysis
1.6.3 Global Main Region Market Analysis
1.6.4 Global Market Comparison Analysis
1.6.5 Global Market Development Trend Analysis

Chapter 2 Smart Video Door Phone Up and Down Stream Industry Analysis
2.1 Upstream Raw Materials Analysis of Smart Video Door Phone Market
2.1.1 Upstream Raw Materials Price Analysis
2.1.2 Upstream Raw Materials Market Analysis
2.1.3 Upstream Raw Materials Market Trend
2.2 Down Stream Market Analysis of Smart Video Door Phone Market
2.1.1 Down Stream Market Analysis
2.2.2 Down Stream Demand Analysis
2.2.3 Down Stream Market Trend Analysis

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Chapter 3 Smart Video Door Phone Productions Supply Sales Demand Market Status and Forecast
3.1 Smart Video Door Phone Market Capacity Production Overview
3.2 2012-2017 Smart Video Door Phone Production Market Share Analysis
3.3 Smart Video Door Phone Market Demand Overview
3.4 Supply Demand and Shortage of Smart Video Door Phone Industry
3.5 2012-2017 Smart Video Door Phone Import Export Consumption
3.6 Smart Video Door Phone Cost Price Production Value Gross Margin

Chapter 4 Smart Video Door Phone Market New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis
4.1 Smart Video Door Phone Market Analysis
4.2 Smart Video Door Phone Project SWOT Analysis
4.3 Smart Video Door Phone New Project Investment Feasibility Analysis
Continue…
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In the end, Smart Video Door Phone Market report provides the main region, market conditions with the product price, profit, capacity, production, supply, demand and market growth rate and forecast etc. Smart Video Door Phone Market report also Present new project SWOT analysisinvestment feasibility analysis, and investment return analysis.


Reference: http://www.military-technologies.net/2017/06/29/global-smart-video-door-phone-market-by-manufacturers-regions-type-and-application-forecast-to-2021/


wireless video surveillance

Empty homes are like the kid at school who always had the “kick me” sticker on his butt. They are a target for all sorts of problems: burglaries, vandalism and flooding, just to name a few.
The US Dept of Justice backs me up with some stats on seasonal crimes. Not to make you paranoid about leaving home, but there a few things you could do to keep your home safe, some high tech, some not.
Know Thy Neighbors
Neighbors are the low tech, but high touch solution. One of the best indications of an empty house is an overflowing mailbox, packages left on the doorstep or flowers that look bedraggled. Promise to reciprocate, but arrange for someone to pick up your packages and mail (or pay one of the neighborhood kids to do it).
No friends? No problem. Use a service like TaskRabbit where you can find someone to do just about anything. If you’re a little iffy about TaskRabbit, read the laugh-out-loud Outsourcing Yourself or the more sobering look at the gig economy, both in The New Yorker Magazine.
Once the purview of state penitentiaries or corporate America, web security cameras today are low cost, easy to install and fairly reliable. Be sure to buy from a reputable source and a known brand, because no-name security cameras can be insecure, and the last thing you want to do is add to your problems. So avoid non-name security cameras on deep discount at sketchy sites, because they are likely to be easily hackable.
If you’re going to do the install on your own, we really like Arlo from NetGear. It’s a wireless HD camera that stores 7 days of video (and will continue to do that with no extra storage plan fees). It has a wide angle view with night vision. It’s available in a number of different configurations, and having more than one is pretty good idea. It also has one of the most adorable or irritating video commercials depending on your taste.



