Customers: Mosvodostok, SUE Moscow; Housing and public utilities, service and household services Contractors: Formosa service Product: AkvakhranitelProject date: 2020/10
|
In Moscow as it became known in October, 2020, earned the system of video analytics for rescue of people from reservoirs of Akvakhranitel, developed by the Pskov company "Formosa Service". The solution began to be used on Borisovsky Ponds.
According to developers, in a system video and thermal imaging cameras with the set characteristics including modern standards of record and compression, repeated optical and digital increase, vlago-and lighting protection allowing to use them in the system of the automated determination of security risks on water bodies are used.
Servers of video analytics are connected to the relayed flow and in real time detect potentially dangerous objects, information on which is instantly transferred to users of a system and remains in archive. Not the camera, and even not the operator of a system who can be on strong removal from a controlled object, and the server depending on software setups will recognize threats, certainly.
Users of a system have access to threats through "the center of processing of threats" with a possibility of group processing of such objects for minimization of time of reaction. Messages about security risks can come to a system and be processed by managers not only from video and thermal imaging cameras, but also from other sources (meteorological information, space and an avia - monitoring of a flood situation, land patrol, messages of citizens and other systems of 112 type).
Akvakhranitel is configured taking into account local features, climate, season and regulations of rescue service - orders, instructions, etc., the chief financial officer of Formosa Service company Olga Goryachenkova told Rossiyskaya Gazeta. The operation mode of a system and an algorithm of determination of specific risks are set by the operator. For example, activation of the point "heat for anchor buoys" does not make sense in the winter.[1]