NVRs vs. DVRs both have a critical role to play in an effective video solution for the foreseeable future manufacturers have managed to do is make something that was already good even better.
According to ResearchAndMarkets.com, the United States video surveillance system market was valued at nearly $11 billion in 2020, and it is expected to reach $21.86 billion by 2026, registering a CAGR of 12.2 percent during the period of 2021-2026.
The learning curve with surveillance drones, security robots and counter-drone solutions is less about absorbing new technology and more about executing it for the best results in the appropriate use-cases.
Although they are only just getting their start in the security industry, security robots, surveillance drones and airspace security (counter-drone or drone defense) solutions hold significant opportunity for the right security integrators.
IDIS’ end-to-end video is protecting a new, purpose-built visitor center at Canterbury Cathedral, part of a $34 million renovation project transforming one of the UK’s UNESCO Heritage sites.
Hanwha Techwin announced that Round1 Entertainment, a multi-entertainment facility offering bowling, arcade games, billiards, karaoke and other activities in an indoor facility complex, has chosen Hanwha cameras, NVRs and WAVE VMS to secure several of its U.S. facilities.
Hanwha Techwin, a global supplier of IP and analog video surveillance solutions, announced that the Star of Hope Mission in Houston, Texas, has installed hundreds of Hanwha security cameras and a Wisenet WAVE VMS to help secure facilities for unhoused men, women and children.
Arcules, a provider of unified security-as-a-service solutions, announced that local Nebraska non-profit Together recently streamlined its security infrastructure through the Arcules unified cloud platform.