Uncommon Platforms
- By Steven Titch
- Sep 02, 2008
The shift to the use of IP networks
for video surveillance,
as well as the enterprise wide
integration of other security
applications over IP
backbones, has substantially increased the
choices large end users have for software
platforms that control video surveillance
networks.
Common platforms, however, force
manufacturers to move away from the proprietary
models of the past. Interoperability
is in; vendor lock-in is out.
While seeking surveillance solutions that
can integrate a broad range of cameras and
edge devices, end users balk at platforms
perceived as too generic. So video system
suppliers are jockeying to differentiate
themselves in new ways: by touting the superiority
of their underlying technology, by
playing to specific strengths in IT networking,
by offering a tighter knit with other
platforms, such as access control systems
and analytics, or any combination of these
methods.
The result has been a dramatic increase
in the impact management software has on
the purchase of a large-scale video surveillance
system.
With analog, the purchase was all about
the cameras. The management software
was there to manage cameras and DVRs
and do little else. The IP era changed that.
Suddenly, cameras are nearly incidental
and video management software -- especially
its compatibility and interoperability
with other nodes on the enterprise network --
is central.
Moreover, with video surveillance now
an enterprise network application, IT departments
are extremely involved in system
review and selection. The high degree
of IT influence has led software and networking
companies like Cisco Systems,
Milestone Systems and Genetec to leverage
their expertise in IT -- as well as familiarity
among CIOs and IT managers -- to
push into the video security market.
Long-time suppliers of proprietary solutions,
such as Pelco, Mobotix and Verint,
are fighting back, introducing their own IPbased
platforms that work across various
cameras and encoders, while trying to maximize
their existing advantage as established
CCTV vendors with strong reputations
as one-stop suppliers.
“It’s a trend across the industry,” says
Mark Kirstein, president and co-founder of
MultiMedia Intelligence, a market research
firm. “Legacy vendors have more of the
pieces pulled together. IP vendors are
pushing hard on the other side, with no
analog or legacy business to protect.”
Video surveillance management software
essentially ports DVR and NVR functionality
onto a PC or server, moving video control
out of an isolated, vendor-specific
CCTV silo into an environment where it can
process, control and direct multiple feeds
from multiple cameras,DVRs and NVRs located
anywhere in the world, exploiting the
scale made possible by IP networking.
Nearly all IP video software can be counted
on to control thousands of cameras and
to automatically discover and assimilate
new cameras when they are added (sometimes
drivers are required). All the traditional
DVR and NVR functions are there:
pan-tilt-zoom, video wall, search and analysis.
IP-compatibility means the software can
handle multiple feeds from different cameras
using different compression algorithms.
All can transmit live and stored video to
other PCs and to thin clients like cell phones
and PDAs.
So as vendors attempt to differentiate
by stressing core background strengths
and a unique organization of feature sets,
apples-to-apples comparisons fall short.
No vendor has the “right” approach -- or
even claims to. Depending on user requirements,
size and legacy equipment, some IP
video solutions will work better than others.
That’s why it’s important for end users to be
aware of the respective strengths of the
many vendors and how they are leveraging
them to succeed
Strength And Positioning
The biggest and most important difference
among vendors is their starting point. Companies
like Pelco Inc., Clovis, Calif., and
Verint Systems Inc., Melville, N.Y., are examples
of legacy vendors whose traditional
strength has been integrated CCTV systems.
Milestone, in Brøndby, Denmark, and On-
Net Surveillance Systems Inc. (OnSSI), Suffern,
N.Y., are typical of a growing, aggressive
corps of suppliers whose core strength
is IP networking and software.
Milestone’s XProtect is built completely
around IP and interoperability.The company
does not manufacture any video surveillance
hardware, choosing instead to develop
drivers for a wide range of IP cameras
and edge devices.The technology approach
plays to common IT procurement methods,
where CIOs and CISOs often look to integrators
to bring together best-of-breed
products, says Eric Fullerton, president of
the company’s U.S. office.
“With markets changing fast, it’s notsmart to be dependent on one vendor.You
can’t always expect one vendor to give you
what you need,” he says.
Jeff Knapp, vice president of marketing
at OnSSI, agrees. The company had been
rebranding XProtect until this spring, when
it introduced Ocularis, its own IP video
management platform. “Users are looking
at a different kind of integration. It’s become
an intuitive market reflecting what
security operators want to do on an immediate
basis,” he says. “There’s a need for
networking best-of-breed.”
Executives at Verint and Pelco, however,
say there is still a great deal of interest in a
single integrated solution from one vendor.
“There are multiple definitions of ‘wide
open,’ especially in this space,” says Mariann
McDonagh, vice president of global marketing
at Verint.“This is a funky space.You pick
your solution from a Chinese menu, but you
don’t build [systems] one piece at a time.”
