The market for IP and networked video surveillance grew nearly 50 per cent in
2007 to approach $500m worldwide, according to newly published data.
Research house MultiMedia Intelligence said that the jump is nearly four
times that of the broader video surveillance equipment market.
This includes CCTV cameras, digital video recorders, network video recorders
and IP encoder/streamers.
But while IP/networked video surveillance camera units and revenue are
growing rapidly, they remain a small percentage of the overall surveillance
market.
MultiMedia Intelligence believes that the outlook for continued growth of
IP/networked video surveillance is strong. However, the barriers to it
overtaking traditional CCTV surveillance will prove "enduring".
"The transition from traditional CCTV surveillance to networked digital
surveillance is revolutionary for the physical security industry," said Mark
Kirstein, president of MultiMedia Intelligence.
The transition from traditional CCTV surveillance to networked digital surveillance is revolutionary
Mark Kirstein MultiMedia Intelligence
"Yet this transition is also seen as over-hyped and under-performing compared
to many expectations. Both are true."
MultiMedia also found that companies such as Cisco, IBM and Intel are adding
a fierce new competitive dynamic.
New IP/networked surveillance companies such as IndigoVision, March Networks
and Nice Systems, meanwhile, are providing unprecedented competition which is
dramatically accelerating product innovation.
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