An example can be extensive park or other open area. In Hortpark in Singapore such a system is based on wireless IP network and high resolution cameras. The cameras employed in the system - ACTi ACM-1231 (K1511) and its counterpart in dome housing - ACM-3411, provide to the monitoring center images of 1.3 Mpix resolution at 8 fps. Due to MPEG-4 compression it is possible to transmit high quality images of required parameters via wireless network (each camera generates traffic below 3 Mbps).
4.29.2008
Megapixel surveillance technology in Hortpark, Singapore
An example can be extensive park or other open area. In Hortpark in Singapore such a system is based on wireless IP network and high resolution cameras. The cameras employed in the system - ACTi ACM-1231 (K1511) and its counterpart in dome housing - ACM-3411, provide to the monitoring center images of 1.3 Mpix resolution at 8 fps. Due to MPEG-4 compression it is possible to transmit high quality images of required parameters via wireless network (each camera generates traffic below 3 Mbps).
4.25.2008
Professional WLAN omnidirectional antenna (vertical polarization) - Pacific Wireless OD58 12dB
Relatively high gain despite small dimensions, tough construction that is resistant to weather conditions, and solid mount make the antenna convenient to install and capable of operating for a long time. It is a very good solution for middle-sized WLANs.
4.24.2008
Interesting blogs about technology
Transmit power wirelessly - the history of wireless transmission
Then, a few years ago, Marin Soljačić, an assistant professor of physics at MIT, was dragged out of bed by the insistent beeping of a cell phone. "This one didn't want to stop until you plugged it in for charging," says Soljačić. In his exhausted state, he wished the phone would just begin charging itself as soon as it was brought into the house.
So Soljačić started searching for ways to transmit power wirelessly. Instead of pursuing a long-distance scheme like Tesla's, he decided to look for midrange power transmission methods that could charge--or even power--portable devices such as cell phones, PDAs, and laptops. He considered using radio waves, which effectively send information through the air, but found that most of their energy would be lost in space. More-targeted methods like lasers require a clear line of sight--and could have harmful effects on anything in their way. So Soljačić sought a method that was both efficient--able to directly power receivers without dissipating energy to the surroundings--and safe.
He eventually landed on the phenomenon of resonant coupling, in which two objects tuned to the same frequency exchange energy strongly but interact only weakly with other objects. A classic example is a set of wine glasses, each filled to a different level so that it vibrates at a different sound frequency. If a singer hits a pitch that matches the frequency of one glass, the glass might absorb so much acoustic energy that it will shatter; the other glasses remain unaffected.
Soljačić found magnetic resonance a promising means of electricity transfer because magnetic fields travel freely through air yet have little effect on the environment or, at the appropriate frequencies, on living beings. Working with MIT physics professors John Joannopoulos and Peter Fisher and three students, he devised a simple setup that wirelessly powered a 60-watt light bulb.
The researchers built two resonant copper coils and hung them from the ceiling, about two meters apart. When they plugged one coil into the wall, alternating current flowed through it, creating a magnetic field. The second coil, tuned to the same frequency and hooked to a light bulb, resonated with the magnetic field, generating an electric current that lit up the bulb--even with a thin wall between the coils."
4.23.2008
Nomination for ULTISYSTEM at Securex fair
ULTISYSTEM consists of software package and modern CCTV devices utilizing H.264 compression. NetStation software used in city monitoring cooperates with ULTIMAX DVRs (Gold Medal of INTERTELECOM 2008) and a wide range of devices: ULTINET web servers, ULTICAM IP cameras with 4CIF resolution, megapixel cameras, and IP surveillance products of ACTi, IQinVision, SONY, AXIS.
4.22.2008
Half-power beam of terrestrial TV antenna
In the case of terrestrial antennas, lower half-power beam means better directivity, i.e. capability of rejecting reflected signals. In analog TV these signals are superimposed on the main image as "ghosts" - displaced images on the right of primary video information.
Half power beam is inversely correlated with the length of an antenna.
It is not always sensible to use antennas with narrow half-power beam. Sometimes one wants to use single antenna for receiving signals from transmitters situated in different locations - a shorter antenna with a wider angle will be more suitable then.
In the mountains, where usually there is no visibility of the transmitter, there should also be used antennas with wider beam. This solution gives a chance to receive any signal at all, and the reflections are a necessary evil.
4.21.2008
Securex 2008 - a strong opening
4.18.2008
Professional software for IP CCTV systems
Remote client software enables simultaneous unlimited access to the archives and live images from up to 64 cameras. Netstation allows to use PTZ cameras. It has been equipped with all popular protocols, as well as with possibility of adding next positions or editing new ones. The cameras can be controlled by keyboard, mouse, or USB joystick
Vilnius
4.15.2008
Prestigious award for ULTIMAX
List of exhibitors - Intertelecom 2008.
4.11.2008
International fair - list
4.10.2008
Wireless IP surveillance system in shipyard
Because of specific environment, no cabling could be used. The only solution has been application of wireless solutions based on packet transmission. There have been employed ACTi devices - PTZ cameras K1215 and fixed cameras K1118. Both models are Day&Night devices, capable of round-the-clock monitoring. Effective MPEG-4 compression limits disc space requirements for the server to 2.8 GB per day. code:RbN3TUWCf
Cascadable multiswitches
Cascadable multiswitches allow to extend the network (on condition that an adequate power margin has been anticipated).