Wednesday, April 1, 2009

ISC West: Day 1

Greetings from ISC West!

Wanted to pass along a link to a great aggregation of all ISC-related announcements: "ISC West 2009 Announcement Directory." Lots of camera, video management (3VR's S-Series announcement is listed there), access control and analytics releases. Excellent one-stop-shop to keep tabs on everything that's happening.

Also, check out ISCTweet.com to stay up-to-date on all Tweets from the show floor! @TheSteveRussell already has a few up there.

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Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Keeping Tabs on @TheSteveRussell



Interesting Augmented Reality development from Squidder this week. The initiative started by embedding t-shirts with a FLAR barcode and making Twitter handles recognizable by Webcams. Once authenticated, a user's latest Tweet was displayed as a video overlay -- but this was only the first layer.

Going further, those Squidders tied facial recognition technology in with the same Webcam-enabled computers, so that the software recognizes the user (rather than the barcode) and then displays their latest Tweet on the screen. The technology is still definitely in the alpha stages, as the software only picks up on a human face rather than a unique individual, but I'd say they've got a beat on the future of video monitoring. I could definitely see this (or a similar) tool also being adapted for Facebook, LinkedIn and other social networking sites down the road. Cool stuff!

Speaking of Twitter, check out the latest of what @TheSteveRussell is thinking about here.

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Sunday, March 15, 2009

IHF Roundup: Body Odor as the New Lie Detector, Biometrics Invade Classrooms and Hospitals, and Other Top Headlines This Week

I've written a bunch about how facial recognition and fingerprinting are changing the face of biometric technologies on this blog -- but body odor as a new biometric identifier? Hadn't quite thought of that one. This week, DHS announced plans to study how body odor can be used to identity individuals (just like fingerprints). Looking forward to seeing how this innovation plays out...

The world of biometrics is receiving attention outside of law enforcement and in classrooms and hospitals, too. Earlier this week, I wrote a couple of posts on the use of facial recognition technology to take attendance in UK classrooms as well as biometric technologies popping up in hospitals nationwide. Who knows where they'll pop up next. I've got a feeling that I do.

Not only are biometrics taking shape in areas typically unaccustomed to these technologies, but the robotics world is expanding to other areas -- including Japanese classrooms and tomato farms. Saya, a robotic teacher, can express six different emotions, call roll and even smile at students. While developers say she's no replacement for human instructors, they hope it to be a solution for the growing labor shortage.

MIT, on the other hand, is developing robots not for the classroom, but rather for the greenhouse. The robots are part of a larger plant monitoring system and are able to water the tomato plants and dispense food when needed. Not only do these gardeners offer more exact feeding habits, but also a more economic gardening solution for massive farming grounds. As this CNET article reports, the researchers envision a fully automatic greenhouse going forward with robots running the operations entirely. They bring a new meaning to the term "green thumb".

Video surveillance standards have also been in the spotlight this week -- SecurityInfoWatch's Geoff Kohl hosted a roundtable on the push for standardization not only in the US, but worldwide and what that will mean for end-users, integrators and product manufacturers. The Open Network Video Interface Forum (ONVIF), in particular, kicked off in Germany earlier this year and this week announced 18 new member companies that have joined the group. Exciting to see these finally taking shape and thrilled to see what comes out on the other end.

Finally, great post from @ShawnF on the growing use of Twitter in the security industry. Check out the post here -- or even better, follow me @TheSteveRussell on Twitter!

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