Pixim DPS technology offers compression advantages
November 19, 2008
From: Security World Hotel
Pixim announces that research performed by an independent test lab
has validated significant compression advantages - along with
associated cost, storage and file transfer benefits - of Pixim's
Digital Pixel System technology.
The tests, conducted by dBeech Associates, Ltd. (
www.dBeech-Associates.com),
validated the Digital Pixel System technology's superior compression
capabilities and digital video recorder (DVR) space savings in some
typical security applications, compared to both high-resolution and
medium-resolution analog CCD cameras. In addition to the compression
advantages, the independent test lab also confirmed the superiority of
the true wide dynamic range (WDR) capabilities of Pixim's Digital Pixel
System technology.
To provide further information on the
compression advantages of Pixim-powered cameras, Pixim has developed a
library of information available on its website. Included are:
· A Compression Overview fact sheet.
·
A technical white paper - "Compression Advantages of Pixim's Digital
Pixel System Technology" - outlining how Pixim's Digital Pixel System
technology is able to deliver compression advantages for users of video
security systems.
· A Flash flip book - "Storage Savings With
Pixim-powered Cameras" - that is Volume 3 in The Pixim Chronicles
series of flip books.
"Most of the advantages of Pixim's
innovative Digital Pixel System image capture and processing technology
are clearly visible: video images with high resolution, natural color
and superb accuracy, and free of image compromising visual noise,
regardless of a scene's lighting conditions," said John Monti, vice
president of marketing and business development, Pixim. "Less obvious,
but equally impressive, is the fact that Pixim's all-digital technology
produces images that are more efficiently compressed. Efficient
compression means that those high-quality images are delivered in
smaller file sizes, which can dramatically reduce the costs of moving
and storing security video in both CCTV and IP-networked installations."
In
the dBeech Associates study, three cameras - one Pixim-powered, one
high-resolution analog CCD and one medium-resolution analog CCD - used
the same lens to capture the same scene over the same 24-hour period,
recorded by the same DVR using MPEG-4 compression. Although test
results naturally vary by application and scene content, this
independent testing showed a clear compression advantage for the
Pixim-powered camera - requiring less hard drive space in the DVR to
store an equivalent amount of video content.
In addition to the
independent test lab results, Pixim's internal tests as well as reports
from customers using Pixim-powered video cameras have consistently
found significant savings in disk recording space when comparing
Pixim-powered cameras to analog cameras on MPEG and H.264 DVRs. To cite
one customer example, an analog CCD video required up to three times
the disk space of a Pixim-powered video to record the same indoor
office scene.
Pixim's Digital Pixel System technology delivers
video that is easier for compression algorithms to work with to achieve
higher compression rates without sacrificing image quality. At a system
level, this means higher flexibility and lower costs because Pixim's
more efficiently compressed video images have lower bit rates and
smaller file sizes, which makes them easier to move between the camera
and a DVR or networked video recorder (NVR) and more economical to
store.
The ability to store the same mount of video content in
less DVR or NVR storage space means that video security system
operators gain tremendous flexibility in how they can use that
additional space to achieve optimum benefit from their security system
and reduce their total cost of ownership.