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After years of unfulfilled promises, panoramic cameras look ready to go mainstream. Increased performance, reduced costs and the rise of IP video systems have transformed a product with great potential into a key component of video surveillance systems. Now that its implementation has caught up, expect to see panoramic cameras deployed widely.
Many of you, including myself, are skeptical of this technology. Though panoramic cameras have won ISC West "Best in Show" Awards twice in the last decade, they have never been a big commercial success. First, the IPIX CommandView360 won the award. Then, IPIX, very famously, crashed and burned. Then, in 2006, Capture Omniscape won the same award. This camera has become a promising niche player but certainly not a mainstream powerhouse.
Now, Grandeye has unveiled a new pure IP panoramic camera series that has the potential to change how IP security systems are designed. Grandeye has been developing panoramic cameras for the last 5 years and is the OEM behind the cameras offered by Sentry360 and Capture Omniscape.
Grandeye offers a 5 MP, 360 degree camera in a small, discrete form factor for an MSRP under $2,000 that can be integrated into mainstream NVRs/DVRs. This clears the major operational issues that panoramic cameras suffered in the past.
[NOTE: In October 2008, Grandeye underwent significant corporate changes.]

The images above depicts the camera itself and demonstrates how discrete the camera is when installed.
With this, panoramic cameras become a smart choice for:
In indoor facilities, like the areas mentioned above, panoramic cameras can provide the best solution for somewhere between 15% and 30% of all cameras. As such, it should become a standard part of video surveillance designs.
In the rest of this review, we will explore the details about the evolution of this product category and best practices for using them.
How the Offering and Market Matured
Despite the hype for IPIX in 2003-2004, panoramic cameras suffered from 3 major problems.
Five years ago, the video surveillance world was different and panoramic cameras were just not good enough. To use an IPIX camera meant using a stovepipe system that could not be integrated with your main video surveillance system. Most security managers are very reluctant to do this because of performance and cost issues. Moreover, even though the cameras offered 1 or 2 MPs, over a 360 degree image, the video quality was clearly worse than simply using 4 analog cameras. As such, the motivation for most was minimal and the obstacles were high.
Because of these fundamental strategic problems, IPIX's rampant marketing campaigns only made things worse. I remember going to IPIX booth multiple times not understanding what all the fuss was about. With companies like Axis and Milestone still trying to make their way to the mainstream, IPIX was a strange beast. Many people, especially with the spectacular collapse, felt the same.
Wider deployment of panoramic cameras started in 2006 with the release of a 3 MP “Analog series”. With this system, the resolution increased to 3 MPs and it could be used with traditional analog systems. However, it requires its own recorder and could not be seamlessly integrated into IP video systems. As such, customers started to use this as a niche tool (especially in retail) to address high loss issues. This will be useful for organizations committed to existing DVR systems but less compelling for the emerging IP video market.
With the new IP offering from Grandeye, the offering is optimized for mainstream IP systems:
With this resolved, panoramic cameras start making sense for widespread use.
Best Practices for Using Panoramic
Panoramic cameras address a number of key problems in video surveillance:
Finally, as DVR and NVR manufacturers have only recently started to add support, you must check to determine that your system can support (For instance, Cieffe, NICE, Videonext, VideoProtein, and Clickit currently support Grandeye). Because they are IP cameras and use standard MJPEG for compression, support should be straightforward but it is obviously important to determine support before deployment. Two forms of support exist:
1. Basic Support - the DVR/NVR can display and record user selected sections of the panoramic image. This is good for live monitoring.
2. Advanced Support - the DVR/NVR records the whole panoramic stream and allows operators to pan,tilt and zoom in the recorded video. This is important for investigations.
Conclusion
Given the growing maturity of panoramic cameras, now is the time for security managers and integrators to start carefully assessing how and where these cameras can improve security and reduce costs in system upgrades or new deployments.
Traditionally, detailed identification of people in anything other than a small, well defined, area (like a doorway) was very hard. With panoramic cameras, in rooms or areas under 1,500 sqft, it now becomes possible to get those details anywhere in the room. This helps solve more cases by ensuring not only evidence available but the evidence has sufficient quality.
Likewise, in large areas, investigators are forced to piece together an incident across multiple cameras and through gaps in coverage. With a 5 MP panoramic camera, the investigator can see the entire facility with sufficient detail to track a suspect or an activity across very large areas. This makes solving cases easier and allows many cases to be solved that would otherwise be inconclusive because of gaps in video coverage.
Panoramic cameras fill an important gap in the role of traditional Megapixel cameras. Traditional Megapixel cameras are optimized for wall mounting to look in a particular direction. This is great when you are looking for something specific (i.e., just people coming in a door or license plates at a car entrance). However, when you need to see a whole room, traditional Megapixel cameras force a trade off of which direction you want to see. Panoramic cameras eliminate this trade off.
As such, panoramic cameras provide an improved solution in monitoring hallways or multiple entrances to a room. The panoramic camera can replace multiple cameras looking down and across hallways. Likewise, it can eliminate the need for multiple cameras to cover different entrances to a room.
Nevertheless, panoramic cameras compliment other cameras and do not provide value in certain applications:
You should be aware of and consider two panoramic alternatives to Grandeye.
| Topic |
|---|
| Convergence |
| IP Cameras |
| Megapixel Cameras |
| NVRs |
| Recession |
| Retail |
| Standards |
| Storage |
| Video Analytics |
| Video Surveillance |
| Wireless |