I’m also a fan of Logitech’s line of smart home cameras, the Circle 2. I like it because the entire line of cameras can be intermingled, kind of the way Tupperware containers and tops can intermingle. The camera’s brains are the same but the casings give them different capabilities. The entire line is indoor and outdoor, weatherproof, high definition and gives you a wide 180-degree field of vision. You can buy wired or wireless, wall mounted or window mounted. Where it get pricer than Arlo is that you only get 24 hours of recorded storage. When that’s over you can purchase different storage plans.
Comcast user? Here’s a tip. They are now in the home security business. They’ll do the installation for you, and you already know and trust them in your home. You can get home security through Xfinity Home’s 24/7 Video Surveillance. You can record, rewind and review up to 10 days of footage in and around your home from an app or web portal.
But Scout’s honor ...promise you won’t spend your vacation watching video feeds of your home.
Lighting
Logitech also makes a simple POP Smart Button that lets you control lighting remotely.Belkin also makes a suite of home control products called Wemo. One them controls your lighting and it even has an “away mode” that will turn lights off and on around the house in random manner so it looks like you’re home.
Heating
One of the best investments I’ve ever made is installing the First Alert Thermostat, a thermostat that I can access remotely via web browser or phone app. Especially during the winter months, it’s saved me many times the cost of the device by letting me adjust the temperature in my home remotely. I like the First Alert system because I’m a frugal shopper. I also don’t need all of the Nest’s ability to learn about behaviors in each room. Honeywell’s Total Comfort is another frugal solution. For a good overview see: http://bestreviews.com/best-smart-thermostats.
The Internet of Things
If your home is Internet of Things laden then you definitely want to keep your IoT devices separated from your data, banking, and other important hackable files. On newer routers you can connect IoT devices to your “Guest” WiFi and keep your main router address for your PCs and devices.
Personal Firewalls
If you have a lot of sensitive data on your devices you might consider investing in Cujo. It’s the home owner’s equivalent of a private firewall that checks every bit of data before it enters your home and blocks anything suspicious. You simply plug it into your router using an Ethernet cable. You can check Cujo remotely for any suspicious activity.
Don’t Over-Share
I grapple with this one because I like sharing those photos of far-flung travels, but think about whether or not you want to put an “out of office message” on your email account, or whether you want to publish the fact that you’re touring Dubrovnik on your social media feed. Personally, I deal with the risk of doing both of these but you should at least give it some thought.Most of all, happy summer. Stay safe. 


 Reference : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/low-tech-high-tech-guide-to-staying-safe-this-summer_us_59555f1fe4b0c85b96c66038

Wednesday, 28 June 2017

wireless video camera

Every parent who's ever wondered, "What happens with my kid when the lights go out?" has two options: Stake out the child's room Navy SEAL-style, or install a video baby monitor to keep watch when your eyes can't be there in person. A mounted camera can beam live video from your child's room to a handheld viewer or to your smartphone — or to both.
After a month of testing six products, our choice for the best baby monitor is the iBaby Monitor M6T, now available for around $160. iBaby's monitor, which taps into a smartphone to help you check in on your child at night, boasts an impressive array of features, including 360-degree pans and crisp images, even in night mode. This all comes at an attractive price.
Our runner-up, the Motorola MBP853 Connect, costs about the same and gives you the option of picking up video streams from either your phone or a dedicated handheld viewer.
Do You Need a Kid-Centric Video Monitor?
In an age in which home-security cameras are getting ever smarter and packing in more features, you may wonder why you'd even need to consider a dedicated video monitor. Why not repurpose an existing home security camera, the thinking goes, and set that up in my child's room instead?
To put that approach to the test, we also evaluated the Nest Cam as a baby monitor alongside our other models. As our runner-up among wireless home security cameras, the Nest Cam gives us a good opportunity to see how a general camera compares to a model created specifically to monitor kids.
The Nest boasts some impressive hardware specs, such as true 1080p/30fps video and a 3-megapixel camera sensor. Setting up the Nest Cam specifically to look in on a 2-year-old at night, we found the video quality on Nest's camera to be sharper and more detailed than on any baby video monitor we tested. Also significantly, some of the Nest Cam's features overlap with those that most parents will want to consider in a video baby monitor.
The Nest Cam includes push-to-talk features as well as alerts triggered by motion or sounds. And when your child is past the age when you need a nighttime monitor, you can repurpose the Nest Cam to check in on other parts of your home — something that's difficult to do with a monitor designed specifically to watch over infants.
That said, when we tested the Nest Cam solely as a baby monitor, we learned that despite its strengths as a home security camera, it's not created specifically for parents. You can't take still photos or record custom video clips out of the box (although the latter can be done with a pricey annual subscription). Plus, there's no way to trigger kid-friendly music to soothe your crying child, and the camera's sound quality is average at best.
MORE: Best Smart Home Tech

