Asian Art Museum of San Francisco Blades Video Surveillance System
February 20th, 2007 Leave a comment Visited 19 times, 1 so far today
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco Blades Video Surveillance System
Avnet (NYSE: AVT), DataCom, Blade Network Technologies and IBM (NYSE: IBM) today announced the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco has tightened security around its world-renowned collection of more than 16,000 Asian artworks by installing a DVD-quality video surveillance system based on powerful IBM BladeCenter servers, IP-based software from DataCom and Ethernet network switches from Blade Network Technologies (BLADE). The solution will help the Museum view, monitor and digitally record activity while archiving footage over an IP network.
The Asian Art Museum is home to the largest collection of Asian Art in the United States, valued at $4 billion dollars. After a five year, $165+ million dollar reconstruction project, the Museum received a grant to bolster its security system in October 2006. The Museum began investigating ways to supplement its analog camera-to-VCR network. Replacing the 130 cameras with sophisticated video technology could cost upwards of half a million dollars, but DataCom’s security networks running on the IBM BladeCenter platform leverage existing analog sources and network components without adding new equipment.
“The solution from Avnet, DataCom, BLADE and IBM provided a one stop call in terms of service,” said Jim Horio, director of Information Technology at the Asian Art Museum. “Not only was the solution up and running in a matter of weeks but the scalability of IBM BladeCenter will allow us to increase the system’s capacity if and when we need to.”
Supported by Blade.org members IBM and Avnet, DataCom’s Network Video Servers (NVS) form the central component of advanced security networks. Each NVS records and displays high-quality, real-time video with an easy to operate interface allowing security personnel to access and manage an unlimited number of servers and cameras through local, remote or web access. Because the solution compresses images on a 64-bit video capture board, it frees more than 80 percent of BladeCenter system resources for enterprise applications. The BladeCenter is equipped with BLADE’s Nortel Layer 2/3 Gigabit Ethernet Switch Modules to provide needed bandwidth, speed and security to pass multiple video feeds into the storage network and to coordinate network interaction from the operators.
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