LogoVision Wireless announced the company has enabled its “Multifeed” live video application to run on Java phones, Windows Mobile and iPhone (News - Alert).
According to LogoVision officials, while newer technologies including DVR, and IP network-based video systems are becoming more prevalent, the ability to provide on-demand access to video surveillance feeds from locations other than a hard-wired ‘control centre’ has been very limited. Consumers are also demanding the ability to view live video feeds while having interactive camera control – all without being tied to desktop systems or hardwired video control centers.
LogoVision’s Multifeed live video application is designed to satisfy these consumer and service provider needs, company officials said.
The company’s Multifeed is a mobile on-demand video streaming application which mobile users can utilize to stream live video captured by cameras to mobile handheld users. The application meshes with existing surveillance systems which support very large numbers of camera feeds, and dynamically converts live 24/7 surveillance video streams into streams that mobile users can see on their cell phones.
The LV Multifeed server/client solution includes interactive mobile video and audio, large-scale dbms, dynamic live stream transcoding of many formats, secure Web portals administration, DVR, both highly scalable concurrent video client and concurrent input feed support, as well as easily implemented client notification and camera motion controls.
The LV player is an on-the-air installable java midlet for java handsets, or a browser player requiring no install. The player allows exceptional frame and picture quality and sub-second surveillance latency. It is now upgraded to run on midp2, Jblend, s-appli java handsets, and iPhone Safari Mobile and Opera Mobile browsers. And it also offers optimized surveillance video decoding with audio for embedded 3gp players.
LogoVision officials claim it is expecting the enterprise demand to view multimedia will increase as more enterprises expand their use of video applications and mobilize their employees even though most of the current demand for mobile multimedia content today is being driven by the consumer market. So it is imperative for them to enable their solution to be compatible with various platforms to capitalize on this emerging trend.
Nathesh is a contributing editor for TMCnet. To read more of Nathesh's articles, please visit his columnist page.Edited by
Erin Harrison