There are important benefits to owning the units that are created directly for parents. Push-to-talk capabilities will usually be integrated, as well as the ability to record and share still images and video clips (even if some monitors require a subscription to do so). Baby video monitors will also usually have built-in music files that you can play to soothe your child. Just the ability to pan and tilt the camera — the Nest has a fixed 130-degree wide-angle perspective — means you can follow your kids wherever they scamper.
The Nest Cam was engineered for general security monitoring; it excels at that, and a new version, the Nest Cam IQ, provides an even sharper picture and more on-board intelligence. (At $299, it's also nealry double the price of our top-rated dedicated baby monitor.) But we believe dedicated video baby monitors offer enough unique functionality that parents will appreciate over a more general wireless home-security camera.
How We Tested
In addition the Nest Cam, we tested five baby video monitors: the iBaby Monitor M6T, the Levana Keera PTZ Baby Video Monitor, the Motorola MBP853 Connect, the Philips Avent Digital Baby Monitor and the Vtech VM343. Three baby monitors (Levana, Philips and VTech) relied solely on 2.4-GHz radio frequency (RF) antennas; iBaby, like the Nest Cam relied solely on Wi-Fi, while Motorola's device used either Wi-Fi or RF. When setting up the baby monitors, we spaced them apart from each other 1 foot or more to avoid potential signal interference.
We evaluated each monitor on the following criteria:
Range: I situated each monitor at an elevated position in my child's room and approximately 7 to 8 feet from the head of my son's bed. The four units with handheld viewers were tested from 12, 20 and 35 feet away through one wall in a 35-year-old apartment complex; we connected both the Nest Cam and iBaby M6T to my Wi-Fi network.
Display: I evaluated the screen quality on both the handheld viewers and the video-streaming smartphone apps. Wi-Fi signal strength and download speeds (~10-13 Mbps) were always more than acceptable for HD-quality video. I also made observations in differences of quality between full-color daytime vision and black-and-white night vision, which all units featured.
Audio: I checked whether the monitors offered push-to-talk features to speak with my child remotely and how clear the sound was on the other end. I also considered if there were other audio features, such as pre-programmed lullabies.
Battery Life: The four devices that had handheld viewers came with removable, rechargeable batteries. I ran down each of these units several times by keeping video continuously streaming and turning off sleep and power-saving modes.
Features: I tested all built-in features such as pan and zoom, motion and sound detection, temperature and humidity sensors, and sleep timers. I also took note of how easy the interfaces were on both handheld viewers and streaming apps.
Setup: Ease of setup and installation factored heavily into our ratings, including whether an account needed to be created and if there were any extra subscription fees necessary. Each unit had cords protruding out of its back, so design wasn't much of a factor in my choice, though parents should take care to keep dangling cords and wires away from their children's reach when setting up a monitor.


Reference: https://www.tomsguide.com/us/best-baby-monitors,review-3296.html

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video surveillance cameras

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) --
BART announced Wednesday that it has working video surveillance cameras on all of its train cars. The announcement came more than a year after the agency revealed the vast majority of its security cameras didn't work following the death of a man on a train.

RELATED:
 Video shows suspect in fatal BART shooting exiting West Oakland station

It's the last install for BART of some 2,000 working video surveillance cameras on its trains, a project that grew out of a tragedy 17 months ago.

It's the fallout of a January 2016 murder when Carlos Funez-Romero was shot and killed on a car at the west Oakland station, a crime that happened within feet of a fake camera.

BART revealed then that more than 70-percent of the cameras on its trains were non-functioning dummies.

RELATED:
 Police need help identifying suspect in fatal BART shooting

A working platform camera did capture images of the suspect in the murder, but so far BART police have made no arrests.

"Video, pictures. Getting an image of someone is just one tool that law enforcement uses," Terence McCarty with BART police said. "Someone in the public knows this person, and so we're just hopeful that they'll come forward."