Verint’s Nextiva software, she says, has
anchored installations involving 750 cameras
and 17 video platforms from diverse
manufacturers.
“We want to be the de facto video management
platform,” McDonagh says.
Pelco moved into the IP space following
its 2007 acquisition by France’s Schneider
Electric, which then folded Integral Technologies’
DigitalSentry IP software platform
into the Pelco product line.
“In moving toward an open architecture,
taking components and building them into
a solution, we want to allow customers to
make choices,” says Rob Morello, senior
product manager of digital systems.
While customers want a variety of components
from different players, Morello
says they also appreciate the comfort level
that comes from working through a
turnkey vendor.
“Customers like to have one throat to
choke,” he says. “[Best-of-breed] integrators
can deliver value, but it comes with liability.”
Milestone’s Fullerton, on the other
hand, says turnkey players tend to give
best-of-breed a bad rap.
“If we had that attitude, we wouldn’t be
where we are today,” he says. “We take responsibility.
We go a long way to solving
any problem.”
From the user perspective, companies
like Pelco and Verint, along with IndigoVision,
LenSec, March Networks, Mobotix
and VideoInsight, can go a long way toward
putting together a surveillance solution.
But they may work best for buyers with an
enterprise network in place, substantial
legacy gear and perhaps an existing relationship
with either the vendor or one of its
major integrators or resellers. They can get
you cameras and NVRs, but might be more
limited when it comes to the supply of
other IT components.
Users less dependent on legacy CCTV
equipment, and who are committed to
maximizing value of their IP networking
assets, are likely to gravitate toward vendors
with a strong software and IT story.
On the other hand, these projects will require
more attention, investigation and
evaluation, both from the purchasing organization
and the system integrator angling
for the bid. Companies like Milestone,
OnSSI and Genetec, along with 3VR,Avigilon,
DVTel, Exacq Technologies and Telindus,
can make recommendations and can
even provide a fair number of components,
but they will be looking for far more input
from customers.
Applications Integration
Cisco Systems is trying to provide the best
of both worlds.When it comes to brand equity
in IT networking, few rival the San
Jose, Calif., company. Yet, while Cisco isrenowned for its support of interoperability
and common standards (having written
many of them), its traditional strength has
been network hardware rather than software.
However, it clearly sees the future of
video surveillance as IP, hence its multimillion-
dollar push into the surveillance segment,
punctuated by its purchases of
Broadware Technologies and SyPixx Networks
in 2006.
The investment bore fruit this May when
Cisco announced a 10-year deal with Harrah’s
Entertainment Inc., the world’s
largest casino operator. Among other networking
innovations, the transaction involves
the implementation of a large-scale
next-generation security and surveillance
infrastructure.
Cisco’s IP software serves as “a point of
interoperability for entire systems, analytics,
encoders and access control,” says Dennis
Charlebois, director of product marketing
for Cisco. “[It integrates] our systems and
others into one nice application. It can manage
and parcel out functions at the edge, at
the server and at the application level.”
The Harrah’s deal is a template for how
users want to turn video security into a network
application that runs in tandem with
other components and applications. In this
case, interoperability is not limited to
CCTV integration with access control and
alarms, but with a much larger guest management
system.
While Cisco might best articulate the
strategy, nearly all software vendors are
touting some level of turnkey applications
integration.
“We’re on the verge of something transformative,”
says Stephen Russell, CEO and
founder of 3VR, in San Francisco.
Russell sees today’s video management
software ultimately morphing into a central
point for the enterprise to manage security
processes across the global organization,
combining access control, alarm management,
analytics, storage and, depending on
the customer’s vertical segment, ATMs,
point-of-sale systems, ticket-in/ticket-out
kiosks in casinos and much more.
Nearly all vendors have taken their first
steps toward applications integration. For
many of the legacy companies, it’s key to
their future. The most common function is
access control. Of the 17 vendors examined
for this article, 10 offered an access management
platform, either their own or
through an OEM arrangement. Genetec, of
St. Laurent, Quebec, which was selling an
access control platform before it introduced
its Omnicast video software, touts its
experience. Pelco considers its partnership
with AMAG Technology, which will allow it
to link video management to access control
and building automation functions, as critical
to its turnkey strategy.
Codecs And Compression
To really command the attention of IT departments,
surveillance management software
vendors must address video encoding,
storage and analytics.
These are the functions that prompt the
most contention between IT departments
and security operations because of conflicting
priorities. Different video encoding algorithms
such as MPEG-4, M-JPEG and
the emerging H.264 standard place different
levels of demand on network and storage
capacity. Simply put, the higher the resolution
and faster the frame rate, the more
bandwidth and storage capacity the surveillance
network consumes. Security and
compliance officers want as much data as
they can get. IT directors want efficient
network use.
