Questions & Answers From the Top
A conversation with Michael Kaplinsky
- By Security Products Staff
- Jan 07, 2008
Arecont Vision, which was founded in April 2003, lends their expertise to the security market with
product development and design of cost-efficient imaging systems for commercial applications. To find
out more, we talked to CEO Michael Kaplinsky about his thoughts on trends within the megapixel and
camera marketplace.
Q.What differentiates Arecont from
the many other players entering
the megapixel camera and IP market at
this time?
A.In video surveillance, the most
important performance criteria is the
ability to best recognize details in a scene.
This is what continues to drive the professional
security market’s transition to
megapixel video. While we believe the
industry’s transition to be inevitable, earlier
professional megapixel camera offerings
have had significant shortcomings that have
impeded the process. Some of the obstacles
that camera manufacturers are struggling to
overcome include high prices, slow frame
rates, poor nighttime sensitivity and a lack
of features traditionally found in professional
analog cameras.
From the get-go, Arecont Vision’s aim
was to solve these obstacles by developing a
product line that would deliver imaging performance
and features superior to conventional
analog cameras at a competitive price
point. We quickly realized that this goal
required a tight integration of various image
processing functions, along with very specialized
internal camera architecture. With
that in mind, we have developed proprietary,
massively-parallel image processing architecture
called MegaVideo® that enables
Arecont to offer super-HDTV-resolution
cameras at analog camera price levels.
Q.What new technologies or product
trends is Arecont driving
to market?
A.Arecont Vision does not use any
third-party image processing technologies
in its cameras. By maintaining
complete control over our architectures and
intellectual property, we have developed
some unique solutions specifically designed
for megapixel surveillance. For example, to
address the issue of lower sensitivity associated
with small pixel sizes, we developed
dual-sensor day/night cameras that automatically
switch between two sensors and
employ larger pixel sizes for night viewing.
To further address the cost of the camera
per unit area under surveillance, we developed
quad-sensor, 8-megapixel panoramic
cameras that provide 180 and 360 degrees of
view. These cameras feature our
SurroundVideo® technology and cost only
a fraction of what it would cost to provide
the same coverage with multiple conventional
megapixel IP cameras.
We also have helped make migration to
higher-performance megapixel cameras easier
through simple ergonomics. By reducing
the size of our megapixel cameras to less
than 3 inches, they easily fit into popular
domes and housings. We’ve also added critical
features such as auto-iris support, flash
synchronization and the ability to accommodate
most standard video surveillance
lenses. As a result of these efforts, we have
seen considerable gains in market demand,
which has led to our sales volume doubling
every six months for the last three years.
Q.Where do you see video surveillance
technology going in the
future?
A.Megapixel cameras allow users to
significantly reduce overall system
costs, as multiple analog cameras can be
replac ed with just one megapixel camera
while maintaining the same area coverage.
While there is no doubt that megapixel
video will completely replace analog cameras
based on the 50-year-old NTSC/PAL
standard, the only remaining barrier to
widespread adoption is the fact that JPEGbased
megapixel video requires larger bandwidth
and storage size. It is well known that
most camera manufacturers have been
developing MPEG-based cameras that cut
the s torage requirements by as much as an
order of magnitude. I would expect that
complete lines of H.264 cameras will start
to appear on the market as early as the first
quarter in 2008. I also expect that some
manufacturers will offer these cameras at an
incremental price increase, further accelerating
the complete market transition to digital
HDTV surveillance.
Q.What makes Arecont Vision a different
kind of company from
other IP surveillance manufacturers
within the security industry?
A.Many of the companies that manufacture
IP video entered this business
leveraging their networking and DSP
expertise. As a result, they have to rely on
third-party image processing technologies.
This ultimately increases the cost of materials
and limits the level of achievable camera
design optimization, leading to higher prices
and performance limitations.
In contrast, Arecont Vision was founded
by CMOS camera and image processing
experts. From the very beginning, we have
targeted analog cameras, not megapixel, as
our competition. That was the main motivation
for the development of a broad intellectual
property portfolio of cost-efficient,
high-performance designs. We call this
approach MegaVideo®. It has enabled us to
compete with analog camera makers by
offering to the market similarly priced but
measurably superior megapixel alternatives.
This allows flexibility by having complete
control over image processing architecture,
and also allows us to produce multisensor
panoramic and day/night cameras
that bring the cost per area under surveillance
down further.
The other factor that makes us unique is
that we manufacture our products in the
United States. The high quality of U.S. manufacturing
results in near-perfect yields,
more than offsetting the higher labor costs.
We also were fortunate to become profitable
at an early stage. As a result, managers
retained the majority stake in the company.
This, in turn, allowed managers to
completely dedicate their efforts to minding
the business, rather than the board, resulting
in an efficient operation.
Q.What makes the use of megapixel
technology advantageous to the
average end user?
A.Simply put, megapixel video is a
lower cost and more efficient way to
do surveillance and monitoring. The technology
has already matured to the point where
megapixel camera prices are similar to the
prices of good, quality analog cameras. Yet,
one megapixel IP camera can replace many
analog cameras while providing the same
area coverage, yielding much lower overall
system cost. Furthermore, megapixel video
enables important functionality that is simply
unattainable with analog cameras: highresolution
archives allow “zoom after event,”
reducing the need for real-time zoom-in
decisions by surveillance personnel, and
enabling one person to handle the surveillance
of much larger infrastructures.
The effectiveness of surveillance with
megapixel cameras also is significantly
higher than analog cameras can provide.
Megapixel cameras can simultaneously
deliver multiple video streams in different
formats. This allows for zooming on some
areas while maintaining an eye on the entire
scene—something quite impossible with
mechanical zoom optics where zooming
implies a reduction in the field of view.
To sum it all up, megapixel cameras
offer lower system cost and far superior
image quality—the rare case where end
user can have their cake and eat it too.