The new cameras have been installed in phases in recent months, and BART officials already credit them with helping them make two arrest in April's teen mob robberies on a train at the coliseum station.

"Every night when BART when cars come to the yard and BART's closed down, we have crews working to replace the cameras. It takes about eight hours to get one car done, and that work is now done," BART Spokesperson Alicia Trost said.

BART rider John Sarbialis said the cameras give him some peace of mind. "Yeah, a little bit. I don't think there are as many officers on that trains that there should be.


Reference: http://abc7news.com/traffic/bart-security-cameras-now-keeping-eye-on-all-trains/2161217/

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

video security system

Long before we were surrounded by photographs via Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, we already knew a picture was worth a thousand words. If you’ve seen an image of a cheetah, you not only know something about its spots, but you also know it doesn’t look like a panther, or a tiger, or a Dalmatian.
That bounty of information we get from images and the comprehensive, instantaneous analysis we apply to them without even thinking, are skills increasingly mimicked by computers. Machine learning — the next step toward artificial intelligence — means computers learn as we do: gathering information in tiny bits, cross-referencing and comparing those bits with what else they already have in their “brain,” aka, database, and then generating a wealth of insights about it all.
These days, video from security cameras is one of the most common sources of information and one of the most underutilized sources of data. Most airports have an array of them already installed, as part of their increasing responsibility to ensure public safety and prevent crimes - or aid in their investigation after the fact. However, thanks to advancements in video analytics, these data-gathering and insight-generating devices can now be used to not only increase security, but to enhance travelers’ airport experience, leading them to have a preference for one airport over another.
Airports are no longer just a transit juncture we blast through on the way from here to there. They cater to travelers for longer intervals and build longer customer relationships, and are rising to the occasion of serving as enjoyable places to spend our time in between travels. Like shopping malls or city centers, modern concourses are filled with shops, restaurants, pubs and wine bars where travelers can enjoy a sampling of local culture, attractions and cuisines.
Because they are often travelers’ first experience of city, in many ways, shape people’s perceptions of the metropolises they’re located in, contributing to, or detracting from, their status and desirability as a destination. The insights gained from video analytics can help airports to capitalize on their new stature as a temporary home away from home, by improving safety, as well as the traveler experience by cutting wait times, and heightening enjoyment of shops and eateries.
As we at Hitachi developed our own video analytics suite, we learned a few things about what aspects existing solutions were missing that could improve accuracy, and deliver the insights and alerts our customers needed most. Here’s just a few of the ways airport administrators, security personnel and travelers can all benefit from video analytics:

Reference : http://www.aviationpros.com/article/12326183/travelers-can-make-themselves-at-home-in-smarter-safer-airports


Monday, 26 June 2017

video security camera

Pompano Beach, FL – June 22, 2017  IC Realtime has announced a surveillance camera integration with Amazon Echo Show. The result of a significant development project wherein IC Realtime’s R&D team worked with Amazon’s camera Application Programming Interface (API), more than 100 existing IC Realtime surveillance cameras have the added ability to stream live video to Echo Show.

IC Realtime offers a wide array of video surveillance cameras and recorders. The brand is well-recognized within the professional security channels for its products’ performance attributes and ability to natively integrate with complex home automation systems. The company’s products are sold and installed worldwide by security systems and audio-video integration specialists.
IC Realtime models compatible with Echo Show include the brand’s suite of ‘ICIP’ series IP cameras (68 models in total) as well as dozens of its Standard- and High-Definition cameras that work in conjunction with an IC Realtime digital video recorder.
According to IC Realtime Technical Manager of Software Integration Chris Callaway, because the Amazon Alexa architecture is primarily Internet-connected, a requirement of the Amazon integration is that connectivity of cameras must take place through a back-end cloud service. 

