RFID Supply Control
The assets are tracked using equipment from Savi Technology, a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, which has supplied the Air Force for some time in terms of radio frequency identification tags.
Source: ID News
The assets are tracked using equipment from Savi Technology, a subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, which has supplied the Air Force for some time in terms of radio frequency identification tags.
Source: ID News
On May 21, the company announced that it had acquired a suite of video management system (VMS) software and software-related technology from provider PacketNVR, LLP. Galvin was instrumental in the development of VMS technology by PacketNVR.
"I look forward to helping Samsung GVI grow and expand its IP video lineup, complementing one of the most comprehensive analog video areas in the industry," said Galvin. "Users and integrators will no longer have to sacrifice performance and control," he said.
Tom Galvin was also vice president and engineer at GE Security, vice president of product development at Verint, and director of engineering at MCI Telecommunications.
Because the Port of Miami is one of the busiest on the continent, is the cruise capital in the world and the cargo portal of the Americas, the Port authorities decided to install a surveillance system that would improve security for the four million cruise passengers and the 7.4 million tons of cargo that pass through this site each year.
IP video surveillance updates the analog security system and ensures protection in all the facilities of the place, including the parking lot, the commercial cargo area and the terminals of the cruise passengers.
The solution allows port officials to remotely and centrally monitor millions of analog cameras that previously existed alongside the new IP equipment using nice's migration path with unified management.
Bill Johnson, director of the Port of Miami, assures that the implementation of the IP video surveillance solution reflects how the entity is implementing state-of-the-art technology to provide security and protection to all users of the port.
The city of Buenos Aires, Argentina, was chosen by the company designer, developer and manufacturer of security and video systems, to install its direct office in the region.
In this location, located in Lanín 198, Barracas, will be in addition to the offices, the service center and the PGTI – Training Center.
This standard, originally created in Manaus, Brazil, determines the 33 steps that assemblers must follow for cameras, resolution 244, and cell phones, 245. Both regulations establish the list of supplies required and the accessories that equipment can carry such as headphones, compact discs with software, manuals and transformers.
Resolution 244 arises in response to the request made by the Association of Argentine Electronics Terminal Factories (Afarte) and its associate NewSan, which in 2008 presented a manufacturing project, which will adapt to the new requirements, as expressed by Fernando Notti, director of the company, which aspires to start the production of Sanyo cameras before the end of the year.