Tuesday, September 7, 2010

High Resolution 550 Line Day Night Color Mini Dome 12 or 24 Volts

Click to enlarge

High Resolution 550 Line Day Night Color Mini Dome 12 or 24 Volts



550 Line High Resolution Color Dome Camera, 32X Digital Zoom, Sony Super HAD CCD, DC Auto Iris Varifocal Lens 2.8mm~12mm


● Up-Most High Resolution: Color - 550 TV Lines/ B/W - 600 TV Lines
● Built-in Next Generation 3D DNR with 3D Filter
● Max. Sens-Up (x258), 0.00001 Lux of Min. Illumination
● Convenient OSD Control Function
● x32 Digital Zoom
● Free Area Selectable Function of BLC and MD
● Privacy Color Masking for 8 Area Selection
● Camera OSD Controlled by RS-485 (Optional)
● ICR-IR Cut Filter Removable (Optional)
● Max 70% of Disk Saving Effect with Super DNR
● Negative Image Function
● Digital Wide Dynamic Range Function (D-WDR)
 

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Sony SSC-DC374 1/3" High Res Color Security Camera

Click to enlarge

Sony SSC-DC374 1/3" High Res Color Security Camera



  • High quality and high sensitivity - 1/3 type IT DSP CCD with Super HAD™ technology
  • High resolution - 480 TV Lines
  • Minimum Illumination of 0.8 Lux @ F1.2 (50 IRE)
  • On/Off Backlight Switchable
  • Turbo AGC (up to 24 dB) for clear, distinguishable images
  • Accepts DC Servo lenses

Color 600 TV Lines Day/Night 12 or 24 Volts Sony CCD



● 1/3" Sony Super HAD CCD
● More than 600 TV Lines
● 0.00006 Lux (SENS-UP x256)
● Auto iris (AI)
● C/CS Lens Mount
● Auto Electronic Shutter (AES)
● Auto Gain Control (AGC)
● Auto White Balance (AWB)
● Back Light Compensation (BLC)
● Sens-up - x2 ~ x256
● Flickerless
● Motion Detection - 4 Zones
● Digital Zoom - x1 ~ x10
● DNR (Digital Noise Reduce) - 16 levels adjustable
● DDS (Digital Slow Shutter)
● 8 Programmable Privacy Zones
● Dual Power Input 12V DC and 24V AC
● NTSC or PAL system
Lens Sold Separately

Friday, May 28, 2010

How to Connect CCTV Cameras to the Internet

If you've ever been on the road and wanted to see what was going on at home but didn't have a way, now you do. All you have to do is to connect a few CCTV cameras to the Internet and you can monitor as many rooms in your home or office from any computer that's online, anywhere in the world.




  1. Step1
    Buy a few closed-circuit television cameras that can be connected to your computer. Some older CCTV cameras will allow you to connect only to a VCR for recording. However, most of the newer ones will allow you to use a digital video recorder, or a computer hard drive. Just make sure to purchase a camera set that can connect directly to your computer. This is usually done through a USB cable.

  2. Step2
    Sign up to HomeCamera.com. Do this once you have the cameras installed and configured with your laptop. This service is free as of 2009 while it is in beta testing, but the company plans to charge $29.95 a year starting in 2010. Download the software and follow the instructions for installation.

  3. Step3
    Configure HomeCamera.com software. This is a simple process. You log into the software and assign a name, such as "living room," "entrance," or "study," to each camera that you wish to monitor. You will then be able to sign into any Web-enabled device such as a personal digital assistant, cell phone or computer and see exactly what the cameras are seeing, via the HomeCamera.com website.

  4. Step4
    Share the camera feeds with friends or family if you wish. If you'd like you can also set up the cameras as motion detectors, and you will receive an email or text message along with a photo every time someone walks by the cameras. In addition, the website can be used as a recording device and can take pictures every few minutes and upload them to the HomeCamera.com servers.

