Market Navigation
- By Ralph C. Jensen
- Feb 01, 2008
Everyone knew it was coming, and now the use of IP
cameras in the security industry is moving at full
speed. Three years ago, the IP trend was a lot of
talk, but players in the industry have ensured that
these cameras offer a dawn from the dour days of analog.
IP cameras also have heralded the arrival of better
equipment—though most experts agree that there is more
work to be done, including improved resolution and intelligence
inside the camera. The megapixel camera is evolving
quite nicely in the high-resolution market, as well as the
video surveillance business. According to John Monti of
Pixim, cameras with output resolutions greater than 720 x
480 will drive adoption of IP cameras once the current
issues of poor low light, low-dynamic range, marginal
SNR, cost and image performance are addressed.
So, what’s to come in this market niche that will
improve the IP video camera? For starters, the speed of the
network will increase, multiplying the range and ability of
the camera. The application of megapixel technology will
only serve to improve visual quality, and future technology
will improve the processing speed of the IP camera.
I recently spent a couple days in Lund, Sweden, and
Copenhagen, Denmark, with Fredrik Nilsson of Axis
Communications to learn more about the technology and
what’s coming to the marketplace in the future.
Axis knows a thing or two about developing and selling
IP cameras. They’ve been doing it since 1996, and they surpassed
the 1 million mark in sales in October 2007. Selling
that many cameras certainly carries some weight in the
industry. You might as well know that Axis officials plan to
hit the $10 million mark in sales in the next 10 years.
Nilsson, the general manager of North American operations
for Axis, said the market for network video products is
accelerating at about 40 percent a year. No question—there
is enormous interest in the IP product, which has helped
Axis and many other camera companies become technical
and market leaders.
At Security Products magazine, we feel so strongly
about the future of the network and IP video that we’ve created
a new magazine Network Centric Security, which
details the trends in market convergence and the applications
of IP systems over the network.
Analog cameras have pretty much done what they can,
and until today, they have filled a genuine and important role.
CCTV systems are giving way to open systems, like network
video, that can be fully integrated. Let’s face it—security
projects are increasing in scope, especially at installations in
train stations, schools, retail stores and airports.
Who is interested in IP video solutions? This is an interesting
question, but the answer is even more intriguing.
Developers and government officials in Dubai, part of the
United Arab Emirates, are building a city that resembles the
future. Everything new in Dubai is juxtaposed with the
ancient, including the Burj Dubai, which will be the
world’s tallest tower, and the Burj al Arab, a resort that
redefines what a hotel can be. Officials in the country are
only interested in IP cameras. They are completely skipping
one product generation and integrating the newest of
the new. In fact, Dubai’s growth represents an exploding
emerging market.
Companies are realizing the added benefits of network
video, such as scalability, remote access and, probably
more important than anything else, cost-effectiveness.
Many companies are transitioning from analog to digital
technology, and, according to Nilsson, projects and installations
are increasing in scope.
IP solutions also have the ability to deploy artificial intelligence
within the camera. Axis co-founder and president
Martin Gren said his company will approach the intelligence
question cautiously, but company research and development
will continue down that path. Gren said intelligence
will become an integral part of the solution at some point.
Artificial intelligence is already used by a few select
venders, such as Verint, Lumenera and ioimage. Monti said
pervasive and flexible AI will require many more embedded
CPU cycles in the camera, which may take another
three years to hit commodity price points.
Some providers, including ioimage, have managed to
package IP cameras with built-in analytics, and according
to Dvir Doron, the company’s vice president of marketing,
it has been deployed for some time now. The majority of
traditional IP manufacturers have yet to release a mainstream
intelligent video for their IP cameras, but Doron
expects that this year will be the time when some level of
analytics will be included on many IP cameras.
Use of the IP video solution is only going to grow in popularity,
especially when commodity price points settle at
comfortable levels. According to IMS Research, the growth
of IP cameras is pegged at a compound annual rate of 40 percent.
I suspect that nearly 10 percent of video surveillance
cameras shipped in 2007 were IP cameras. This only heightens
the prospects that IP solutions will continue to grow.
The use and practicality of IP solutions touches more
than the security market. Jumbi Edulbehram, director of
strategic channels at Axis, said the integration of IP video
with other systems, such as access control, gives the solution
a higher level of intelligence. He also pointed out that
IP video can be used in a retail application to assist in merchandising
and store operations.
Storage capacity also is part of the big picture. IP video
cameras currently use the MPEG-4 compression scheme
and stream video in this format, which is the industry standard.
However, as H.264 standards become more prevalent,
manufacturers will incorporate this technology, probably
this year.
IP video is growing fast, and the analyst community’s
view is unanimous about its future. Within the next three
years at the latest, it will be more common than not for
video analytics functionality to be requested in project
specifications for major institutional or commercial
video surveillance systems. As soon as the mainstream
security channel—systems
integrators, dealers
and installers—buys into
the deployment of IP
video-based systems,
their skill sets of installation
and sales will push
integration forward.