Compression as a Business Advantage
January 18, 2009
From: Security Magazine
Security leaders are now looking at compression technology for
security video in new ways. Here is a backgrounder on Pixim’s Digital
Pixel System image capture and processing technology. Security Magazine
readers can view acomparison at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENEqg77ctAM
Pixim’s technology enables video security cameras to produce
high-resolution images with natural color and superb accuracy, free of
image-compromising visual noise, regardless of a scene’s lighting
conditions.
And behind the visually obvious advantages lie another important
benefit of Pixim’s Digital Pixel System technology: images that are
more highly compressed, which can lead to dramatically lower system
costs for storing and moving security video.
Digital Pixel System technology and compression
All video imaging systems use compression algorithms – mathematical
formulas that affect bit rate (i.e., how much bandwidth is needed to
transmit video images) and storage space (i.e., how much disk space is
consumed within a digital video recorder [DVR] or network video
recorder [NVR]). Examples of compression algorithms include MPEG-4 and
H.264.
Compression algorithms vary in their efficiency, which can change
depending on a number of factors. Two of these factors can be
influenced by a camera’s video capture and imaging processing
technology:
- The amount of temporal noise present in the video
– because video compression algorithms “see” temporal noise as if it
were motion, and more motion leads to higher bit rates and larger file
sizes for compressed images.
- The amount of high-frequency content in a scene
– which from a video compression standpoint means sharp edges such as
the lines separating brightly lit and deeply shadowed areas, the edge
of a building, or stripes or other color patters against the solid
background of a shirt. Sharp transitions (i.e., high-frequency content)
increase compressed bit rate as well as the size of the compressed file
on a DVR or NVR.
Pixim’s Digital Pixel System technology optimizes a camera’s video
output before it is received by the compression algorithm as input from
a scene. Pixim’s technology reduces video scenes’ temporal noise and
high-frequency content, thus boosting the efficiency of the compression
algorithm and easing the processing, storage and transfer demands on
the video security system.
The advantages of better compression
More efficiently compressed video images have lower bit rates and
smaller file sizes – which means they are easier to move between the
camera and a DVR or between servers over a network. More efficiently
compressed images also are more economical to store on DVR, server or
networked storage devices.
This ease of transport and storage translates directly into lower
overall system costs for a video security system. Pixim’s Digital Pixel
System technology can reduce video security systems’ total cost of
ownership in the following ways:
- All-digital technology. In
Pixim’s Digital Pixel System technology, each pixel acts like an
individual, self-adjusting camera that can respond optimally to the
unique lighting conditions present at that specific pixel
location. From a compression standpoint, this all-digital approach
means the camera, video compressor, and DVR or NVR do not have to
process, transmit and store extraneous information. In addition, from a
cost-of-ownership standpoint, users of video security systems do not
incur the expenses associated with the extra processing, transmitting
and storing of images.
- Reduced image artifacts. Image
artifacts such as vertical smearing, blooming and camera blindness not
only diminish image quality, but also increase an image’s bit rate and
file size. Pixim’s all-digital technology automatically eliminates or
vastly reduces this visual noise, and owners of video security systems
spend less on manipulating, moving and storing Pixim’s more
streamlined, noise-free images.
- Color consistency. Images
with saturated and muddy colors require more processing to be made
useful for security purposes, and they result in larger file
sizes. Unlike analog cameras, which generalize pixel settings, Pixel’s
Digital Pixel System technology achieves pinpoint color accuracy with
each pixel. As a result, Pixim-powered cameras deliver accurate white
balance and true, consistent color – not saturated highlights or muddy
shadows and the extra processing costs that accompanies inconsistent
color.
- Progressive capture and global electronic shutter. Video
cameras take one of two broad approaches to capturing images: all at
once or in pieces. Pixim’s Digital Pixel System technology enables the
camera’s sensor to capture an entire scene – including every scanned
line – all at once. This approach minimizes or eliminates the
introduction of visual artifacts such as skew (a kind of “leaning”
effect), wobble (video with a rubbery or jiggly appearance), jagged
edges, smearing or high-frequency content (i.e., the sharp edges
between dark and light portions of a scene). Fewer image artifacts
means clearer, cleaner images with lower bit rates and smaller file
sizes – leading to lower network traffic and reduced storage
requirements, along with their associated cost savings.
To summarize, Pixim’s technology begins with low-noise digital
pixels and uses advanced processing to enhance image quality and reduce
image noise to minimal levels. The result is cleaner video that
compresses better and that can significantly reduce system costs for
video security camera systems.