  5. Step5
    Get creative. CCTV cameras connected to the Internet can be used for a lot more than just home security. For example you can use them to watch wildlife, for distance learning, video conferencing, and more.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

How long do you record cctv cameras in pubs for pubwatch


LiveCCTVCameras

http://www.livecctvcameras.co.uk/
Closed-circuit television - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/c/closed_circuit_television
Mass surveillance - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/m/mass_surveillance
Closed-circuit television - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed-circuit_television
Traffic enforcement camera - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/t/traffic_enforcement_camera
'Talking' CCTVcameras go live across Hounslow (From Hounslow...

http://www.hounslowandbrentfordtimes.co.uk/news/4795252._Talking_...
Automatic number plate recognition - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/a/automatic_number_plate_recognition
BBC News - Cash prizes for catching CCTV criminals

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8393602.stm
Surveillance - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/s/surveillance
BBC News : UK : More CCTVcameras to fight crime

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/1501533.stm
Panopticon - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/p/panopticon
Facial Recognition System - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/f/facial_recognition_system
CCTV density-maps of the UK - Boing Boing

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/07/20/cctv-density-maps-of.html
Death of Ian Tomlinson - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/d/death_of_ian_tomlinson
History of Bournemouth - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/h/history_of_bournemouth
Nottingham Travelwise: CCTV

http://www.itsnottingham.info/cctv/
Channel Tunnel - featured topic

http://about.qkport.com/c/channel_tunnel

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Does target security really monitor there cctv


Closed-circuit television (CCTV) is the use of video cameras to transmit a signal to a specific place, on a limited set of monitors.
It differs from broadcast television in that the signal is not openly transmitted, though it may employ point to point wireless links. CCTV is often used for surveillance in areas that may need monitoring such as banks, casinos, airports, military installations, and convenience stores. It is also an important tool of distance education.
In industrial plants, CCTV equipment may be used to observe parts of a process from a central control room; when, for example, the environment is not suitable for humans. CCTV systems may operate continuously or only as required to monitor a particular event. A more advanced form of CCTV, utilizing Digital Video Recorders (DVRs), provides recording for possibly many years, with a variety of quality and performance options and extra features (such as motion-detection and email alerts).

Surveillance of the public using CCTV is particularly common in the UK, where there are reportedly more cameras per person than in any other country in the world. There and elsewhere, its increasing use has triggered a debate about security versus privacy.
he first CCTV system was installed by Siemens AG at Test Stand VII in Peenemünde, Germany in 1942, for observing the launch of V-2rockets. The noted German engineer Walter Bruch was responsible for the design and installation of the system.
CCTV recording systems are still often used at modern launch sites to record the flight of the rockets, in order to find the possible causes of malfunctions, while larger rockets are often fitted with CCTV allowing pictures of stage separation to be transmitted back to earth by radio link.
In September 1968, Olean, New York was the first city in the United States to install video cameras along its main business street in an effort to fight crime. The use of closed-circuit TV cameras piping images into the Olean Police Department propelled Olean to the forefront of crime-fighting technology.
The use of CCTV later on became very common in banks and stores to discourage theft, by recording evidence of criminal activity. Their use further popularised the concept. The first place to use CCTV in the United Kingdom was King's Lynn, Norfolk.
In recent decades, especially with general crime fears growing in the 1990s and 2000s, public space use of surveillance cameras has taken off, especially in some countries such as the United Kingdom.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Video: Woman watches burglary live online via surveillance camera


A Florida woman who had a surveillance camera installed in her home was shocked when she caught two burglars ransacking her house in real time.

Jean Thomas, 43, was at work 25 miles away when she checked her surveillance feed and saw two strangers in her sitting room, stealing her son's Wii game system and eating food they had taken from her fridge.
Mrs Thomas called police and was able to give a running commentary of what was happening in her house as the men walked in and out of the camera's line, carrying her jewellery, television and other belongings.



"I'm watching my home on my online monitor and there's a man in my house and he's robbing it," the Boynton Beach, Florida, resident said in a 911 call. "He's in my bedroom now."
In the footage, released by the Boynton Beach police department, two men, trailed by the family's two dogs and a skittish cat, move from room to room as they sift through the family's property.
Police rushed to the scene and four men - the two filmed inside the house and two suspected accomplices captured nearby - now face charges of burglary and grand theft.
Mrs Thomas bought the surveillance system after her home was burgled last October.
Until Wednesday, however, the £200 investment had yielded little other than hours of footage monitoring the daily movements of the family's pets.

