
CASE
STUDIES: Lattice Semi-Conductor
Acquisitions
Spur Video Upgrades
When Lattice Semiconductor, a developer and marketer of high
performance
programmable logic devices, acquired a new site in Shanghai,
they ended up with much
more than just a new facility. It prompted a fresh look at
their video security efforts
worldwide.
The
company had begun installing the Kollector digital video recorders
from Vicon when
they acquired some new facilities. “We had several acquisitions
in 2001 and 2002, so we
had to build security systems around that,” says Eric
Morse, CPP, corporate security
manager, Lattice Semiconductor, Hillsboro, OR. “When
we did that, we designed to go to
the DVR. We took a look at different product lines and were
most comfortable with
Vicon.”
Once
they had established a standard throughout the new facilities,
they followed a policy
to also bring the older facilities up to standard for consistency,
Morse says. However,
during the process of bring the Shanghai facility online,
Vicon came out with the newer
Kollector Elites. “When those became available, we liked
the platform and the software
that they were based on, and we knew this was a product that
we would find more useful
than the older product.”
Currently,
Lattice has four facilities -- one in Shanghai, one in England
and two in San
Jose, Calif. – outfitted with the newer Kollector Elites.
But they plan to upgrade all nine
locations by the end of 2004, Morse says.
Access
and Video Working Together
One
of the main things Lattice wanted the new DVRs to do was to
supplement their
integrated access control system in a very user-friendly way.
“We were looking for our
remote sites to have a stand-alone system that would record
locally 24/7 but allow
corporate headquarters to access that information at any point
in time,” Morse says. “We
also have an integrated access control system. We use the
Vicon DVR to supplement that. We monitor doors through the
CCTV."
“One of our main concerns is having only employees enter
our facilities, no outside
people. We also wanted to monitor for current employees verses
prior employees, to
monitor any equipment loss or internal theft by contractors
or janitorial staff, and
anything else off hours that could be suspicious.”
To
do that, they set up various alarm modules for motion sensitivity.
“It will send an
alarm locally and to corporate if there is any movement,”
Morse says. “That’s all done
with Vicon software. You can bring up a camera and grid that
view. You can grid the
whole view, or just the door. You can also set the sensitivity
so if a cat or a dog outside
passes by it won’t alarm, but if a person does, that
takes up more pixels and will cause an alarm. All this takes
place before the person ever gets to the access control system.”
But because these events take place over the corporate wide
area network, Morse says
there was a bandwidth utilization question from the IS department.
“We had a conference
call with Vicon and they sat down with our IS department and
walked them through the
process. Locally, they set up similar machines and put a sniffer
on there to measure how
much bandwidth they would be taking up. They do take up more
bandwidth, but it was
something IS was able to work with.”
Now
when there is an incident, the KE’s also allow more
flexibility than other products,
or even the prior model, Morse says. “I can set the
quality level of the video I want to
capture. The higher the quality, the more storage you are
taking up. The lower the
quality, the more storage and history you can archive. I can
balance that by camera. For
archiving, I can archive directly to AVI files. There are
just a lot more end user features.”
Another plus, and a major feature Lattice was interested in,
is the court admissibility.
“We had someone break in to one of our facilities,”
Morse says. “One of the nice things
about the Elite is that it is date/time stamped and admissible
in court. Any time data is
brought back, it checks and makes sure it hasn’t been
tampered with and is still court
admissible.”
Just
Like Being There
For
Morse, being able to control everything remotely is the best
feature of the new
system. “That is the number one benefit for me,”
he says. “At my location I don’t even
have any Kollectors. With my software I can pick and choose
any Kollector and change
or modify, record locally onto my PC, change camera settings
– all from a couple
thousand miles away.
“If I’m at my corporate facility, I can run software
and it’s just like I am sitting there in
Shanghai, just like I was there locally. Most DVRs can’t
do that.”
Another
benefit was being able to “see” things first hand.
“We have remote locations and
we have security officers that have policies and procedures
they are supposed to follow,”
Morse says. “The first night we had a Kollector Elite
installed, we were able to see
several violations of procedures and policies that have since
been corrected. There were
different posts that were supposed to be monitored, uniform
requirements, that sort of
thing. You can call an officer and talk to them on the phone,
but until you see the video
you can’t tell what’s really going on.”
Overall,
Morse is very pleased with the results so far. “In a
nutshell, it has simplified the
process of reviewing video. It doesn’t matter what the
incident is, the Elites make it
simpler than analog and simpler than with the older Kollectors.
Whether it’s a question
about a janitor locking a door or burglary, it saves me a
lot of time in tracking down
when that event occurred. It’s a matter of minutes verses
hours or even days.”
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