Archive for September, 2011

Unlocking Further Success

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

SimonsVoss Technologies AG has reported group-wide sales of EUR 21 million for the first half of 2011. With this result Europe’s leading supplier of digital locking and access control systems has increased year-on-year sales by 21 per cent.

SimonsVoss success has been built on their concept to use a digital transponder rather than a traditional lock. This has resulted in the company developing a highly sophisticated radio-controlled wireless locking system and becoming an undisputed technology leader in their field.

Simons Voss provide wireless solutions for locking systems and access control systems. These access control systems combine the individual components and provide made-to-measure access, record keeping, audit trail, control and monitoring functions.

The company continues to expand and now employs over 250 people and has installed over 10,000 systems worldwide.

Their most recent success follows the launch of their SmartHandle 3062 and digital locking cylinder 3061 products and Hans-Gernot Illig, CEO of SimonsVoss Technologies AG has said that the company is expecting to supply their one millionth digital lock by the end of the year.

The SmartHandle product combines intelligent Access Control with an elegant and ergonomic design. The SmartHandle 3062 was developed specifically for the requirements of the hospitality industry and care homes.

Digital locking solutions are becoming increasingly popular and have several advantages over ‘traditional’ mechanical locking systems.  Manual systems can quickly reach their limits and can be a costly security risk if keys are lost or copied.

The main benefits of a digital locking solution:

  • Quick, wireless installation
  • Easy to adapt
  • Seamless security
  • Central control
  • Highly economical

As Simonsvoss say, “No Wires, No Keys, No Limits!’

It’s The Premier League For High Definition

Friday, September 16th, 2011

Ground staff at Fulham FC can now keep an eye out for trouble using tablets and smartphones.

The Premier League club has installed an advanced security system that allows employees to wirelessly monitor its network of 63 High Definition (HD) cameras.

Images of troublemakers can be quickly circulated to police and Fulham’s own crowd control team and in future the technology may incorporate facial recognition, linked to a database of known hooligans.

Before the upgrade, the ground was equipped with 27 standard definition cameras, each recording onto its own VHS tape deck. The old CCTV system was ditched in favour of ethernet-connected high definition cameras.The entire system runs on an IP computer network, meaning that cameras are hooked-up using standard ethernet cables.

Video is stored on a central server and can be accessed by a range of devices, securely connected to Fulham’s wi-fi mesh network. This allows local and remote access via a range of devices, including  iPads and iPhones.

Users control the cameras by dragging their finger across the screen and can even use the standard pinch-to-zoom feature.

“Incidents that happened were taking days to recover. We can now do that within seconds,” said Nicolas Pendlebury, Fulham FC’s head of IT projects.

Operators can zoom in on the stands at a high resolution “Say there are five fans in the away end breaking seats, we would bookmark the image in the application, email those photos to one of our response team and say ‘please eject these people’. They can’t argue it is not them. It stands up in court if we need to take it there.”

The higher quality provided by the HD cameras means that the club can now produce still images to help identify troublemakers, in contrast to the poor results lifted from its old system.

“The closest we could get to any fan was four or five people wide by four or five high. The image was like, ‘do you know this man?’, and you would say ‘is it a man?’,” said Mr Pendlebury

Artificial intelligence promises to add even more advanced features to the new CCTV setup in future. In addition to facial recognition, linked to a national database of football hooligans, the club is hoping to introduce systems that can detect suspicious behaviour. “We are looking at a tool that can pick up threats. For example, if it sees me walking into a room with a bag, but leaving without the bag, it will pick up that I entered with something and left with nothing,” said Mr Pendlebury.

Because the system is online, the club has put in place a range of safeguards to ensure that access to the feeds is secure. Use of the remote access devices, including iPads is currently limited to four authorised individuals, and is only possible while connected to the club’s own private network.

Fulham is also putting in place privacy measures to protect local residents whose homes may fall within the camera’s field of view. The location of windows on nearby houses has been digitally mapped and will be automatically blacked out.

Much of the technology installed at Fulham’s Craven Cottage stadium, as well as its Motspur Park player training facility, was developed for airport security systems.

Some elements have been used at sporting grounds already, but the club believes it is the first to bring together high definition IP cameras with an in-house cloud storage system.

One thing the system can’t do is improve results on the pitch. On the day that Fulham rolled out its new cloud HD CCTV, they were held to a 1-1 draw by Blackburn.

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