Monday, May 24, 2010

One crime solved for every 1,000 CCTV cameras, senior officer claims


Just one crime is solved a year by every 1,000 CCTV cameras in Britain's largest force area, it was claimed today.


A senior Scotland Yard officer, Detective Chief Inspector Mick Neville, warned police must do more to head off a crisis in public confidence over the use of surveillance cameras.
DCI Neville said officers need to improve their results to make captured images count against criminals.
He said there are more than a million CCTV cameras in London and the Government has spent £500 million on the crime-fighting equipment.
But he admitted just 1,000 crimes were solved in 2008 using CCTV images as officers fail to make the most of potentially vital evidence.

Writing in an internal report, Mr Neville said people are filmed many times every day and have high expectations when they become victims of crime.
But he suggested the reality is often disappointing as in some cases officers fail to bring criminals to justice even after they are caught on camera and identified.
DCI Neville said CCTV played a role in capturing just eight out of 269 suspected robbers across London in one month.
Critics of Britain's so-called ''surveillance state'' will seize on DCI Neville's comments as further evidence CCTV is not working in the fight against crime.
The Government is considering whether every camera should be registered on centrally-held CCTV maps.
Earlier this year a Home Office report found camera schemes have a ''modest impact'' on reducing crime.
Researchers found cameras were most effective in preventing vehicle thefts and vandalism in car parks.
Some local authorities have been forced to make freedom of information requests to police forces to try and work out if CCTV cameras are effective.
The Metropolitan Police is piloting a scheme, known as Operation Javelin, to improve the use of images from existing cameras.
Staff in 11 boroughs have formed dedicated Visual Images Identification and Detection Offices (VIIDO).
They collect and label images before passing them to a central circulation unit that distributes them to officers, forces and the media.
Some 5,260 images have been viewed so far this year with identification made in more than 1,000 cases.
DCI Neville said the scheme should be expanded to force-wide as officers make the investigation of CCTV evidence as professional as fingerprints and DNA.
David Davis, the former shadow home secretary said it is ''entirely unsurprising'' that the report highlights some shortcomings of CCTV.
''It should provoke a major and long overdue rethink on where the Home Office crime prevention budget is being spent," he said.
''CCTV leads to massive expense and minimum effectiveness. It creates a huge intrusion on privacy, yet provides little or no improvement in security.
''The Metropolitan Police has been extraordinarily slow to act to deal with the ineffectiveness of CCTV, something true both in London and across the country.''
Detective Superintendent Michael McNally, who commissioned the report, said improvements in the use of CCTV can be made.
He told Sky News: ''There are some concerns, and that's why we have a number of projects that are on-going at the moment.
''CCTV, we recognise, is a really important part of investigation and prevention of crime, so how we retrieve that from the individual CCTV pods is really quite important.''
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said: ''The Metropolitan Police is currently the only police service to employ this method of CCTV tracking.''

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Paris to quadruple number of CCTV cameras


Paris will quadruple the number of closed-circuit police cameras in its streets by the end of next year, after President Nicolas Sarkozy's promise to emulate London in an attempt to track crime and terrorism threats.

