Lights, Camera, Action
Add IP Surveillance
Without Crashing Your Network
So you've decided to take the plunge and purchase that new surveillance system for your business. Good choice. The growing popularity of internet protocol-based surveillance (also called IP surveillance) is a testament to its quality and convenience.
Installing your new surveillance system means adding cameras that will compete for the same bandwidth and storage used by existing network devices and applications. A few smart choices when selecting your equipment can make all the difference between an IP-based system that hums along unobtrusively and one that drains your network.
Assess Your Network
Before the video cameras roll, take a closer look at your network. IP models can quickly zap bandwidth -- and waste storage space. If existing uses already tap more than 50 percent of your network assets, you’ll want to upgrade to avoid overburdening the network. Relevant additions might include adding a VLAN to segment traffic by type (internet, file and print, video) for better throughput.
In some cases, you may need to place your surveillance equipment on its own separate network to further ensure healthy throughput. Larger installations can almost always benefit from this approach. But even systems with one or two cameras may do better. The question is how important is surveillance continuity for your company? Can you afford to lose surveillance time if your original network goes down? If not, a separate network is essential. We can assess your network and help you decide the best option.
Choose Adjustable Cameras
When selecting cameras, remember that even one poorly configured unit can slow your network. To avoid that problem, we can show you models with the following features:
Motion-activation | These cameras shoot video only when they detect motion within the frame, potentially saving you a bundle on storage.
Adjustable bandwidth | This feature lets you designate the amount of network bandwidth used, with 0.2 Mbps to 2.0 Mbps being a common range. Using the lowest-end settings will save bandwidth without significantly altering image quality.
Adjustable frames per second (fps) | Video cameras typically record 30 fps. Dropping that number to 5 to 12 fps lets you keep a watchful eye, while significantly reducing resource use. Sure, it means choppier video, but an intruder's face is still easily recognizable and individual frames can be blown up later for a closer look.
Adjustable resolution and compression | By dropping resolution from 704 x 576, to 176 x 144 (or anywhere in between) and increasing compression to maximum, storage needs are reduced enormously. Typically, the adjustments don't hurt image quality. But lower resolution means your security personnel must view a much smaller image on their monitors. Base your choice on your specific situation.
Choosing the right settings on your cameras can make an enormous difference. For example, a single day of storage for one camera running continuously at the highest resolution (2.0 Mbps/10 fps) requires 43 GB, compared with just 1 GB at the lowest bandwidth settings.
Calculate Storage Needs
The amount of storage you'll require depends on the number of cameras used, and how long you need to save those images. If it's just for a day, you can purchase a day's worth of storage and reuse throughout the week. If you'll need to review incidents days after they've happened, increase your storage accordingly. Your industry may have laws requiring you to keep surveillance images on hand for 30 or 60 days. If so, you'll have to budget for significantly more hard-drive space. We can help you make an insightful choice.
The Bottom Line
Adjusting your cameras can save you an impressive amount of network bandwidth -- especially when done in conjunction with a network assessment and related upgrades. And, it can bring down your storage costs significantly.
Ask us to help you chose the right equipment and ensure an installation that won't break your network -- or your budget.
Why You Should Switch To IP Surveillance
IP surveillance systems offer many benefits over traditional closed-circuit television (CCTV) technology.
Flexible off-site monitoring | Surveillance images can be viewed from any PC within a network, eliminating the expense of the high-end dedicated phone lines required for remote monitoring via CCTV.
Versatile image capturing & sharing | IP surveillance systems can be configured to enhance the visual quality of images, or capture images only when motion is detected. And unlike CCTV owners, end-users don't need time-lapse photography equipment to share images with security personnel.
Simple cataloging & storage | Media is saved on hard disk and easily reviewed and logged from a desktop; the data can then be burned to a CD-ROM or DVD. This is cheaper than CCTV videotape, with its significant storage requirements.
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