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Venerdì 28 settembre 2007

Le costruzioni dal satellite, aziende della vigilanza hanno detto a

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Da John E. Dunn

Le grandi organizzazioni nel Regno Unito stanno offrende un nuovo servizio che potrebbe essere l'ultimo nella sicurezza fisica - sorveglianza della costruzione via il satellite.

Il servizio è i lavori di due aziende, Scyron e Datasat, che hanno spiato una necessità fra le grandi multinazionali ed enti governativi di fissare a distanza le costruzioni ed i beni a distanza. Scyron fornisce l'elemento di analisi del software, che può valutare la minaccia usando le immagini proveniente dal satellite, mentre Datasat ha accesso ad una rete satellite a rifornimento immesso per l'applicazione.

Scyron - which invested in its partner Datasat in July - uses the example of a shipping company watching over its fleet in any part of the world. If suspicious incidents are recorded, the system can adjust bandwidth to ensure the efficient transfer of images back to its monitoring HQ. It can also be tied into biometric and audio security systems as an extra layer.

Such a service doesn’t come cheap, but then again neither does any remote security analysis. The company claims its approach will still save time and money when compared to manual incident analysis.

In addition to maritime and transport, other industries that might be interested include border controls, utilities, and even the military, though the latter might be expected to have their own systems in place for such security.

“The system gives a solution to the headache of permanently manned controls at numerous locations across the world. It is more targeted as it only alerts to suspicious activity but also in conjunction with satellite – it reaches the parts which others just cannot reach,” said Phil Emmel, Datasat’s managing director.

What the company describes as an ‘entry-level’ system would set an organisation back 50,000 euros, but an accurate cost would depend on the number and type of sites being secured, the company said. The service was demonstrated at the Alarmes, Protection Securite Expo, held this week in Paris.

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  • This entry was posted on Friday, September 28th, 2007 at 4:33 pm and is filed under Sci Tech, Surveillance . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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