Mushroom Networks ThirdEye makes surveillance mobile, peeping on perps goes wireless and ThirdEye utilizes the company's Broadband Bonding tech to mesh bandwidth across several cellular data cards into one high-speed connection for PTZ cameras (pan-tilt-zoom), letting corporate or government users patrol their perimeters remotely in real-time. The cost of this surveillance freedom won't come cheap for Uncle Sam and friends either with prices starting at $3,190 and unless you're the Howard Hughes homebound-type, you won't be needing this level of protection.
Mushroom Networks Inc., innovators of
Broadband Bonding technology announced
ThirdEye, a highly portable video surveillance technology that utilizes inexpensive cellular broadband cards to transmit live high-quality video from any location. Designed for security, government, defense, emergency response, and other such applications,
ThirdEye seamlessly integrates with leading pan/tilt/zoom (PTZ) cameras delivering the first fully wireless surveillance system that can be placed along borders/roadways, inside vehicles or moved to new locations as often as needed without requiring a wired Internet connection.
ThirdEye transmits live video via Broadband Bonding, a method that aggregates the bandwidth of several cellular data cards (from one or a combination of mobile carriers) into a single high-speed connection. Because the system utilizes multiple cards, video transmission is nearly infallible as the remaining cards automatically compensates if a connection is lost. In addition, the low latency nature of Third Eye allows real time control of
PTZ cameras for panning, tilting and zooming the camera as needed from any remote location.
"Many industries including corporate, broadcasting, transportation and many others have adopted our unique technology for combining multiple broadband links into a single high-speed connection," stated Dr. Cahit Akin, co-founder and CEO of Mushroom Networks.
"With ThirdEye, we are now delivering mobile video capabilities to government and security surveillance applications as well as brand-new applications that were not possible before such as a doctor remotely viewing a patient in a moving ambulance, or a police chief remotely viewing and controlling the dash cam of a squad car." Mushroom Networks' ThirdEye employs industry standards RJ45 Ethernet to connect to the
IP camera at the mobile location turning any
PTZ camera into a suitable device for live video transmission.
ThirdEye is completely transparent to existing video surveillance equipments and therefore simply replaces the wired Internet connection at the camera side without requiring any changes to the existing system.
Features:- High quality video delivery over bonded 3G / 4G wireless cards - ThirdEye uses award winning bonding technology that is optimized for delivering live video from PTZ cameras over aggregated 3G / 4G wireless data cards to the command and control center location. This bonding technology provides support for higher quality video settings, such as higher resolution, higher frame rate as well as unmatched professional grade reliability.
- Transparent setup - ThirdEye is designed to simply slide into your video security camera work-flow without any change required. Simply replace your wired connection that you normally use to connect to your PTZ camera or gateway with the ThirdEye field unit that is peered with the ThirdEye server and you can start monitoring and managing your PTZ camera remotely.
- Reliable video feed - ThirdEye is designed to cope with and shield the unavoidable fluctuations and performance variations of the cellular Internet connections. The net result is reliable video feed even when some wireless cards may disconnect.
- High Speed Internet access - When not feeding video, ThirdEye doubles as a Broadband Bonding Network Appliance for high speed Internet access over the bonded 3G / 4G wireless cards for data applications.
- Support for any service provider for 3G / 4G data cards - You can use cards from any carrier in any country. Please contact us for the latest list of supported data cards.
Thank you to tell us so much useful information. So nice sharing. I’m glad to read it.Website reviews