By Henry Samuel in Paris
Published: 1:47PM BST 16 Oct 2008

While the Paris metro and rail networks already operate around 9,500 CCTV devices, police have only 330 at their disposal to survey outside public areas. The new plan, dubbed "A Thousand Cameras for Paris", will raise that number to more than 1,200 – with most installed in high-risk areas and outside railway and underground stations.
The figure is still small compared with London, where each citizen is caught on average several hundred times a day. Britain has about four million closed-circuit security cameras compared with France's 340,000.
The CCTV drive follows Mr Sarkozy's pledge last autumn to follow London's surveillance lead. "I am very impressed by the efficiency of the British police thanks to this network of cameras," the French president said. "In my mind, there is no contradiction between respecting individual freedoms and the installation of cameras to protect everyone's security."
Until now, large meeting places such as the Place de la République, where strike protests usually start, and the busy Champs-Elysées were already heavily equipped.
But police want to beef up surveillance outside the Gare du Nord – where the London to Paris Eurostar terminates – the scene of several gang battles in recent months.
It will increase on the Champ-de-Mars – the area around the Eiffel tower – where violent youths recently attacked a group of students celebrating the end of their baccalaureate exams.
More cameras will be installed in the 19th arrondissement, where a Jewish youth was killed in June in an apparent anti-Semitic attack, as well as in the 18th arrondissement Рhome to Montmartre and the Sacr̩ Coeur.
Paris's police chief will present the plan to city councillors next week. The capital's Socialist mayor, Bertrand Delanoë, long opposed to CCTV, recognised its effectiveness in fighting crime in his campaign for re-election this year.
"The objective is not to cover every road, every corner of the city, but to put video means where common sense dictates," one of the plan's authors told Le Figaro, which leaked the details.
Many of the current cameras are so low-resolution that the images are unusable in a court of law, local politicians say. Interior minister Michèle Alliot-Marie will draw up a charter to go with the new generation of cameras, limiting to 30 the days recorded images can be stored. There will be strict controls on who is allowed to view them.
French police also hope a mini spy-in-the-sky drone the size of a toy glider will help them track rioters and fight crime.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

CCTV only effective at cutting car crime


CCTV is only effective in cutting vehicle crime and has little effect in reducing other offences, research for the Home Office has found.

The review of a series of CCTV studies revealed cameras that flood town centres and housing estates do not have a significant impact on crime.
In one city, it only led to increased reporting of offences to the police.
It will renew fears over the role of the CCTV network in the UK, which is already the largest in the world with the equivalent of one camera for every 12 people.


An analysis of 44 research studies was carried out by the Campbell Collaboration, a review body, which found that while cameras have a modest impact on crime levels, they are at their most effective in reducing car crime in car parks, especially when used alongside improved lighting and the introduction of security guards.
The authors, who include Cambridge University criminologist David Farrington, said CCTV should continue to be used but have a much narrower focus, such as reducing vehicle crime.
Results from a 2007 study in Cambridge which examined 30 cameras in the city centre found they had no effect on crime but did lead to a rise in the reporting of assault, robbery and other violent crimes to the police.
However, the Campbell Collaboration stressed that CCTV is more effective in reducing crime in Britain than in other countries.
It said CCTV is now the single most heavily-funded crime prevention measure operating outside the criminal justice system adding: "Over the last decade, CCTV accounted for more than three quarters of total spending on crime prevention by the British Home Office."
Chris Grayling, the shadow home secretary, said: "CCTV has definitely got a role to play in combating crime but its use should be decided by local communities."

Friday, May 21, 2010

Home Office to unveil first CCTV regulator to take control of Britain's army of cameras


A new regulator is to be appointed to oversee Britain’s four million CCTV cameras.

The Home Office is expected to announce the UK's first CCTV regulator later today Photo: PA
New standards for the use of CCTV images, as well as new guidance to ensure that police use CCTV images more effectively, are also to be unveiled by ministers today.
The news comes after the Home Office’s own experts found in a series of reports that CCTV was only effective in cutting vehicle crime and has little effect in reducing other offence.
Andy Rennison, the current Forensic Science Regulator, is understood to have been given the task of implementing the 44 recommendations of the two-year old National CCTV Strategy .
The strategy called for the creation of a “basic CCTV infrastructure” while also promoting “CCTV and its expansion by forming evidence-based business cases”.