For several years IC Realtime has offered subscribers a cloud storage service called ICMyCloud, which grants users in home and business settings the ability to stream and record high-definition video footage from their IC Realtime cameras as often as 24-hours a day, 7-days a week.  IC Realtime’s Echo Show compatible cameras connect through ICMyCloud.
Locations in the home where security cameras are commonly placed include nursery rooms, entertainment and living rooms, front/side/back doors, garages, pool areas and more. 
The ICMyCloud camera works with Echo Show the following way: “The Alexa ‘skill' pulls the ‘Camera Name’ you’ve assigned within ICMyCloud,” says Callaway. “Let’s say for example you have named a camera for the Nursery.  You simply say, ‘Alexa, Show the Nursery camera.’ Alexa would respond with ‘OK, showing Nursery camera’ and begin its stream. When you are finished, you would simply instruct Alexa to ‘Hide my Camera.’”

Callaway also notes that keeping the video data safe is of the highest-priority. “IC Realtime implements stringent security protocols for the cloud- and internet-connected camera integrations, ensuring support of strong encryption methods, password complexity, and unique session URLs to guarantee the strongest integrity possible,” says Callaway.
“The ability to share video from our security cameras via the Cloud to Echo Show is a prime example of today’s ‘Smart Home’ graduating to an ‘Internet of Things Smart Home,’” says IC Realtime CEO Matt Sailor. “IC Realtime and its parent company IC Real Tech continue to bring to market innovative ways for people to capture and interact with their video surveillance - from crime/forensics to 360-degree lifestyle video.”
Expanding upon the popular Alexa devices such as the Echo and Echo Dot, Echo Show adds a 7-inch touchscreen, dual Dolby-optimized speakers, video-calling and a front-facing camera.
IC Realtime is the leading IP video surveillance camera brand in the custom residential channel. The company makes a vast array of security cameras and video recorders. Notable achievements include the company’s pioneering of the Cloud Video Recorder and the IC Real Tech ALLie Home 360-degree x 360-degree Lifestyle camera. 
For more information on IC Realtime cameras compatible with Amazon Echo Show, visitwww.icmycloud.com/alexa.
For all IC Realtime media inquiries, please contact Paul Muto at paul@mutocomm.com or 631.849.4301.
About IC Realtime
Established in 2006, IC Realtime is an American-owned and operated digital surveillance and technology product innovator and manufacturer that serves many facets of the government, military, commercial and residential channels.  The company’s mission statement is to innovate, deliver and support global video technology. 
IC Realtime’s technological breakthroughs include pioneering the introduction of the Cloud Video Recorder™ and most recently the ground-breaking IC720 360° x 360° situational awareness video surveillance camera.  The company is also a strong supporter of the UL2802 performance testing standard for camera image quality.  


Reference: http://www.securityinfowatch.com/press_release/12346742/ic-realtime-video-surveillance-cameras-integrate-with-amazon-echo-show

Sunday, 25 June 2017

security video camera

Police are on scene in Surrey investigating a brazen daylight drive-by shooting in a residential neighbourhood.
Mounties say two people are in hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
Surrey RCMP was called to 86th Avenue and Prestige Place around 3 p.m., where witnesses describe hearing multiple gunshots.
“I heard a car drive by and it sounded like fireworks, it was like a rapid shooting, and we just came out and saw all the debris on the ground,” said neighbour Samatha Wyse.
Wyse said bullet shells and shredded tire material were left in the street afterwards, and that police also told her one of the weapons was an automatic weapon.
A nearby parked vehicle appears to have also been struck by a stray bullet and has a smashed-out window.ol
Caught on tapeice were called to the
Security video shot in the area appears to have captured the incident.
On the video, a silver pickup truck and white sedan can be seen driving towards one another, then appear to collide.
Two suspects dressed in dark clothing get out of the truck, and at least one of them appears to begin shooting an automatic weapon.
The white sedan and truck then drive off in opposite directions.
A short time later, police and firefighters were called to nearby Port Kells where a pickup truck with its licence plates removed was found engulfed in flames.
Mounties confirm it was one of the two vehicles involved in the shooting, and add they believe the incident was targeted.

Reference: http://globalnews.ca/news/3554947/police-respond-to-brazen-daytime-shooting-in-surrey/