WHY IP CAMERAS ARE THE BEST?
View on the Cloud!
IP cameras allows network video viewing, with which users can access real-time video at any time from any authorized computer anywhere (including your mobile phones). This feature is very useful for those who want to check on their loved one despite always being on the move.
Example of Remote Accessibility:
Watch the live stream from an IP Camera in the British Virgin Islands!
Superior image quality
Image quality is clearly one of the most important features of any camera, if not the most important!
With epic Full-HD recording, the Superior image quality enables the user to more closely follow details and changes in images, making way for better and faster decisions to more effectively safeguard people and property. It also ensures greater accuracy for automated analysis and alarm tools. In addition, digital images can be more easily stored and retrieved than in cases where analog systems are used.
This is especially seen in our high-end IP Cameras with Wide Dynamic Range.
Easy, future-proof integration
There are almost no limitations as to where a network video product can be placed. Axis network video has the capacity to provide a high level of integration with other equipment and functions, making it a continually developing system. A fully integrated IP network video system can be used for a multitude of applications simultaneously: for instance, access control, building management, point-of-sales systems, ATMs, as well as fire alarms, intruder and visitor management.
An analog system, on the other hand, rarely has an open interface for easy integration with other systems and applications.
OTHER ADVANTAGES
Distributed intelligence
These days, a massive amount video is being recorded, but never watched or reviewed due to lack of time
As a result, events and activities are missed, and suspicious behaviors remain unnoticed. With IP Cameras, intelligence has been brought into the camera itself.
Scalability and flexibility
A network video system can grow with a user’s needs - one camera at a time, while analog systems can often only grow in steps of four or 16 at a time