There has also been frustration that despite the growth of the cameras, they are used only to solve a fraction of crimes. One source said: “Police need to make better use of CCTV evidence - they need a more systematic approach to ID suspects.
David Hanson, the Home Office minister, is expected to tell MPs that by the end of March, 17 of the 44 recommendations will have been implemented. A handful of the measures which have been overtaken by new technology are under review.
The CCTV network in the UK is already the largest in the world with the equivalent of one camera for every 12 people. Yet questions have been raised about its effectiveness.
Earlier this year research by the Home Office found that flooding town centres and housing estates with cameras did not have a significant impact on crime. In one city, it only led to increased reporting of offences to the police.
An analysis of 44 research studies found that cameras are at their most effective in reducing car crime in car parks, especially when used alongside improved lighting and the introduction of security guards.
The Campbell Collaboration said CCTV is now the single most heavily-funded crime prevention measure operating outside the criminal justice system, accounting for more than three quarters of spending on crime prevention by the Home Office.
Charles Farrier, a spokesman for campaign group NoCCTV, said the statement on the implementation of the strategy showed that “they are ploughing ahead regardless” of the criticism over the use of CCTV.
But Tom Reeve, editor of CCTV Image magazine, said: “CCTV is very effective to police to investigate crimes, even when the images not crystal clear. They lead to other avenues of investigation.”

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Seven of ten murders solved by CCTV


Almost seven out of ten murders are solved using footage captured by CCTV cameras, The Daily Telegraph can disclose.

By Richard Edwards, Crime Correspondent
Published: 4:34PM GMT 01 Jan 2009

The first study of its kind into the effectiveness of surveillance cameras revealed that almost every Scotland Yard murder inquiry uses their footage as evidence.
In 90 murder cases over a one year period, CCTV was used in 86 investigations, and senior officers said it helped to solve 65 cases by capturing the murder itself on film, or tracking the movements of the suspects before or after an attack.
In a third of the cases a good quality still image was taken from the footage from which witnesses identified the killer.

Britain has more cameras in public spaces than any other country in the world – an estimated 4.2 million – and a person can be captured up to 300 times a day by CCTV in London. However the proliferation of the spy systems has caused controversy, with civil rights campaigners criticising the creeping growth of a "surveillance society" that is invading the privacy of law-abiding citizens.
A report by the Surveillance Studies Network said that £500 million of public money had been invested in CCTV over the last decade and that during the 1990s the Home Office spent 78 per cent of its crime prevention budget on installing cameras.
However no study had ever been conducted to determine their effectiveness and some anecdotal evidence had previously suggested that they were of little investigative value.
Commander Simon Foy, Scotland Yard's head of homicide, told the Daily Telegraph that the results of his study proved that CCTV cameras are as vital to detectives as forensic evidence such as DNA samples or fingerprints.
Mr Foy said: "CCTV plays a huge role in helping us investigate serious crime. I hope people can understand how important it is to our success in catching people who commit murder."
One of the most infamous cases is that of Richard Whelan, who was stabbed to death on a bus in 2005 as he attempted to defend his girlfriend. The horrific 33-second attack was all caught on camera. Anthony Joseph, a paranoid schizophrenic, baited the victim by throwing chips at his girlfriend and the killer grinned at a CCTV camera as he left the bus.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Uk has more cctv than anywhere else


Britain has become a bureaucratic and authoritarian state watched over by a quarter of the world's CCTV cameras, a study of Labour's decade in power claims.


National debt is running at £175,000 per household, five times more than thought, while each year the Government has passed 3,500 regulations, along with 100,000 pages of rules and explanation.
'The Rotten State of Britain' claims to be the first "deeply researched factual account" of Tony Blair's and Gordon Brown's time in office.

The author Eammon Butler, a director of the leading think tank the Adam Smith Institute, claimed that his book had been turned down by two publishers because of the "unconventional" nature of the content.
He said: "A new form of centralised government and authoritarian government has been created that is worse than ever in Britain's recent history."

