International. Johnson Controls has made official the launch of its new intelligent contactless access management solution called Tyco's Illustra Insight. This technology is ideal for work environments where a high level of safety is required that does not disrupt the constant circulation of employees, contractors and visitors.
Facial recognition
Powered by Tyco's artificial technology (Tyco AI) and deep learning algorithms, Tyco's Illustra Insight combines the capabilities of access control software with an advanced facial recognition camera to enable simultaneous recognition of multiple people as they approach an access point. The device's built-in LEDs, along with audible messages informing whether access is granted or denied, ensure that employees, contractors, and visitors intuitively know if they are authorized to enter an area.
• Anti-fraud technology uses two lenses and a combination of IR and RGB video to distinguish between a real person and a printed or video image.
• Faces can be accurately detected from a distance of up to three meters (almost ten feet), and multiple faces can be processed at the same time in less than a second, speeding up the movement of authorized persons.
• Cameras can be installed at an optimal height of 1.5 to 1.8 m (five to six feet) for facial recognition within a wide field of view and at different heights, allowing both people in wheelchairs and those who are taller than average to be captured.
Versatile access management
"The range of applications in which our new technology will be able to contribute significantly to a safer work environment is extremely wide and varied," said Rafael Schrijvers, Access Control Product Management, Tyco Security Products, Johnson Controls. "In healthcare environments and sterile environments, Tyco's Illustra Insight solution eliminates the need to press buttons or support access control cards. These aspects are very important for our customers during the pandemic and in the future."
At airports, it eliminates the risk of cards being shared and two people with the same credential entering security-vulnerable areas. In addition to facial recognition, Illustra Insight allows you to detect people of interest and activate an integrated access control system. For example, you can generate an alert when an important person is identified.
Tyco's Illustra Insight solution is part of Johnson Controls' dynamic OpenBlue platform that, through its suite of OpenBlue Healthy Buildings solutions, provides access to other technologies, such as smart equipment, contagion control, contact tracing, social distancing monitoring, and connection to other devices, to make shared spaces safer, dynamic and sustainable.
While designed to integrate seamlessly with Johnson Controls' access control brands, Tyco's Illustra Insight solution can also interconnect with any access control system that features traditional and modern integrated cabling protocols. Additional features include the following:
• Its elegant format with customizable color LED light ring and sound messages that you can configure at your convenience allow you to create a pleasant environment with intuitive visual and sound responses for visitors and employees.
• The unique two-piece design ensures that the network interface is in a secure and secure area, with encrypted protocols used to ensure secure communications between the Tyco Illustra Insight camera head and the Insight control unit.
• Tyco's Illustra Insight solution has been designed in accordance with Johnson Controls' OpenBlue Security Product Cyber Protection Program, created to minimize the possibility of introducing vulnerabilities into electronic security solutions.
Illustra Insight's light ring and the option to record personalized greetings in several different languages are just two examples of design engineers' effort to create a unique user experience that enhances the device's ability to facilitate the free movement of people and set a new standard for automated video and access control.
Errata faith: In the original post we shared an image that did not correspond to the news. We apologize. The correct image appears in this note.
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