MESH PIONEERS
 |
| Sophisticated security video software can capture, display and store images from mesh network cameras. Photo courtesy of Sam Systems |
|
Viscount Systems of Burnaby, British Columbia, is a mesh pioneer. Just recently, a number of provincial government projects in Canada homed in on MESH, the firm’s flagship technology. Stephen Pineau, Viscount’s president and CEO, also told Security Magazine that mesh networks do well at organizations that have numerous remote facilities. One of the largest rail carriers in the U.S. is installing Viscount’s mesh technology, for maintenance and administration needs.
There is mesh fever around the world. Korea-based Samsung Corp. recently deployed a Firetide mesh network at the construction site of the tallest free-standing structure in the world, the Burj Dubai (Dubai Tower), in United Arab Emirates. The newly installed Firetide network is being used for video surveillance, voice over IP and radio over IP applications at the worksite.
Drop in networking over ZigBee is one of Digi’s wireless strategy. According to Minnetonka, Minn.-based Digi’s Joel Young, there has been a natural migration to security after an initial application monitoring cellular phone towers. As compared to other wireless designs, ZigBee is targeted for low power, low cost and low transmission situations. It provides the ability to network devices or groups of devices (e.g., sensors, alarms, controllers) where no pre-deployed networking infrastructure exists or where access to an existing network is prohibited. Drop-in networking makes it possible to easily and cost-effectively poll, monitor, adjust and control systems that previously required laborious and expensive manual processes or extensive wiring.
Advances in software-based security video help propel mesh networks. One example is Sam Systems of Troy, Mich. A New Product Showcase winner at a Las Vegas ISC, the firm’s software significantly cuts bandwidth and storage, according to Joe Hannawa, the firm’s director of business development. The approach uses network video tunneling, adaptive video resolution as well as intelligent content analysis, added Chief Technology Officer Nick Brookins.
With seamless integration to Windows Media, the software allows security to distribute buffered video via public and private mesh networks as well as over other means of communications. Brookins eschewed such compressions as MJPEG and MPEG4 – “They were designed for entertainment,” said Brookins – for a unique feature set optimized for real-world surveillance situations.