Among the claims in the book are that Britain has a quarter of the world's CCTV cameras, the largest of any country and that taxes have risen by 51 per cent since 1997.
Mr Butler also claims national debt is running at £4.6 billion, or £175,000 per household, not £729 billion (£29,000 per household) as the Government claims.
In the audit of 10 years of the Labour Government, Dr Butler says that there are now 1,406 litter wardens and dog catchers who have been given powers to levy on the spot fines.
Dr Butler said he wrote the book because he got "so angry about the way that they have no concept of the rule of law".
Dr Butler found that in just one year – 2006/7 – half of the 722,464 DNA samples collected by the police came from children, including a seven-month year old girl.
One in nine hospital patients picks up an infection during their stay on a ward, while the total cost of outstanding claims against the NHS is £9.2 billion, Dr Butler claimed.
He said that 30,000 of the 200,000 people who die of cancer and strokes each year would survive "if they lived anywhere else in northern Europe".
Dr Butler also claimed in the book that the number of people receiving state benefits has risen from 17 million people in 1997 to 21 million people by 2007.
He found that nearly six million families receive £16 billion-worth of child credit. Dr Butler said: "It's ridiculously high number of beneficiaries for something aimed to help the poorest."
The result is that some families would be better off if the parents did not live together.
He said: "Three-quarters of the poorest households would be better off splitting up. And when money is tight, that is exactly what happens."

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

What Is a CCTV Monitor?


CCTV stands for closed-circuit television. A CCTV monitor refers to one of the screens used in closed-circuit television.

    Identification

  1. Closed-circuit television is a system where images from cameras are sent to monitors that are directly connected to the cameras, unlike other types of broadcasting, which use airwaves to conduct signals.
  2. Effects

  3. Closed-circuit television can only be viewed on specific monitors and cannot be seen on televisions or other devices that are not directly connected to the cameras.
  4. Uses

  5. CCTV monitors display pictures used for a variety of purposes, including monitoring traffic, to show pictures at sporting events, to detect crimes and to monitor the functioning of machines or other equipment in factories.
  6. Features

  7. On most CCTV monitors, you can adjust the brightness and contrast to improve the display picture and turn off the equipment when not in use. CCTV monitors are available in black and white and color.
  8. Benefits

  9. When CCTV monitors are in plain view of the public, they may reduce the threat of vandalism and theft as potential perpetrators know they are being watched. In industrial settings, CCTV monitors help ensure quality control and productivity.

What Is CCTV?


Closed circuit television, or CCTV, is used in different situations all over the world, and there is a good chance that most people have appeared on a CCTV network, whether they intended to or not. Most retail businesses employ a CCTV system to keep track of each customer that enters a store, deterring theft and vandalism.

    Identification

  1. A CCTV network can only be accessed by display units directly connected to the network. A CCTV network uses coaxial cable, infrared beams or microwaves to broadcast the signal to the connected receivers. This differs from a standard open television network in that anyone tuned to the open network's frequency can access the images being broadcast. With CCTV, the access is restricted.
  2. Functions

  3. CCTV has many practical applications, and it is in use in facilities and homes all over the world. A company may employ a CCTV network as a form of security to monitor the company grounds, and a private residence can employ a CCTV network in the same way. CCTV networks can be used in hospitals to allow nurses to keep an eye on multiple patients at the same time, and they can also be used to monitor traffic at busy intersections.
  4. Features

  5. The majority of the video cameras used in a CCTV network use cameras that have a charged coupled device (CCD) chip for capturing digital images. This device creates images using small charges of electricity that are emitted when light hits a pixel. Each CCD chip generates hundreds of thousands of pixels that make up the image.
  6. Recording Device

  7. Each CCTV network has a time-lapse recording device that captures the images and stores them for use at a later time. Many CCTV networks are beginning to implement digital archiving systems that store all of the images on a series of computer hard drives, but many existing CCTV networks use VHS tape as their method of recording. With CCTV time-lapse technology, it is possible to store 24 hours of surveillance on one tape.
  8. Monitors/Displays

  9. Monitoring CCTV cameras can be done in different ways. In some cases, a CCTV is meant for entertainment purposes, such as the presentation of a boxing match on a pay-per-view network, so these CCTV images are professionally edited for presentation. Most CCTV networks use switchers, quads or multiplexors to keep track of what each camera is capturing. A switcher displays the image from a camera for a few seconds and then automatically switches to the next camera. A quad system feeds images from up to four cameras into one display. The images of each camera in a quad system are recorded separately, but the quality is diminished because they only occupy one-fourth of the screen. A multiplexor is a high-speed switching device that can display and record the images of up to 16 cameras in full-screen mode and quality.