MPEG-4 and M-JPEG, the most common
legacy encoding schemes, are bandwidth-
intensive. Thus IT managers usually
demand frame rates be scaled back, usually
in inverse proportion to the camera resolution.
While most networks can tolerate
MPEG-4 at 10 to 25 fps, M-JPEG streams
generally need to be 5 fps or less.
Users see H.264 as a potential middle
ground. Studies by Edinburgh, U.K.-based
IndigoVision have shown that compared to
MPEG-4, H.264 can achieve typical savings
of between 20 percent and 25 percent in
bandwidth usage and in excess of 50 percent
during periods when there is no movement
in the frame.
“H.264 is the most popular.And because
it’s standard, it’s cheaper,” says Patrice Belmonte,
director of marketing at Genetec.
“But is it ready?” counters Iain Wadds, head of pre-sales consultancy at Telindus,
Cambridge, U.K., which does not support
the algorithm.
Meanwhile, a handful of vendors, including
Avigilon, Genetec, OnSSI and VideoInsight,
are looking at leading-edge wavelet
compression encoding schemes -- JPEG
2000 for still frames and a variety of nonstandard
formats for moving images. Wavelet
compression, they say, is the only technology
that can allow security departments to get all
the advantages from digital high-definition
and megapixel video without overtaxing the
undergirding IT networks.
JPEG 2000, explains Pierre Parkinson,
vice president of marketing and business development
for Avigilon, of Vancouver, B.C.,
which promises HD “out of the box,” uses
on-board camera intelligence processing to
record large amounts of data and then selectively
transmit data.Avigilon’s Control Center
software can be set so a 16 megapixel
camera transmits one frame per second at
the full 16 megapixels, and the other 29
frames at one megapixel. It can also send
portions of a single image at full resolution,
where a person might be moving, for example,
rather than the whole picture.
A few manufacturers offer proprietary
encoding techniques, a holdover from the
legacy era. Mobotix, for example, offers its
own proprietary MxPEG algorithm with its
cameras.
“MPEG-4 requires processing power,
video compression and storage,” says Peter
McKee, director of sales for the Kaiserslautern,
Germany-based company.
MxPEG can feed 40 high-resolution camera
streams to a single PC, he says.
Analysts such as Kirstein, even as they
question whether H.264 is suitable for HD,
are skeptical about the long-term viability
of proprietary codecs.
“Interoperability is a lot more important,”
he says. “You’re not going to get
away with a proprietary codec.”
Storage And Analytics
At least four vendors -- March Networks,
Telindus, Verint and Pelco -- emphasize
their ties with storage companies.
Telindus has an OEM agreement with
Steelbox Networks, which provides a storage
system geared for surveillance applications.
Verint partners with EMC, and Pelco
works with IBM. March Networks, Ottawa,
Ontario, has a deal with Sun Microsystems.
“As the industry goes to an all-IP platform,
storage requirements are going up,”
says Peter Strom, CEO of March Networks.
“The Sun platform is extremely
compelling from a [total cost of ownership]
perspective. It’s open and scalable and uses
Windows or Linux.” The relationship has
helped March Networks win customers in
the retailing, transportation, financial and
banking industries.
Analytics provides another point of differentiation.
Although products are available
from companies such as IQinVision,
Orsus and ioimage, analytics packages are
increasingly being integrated into video
management software. Even Milestone,
which started out as the quintessential application-
agnostic video software platform,
added a license plate recognition feature
this spring.
Pricing
Finally, pricing approaches vary among
vendors, although gradually manufacturers
are moving toward a model based on a license
fee paid per camera.
“Per-camera license is the only model
that makes sense,” Kirstein says. “It’s the
only way vendors can have a sustained revenue
stream.” Any resistance stems more
from the perception inherent in the legacy
market than from outright vendor strategies,
he adds. “The perception has always
been that hardware has more value than
software -- even when it was software in a
hardware box.”
Cisco, DVTel, EVT, IndigoVision,
LenSec, Mobotix and VideoInsight offer
pricing schemes based on factors other
than number of cameras. In some cases, the
software cost is bundled into the cost of the
project, an approach used by Cisco,
VideoInsight, LenSec and EVT. Only
Mobotix rolls the cost of the software into
the cost of the camera itself -- and boasts it
will give away control software free for use
with non-Mobotix cameras.
Analysts such as Kirstein see the percamera
license model winning. But that
does not mean the future belongs solely to
the software specialists. Still, as procurement
processes become more tied to IT
networking requirements, it will be legacy
players -- and their channels -- that will
have to adapt more readily.
“The speed of innovation is so fast,” Milestone’s
Fullerton says. “You’re not going to
know what the user wants tomorrow.”