COVID-19: The Second Wave
Fighting the pandemic doesn’t require investments in short-term solutions
- By KiChul Kim
- Feb 12, 2021
The second wave is here, and people are
tired of the pandemic as we head into
what will most likely be a long, dark
winter with COVID-19. Campuses of
all sizes need to function at some level
or risk an uncertain future. News of vaccines
brings hope, but the reality is most people and
organizations are going to be in vulnerable
positions this winter. As a business or school
struggling with lost revenues and unforeseen
costs, it’s hard to be enthusiastic about spending
money on COVID-19 related protections
and solutions when we hear that vaccines are
coming. What will happen to big dollar
COVID-19 capital expenses once the virus is
in the rear-view mirror?
The good news is that you can invest in
solutions you need today to help with social
distancing, occupancy monitoring and face
mask detection. Once the virus is behind us,
these same technologies can take on new and
additional roles to protect your campus from
different threats while giving you actionable
data on the day to day operations and management
of your organization. This is particularly
true with regard to the latest AItechnology
inside security cameras.
These new cameras have evolved to
become data sensors that record much more
than images. AI cameras can detect objects
such as people and vehicles. They can store
attributes about those objects such as colors
of vehicles or clothing, they can tell if someone
is wearing a mask or even if they’re
wearing it incorrectly.
They can sense direction and count those
objects. This makes them true data-gatherers
which can give you enhanced insight about the
flow of people and vehicles around your campus.
People are used to seeing security cameras
in their daily lives, so they are an accepted and
innocuous part of the world today.
When COVID-19 hit, companies scrambled
to come up with technological solutions
to help, but it’s worth noting that intelligent
AI-based cameras were really quick to evolve
and step up to the task. They could be easily
programmed to look for masks, since they
already understood what a face and torso
looked like. It was easy to accurately count
people and warn when occupancy limits
where reached in high traffic areas. This is
because with AI (or machine learning), we can train cameras to recognize whatever we
need them to see. Today, it masks, but tomorrow
it could be something else.
As schools and businesses seek to bring
people back to brick and mortar establishments,
it’s going to be important to make
customers, students and teachers feel comfortable,
in addition to simply following
guidelines. Customers will have to feel that
it’s worth going out, versus shopping on-line.
For many, that comfort might in part be
derived from visible occupancy monitoring
efforts and automated voice-down messages
when people aren’t wearing masks or keeping
their distance. Being proactive and visible in
our efforts to protect one another can reduce
anxieties and help everyone be mindful and
adopt good habits.
We’ve seen how some businesses have
closed all entrances but one and stationed
employees outside the store to screen and
count customers wishing to come inside. It is a
costly use of employee resources, it risks confrontation,
the counting can be highly inaccurate,
and it doesn’t exactly welcome people
with open arms. Businesses which offer online
services have even less traffic, so having an
employee screening the few people who still
require walk-in services is a poor use of their
limited resources. Having multiple entrances
at the premises only compounds the problem.
Schools are particularly challenging, since
the density of students in any particular area
can be hard to manage. It could be easy to
overload any mask detection system, which
could result in continuous voice alerts that
eventually get ignored and not taken seriously
by students and staffalike. Successfully
using technology to help enforce guidelines
has to be well thought out and can only be
only one part of a comprehensive plan for
K-12 and higher education.
How can the latest security technology be
used to help campuses remain open?
Keeping people mindful of good habits is
one of the most important things we can do
when it comes to reducing risk of infection.
The latest AI-based cameras can detect
masks and count people entering and exiting
premises from multiple entry points.
They can drive displays and play messages
to proactively inform customers, students
and staffabout current occupancy levels and
whether they should enter or wait. This frees
stafffrom screening and counting duties, and
most importantly, it reduces friction between
employees and customers concerning policy
compliance. Having a “voice from above”
asking people to wear a mask helps to remove
the burden from staff.
At minimum, it provides an alternative
focus for any customer frustration. All of this
can be achieved “on the edge” without complicated
servers and extra equipment. These
new cameras are the smartest and most capable
we have ever seen. Their ability to be
updated and evolve over time makes them
especially attractive as an investment with
the potential to pay for itself many times over
during its service life.
Previously, counting people with cameras
required a dedicated camera facing downwards
to count people’s heads. This meant
that the camera was only useful for that one
task. The latest AI cameras can be mounted
in a traditional way that views the torso and
face. They can accurately count people for
occupancy and social distancing, detect
masks, and be useful for surveillance all at
the same time.
Smart Tech Investments Should Pay
Dividends in a Post-pandemic World
With businesses, schools and hospitals
struggling to allocate their limited budgets
responsibly, it’s imperative that any expenses
serve their long-term needs. Whenever possible,
technology investments should support
multiple uses. Any security technology
deployed for the pandemic needs to be visible
and immediately effective to help people
to do the right thing.
After the immediate threat from COVID-
19 is gone, cameras and supporting infrastructure
can continue to evolve to support
operations and business intelligence needs
beyond pure surveillance. Modern IP-based
cameras offer much more than simply recording
video. These comprehensive IoT sensors,
coupled with a capable VMS, can be used to
measure and analyze buying patterns and
operations flow. They can be tied to POS systems
and marketing tools. They are continually
evolving to be an indispensable part of
operational intelligence for any organization.
Like our smartphones, apps can be developed
to address specific needs when they
arise. If another pandemic occurs, these
devices can be ready to adapt by providing
touchless access for staffand again reminding
people of their responsibilities. They may
even help with contact tracing by generating
reports about exposure to people who have
become ill.
As bad as this pandemic has been, it is
important to remember that some good tools
have come out of it that will help campuses
get back to some semblance of normalcy in
the months ahead.