Table of Contents
Table of Contents ................................................. i
List of Figures ................................................... v
Executive summary ................................................ 1
1 Overview of connected video cameras .................................. 3
1.1 Market segments .......................................... 3
1.1.1 City surveillance ........................................ 3
1.1.2 Commercial building and industrial site surveillance.................... 3
1.1.3 Smart home security cameras ................................. 4
1.1.4 Body-worn cameras ........................................ 6
1.1.5 Video telematics for commercial vehicles ......................... 7
1.2 Digital video technology ........................................ 9
1.3 Network technologies ....................................... 11
1.3.1 3GPP cellular technologies ................................. 11
1.3.2 Wi-Fi ................................................ 16
1.3.3 Video requirements on wireless networks ......................... 17
1.4 Artificial Intelligence and video analytics ............................ 19
2 Video surveillance systems ...................................... 23
2.1 Issues of public safety ...................................... 23
2.2 Crime against businesses ...................................... 27
2.3 Video surveillance infrastructure .................................. 28
2.4 Surveillance system market developments ........................... 33
2.5 The video surveillance system vendor landscape ...................... 34
2.6 Company profiles and strategies ................................. 38
2.6.1 Axis Communications (Canon) .............................. 38
2.6.2 Bosch ................................................ 40
2.6.3 Dahua Technology ........................................ 41
2.6.4 FLIR Systems .......................................... 43
2.6.5 Hanwha Techwin ........................................ 44
2.6.6 Hikvision ............................................ 45
2.6.7 Honeywell ............................................. 47
2.6.8 IndigoVision (Motorola Solutions) ............................. 49
2.6.9 Infinova .............................................. 50
2.6.10 Johnson Controls ....................................... 50
2.6.11 Motorola Solutions ........................................ 51
2.6.12 Panasonic ............................................. 53
2.6.13 Tiandy Technologies ..................................... 54
2.6.14 United Technologies Corporation ............................. 55
2.6.15 Uniview Technologies ...................................... 56
3 Smart home security cameras ..................................... 57
3.1 Home security and property crimes ................................ 57
3.2 Smart home and home security systems ........................... 58
3.2.1 Home security systems .................................... 59
3.2.2 Home security cameras as point solutions ........................ 61
3.2.3 Smart home communications technologies ...................... 62
3.3 The Smart home security camera vendor landscape .................... 63
3.3.1 Professional home security ................................. 63
3.3.2 DIY home security ...................................... 65
3.3.3 Standalone home security cameras ............................ 65
3.4 Company profiles and strategies.................................. 67
3.4.1 ADT ................................................. 67
3.4.2 Alarm.com ............................................ 70
3.4.3 Amazon ............................................. 73
3.4.4 Arlo Technologies ...................................... 75
3.4.5 Canary ............................................... 76
3.4.6 D-Link ................................................ 77
3.4.7 Google Nest ............................................ 79
3.4.8 Logitech ............................................. 81
3.4.9 Reolink ............................................... 82
3.4.10 SimpliSafe ............................................ 83
3.4.11 TP-Link ............................................... 84
3.4.12 Verisure ............................................. 85
3.4.13 Vivint ............................................... 87
3.4.14 Wyze Labs ............................................ 89
3.4.15 YI Technology ......................................... 90
4 Body-worn cameras ............................................ 93
4.1 Law-enforcement ........................................... 93
4.2 Lone worker safety ........................................ 98
4.3 Overview of the main market segments ........................... 102
4.4 The BWC vendor landscape .................................... 105
4.5 Company profiles and strategies ............................... 108
4.5.1 Axon ................................................ 108
4.5.2 B-Cam ............................................. 111
4.5.3 Digital Ally ........................................... 112
4.5.4 Digital Barriers .......................................... 112
4.5.5 Edesix (Motorola Solutions) ................................. 114
4.5.6 Getac Video Solutions .................................... 115
4.5.7 Pinnacle Response ..................................... 116
4.5.8 Pro-Vision ........................................... 117
4.5.9 Reveal Media ......................................... 118
4.5.10 SoloProtect ............................................ 120
4.5.11 Utility Associates ...................................... 122
4.5.12 WatchGuard (Motorola Solutions) ............................. 124
4.5.13 WCCTV ............................................ 125
4.5.14 Wolfcom ............................................. 127
4.5.15 Zepcam .............................................. 127
5 Video telematics for commercial vehicles ............................. 129
5.1 Commercial vehicles and fleet management ......................... 129
5.2 Video telematics .......................................... 130
5.3 The video telematics vendor landscape and market shares .............. 134
5.4 Company profiles and strategies ............................... 134
5.4.1 CameraMatics .......................................... 135
5.4.2 D-TEG .............................................. 137
5.4.3 KeepTruckin .......................................... 138
5.4.4 LightMetrics ........................................... 141
5.4.5 Lytx ............................................... 142
5.4.6 Nauto ............................................... 145
5.4.7 Netradyne ........................................... 146
5.4.8 Samsara ............................................. 148
5.4.9 Seeing Machines ...................................... 151
5.4.10 SmartDrive Systems .................................... 153
5.4.11 SmartWitness ........................................ 155
5.4.12 Streamax ............................................ 158
5.4.13 SureCam ............................................ 163
5.4.14 Trimble ............................................. 165
5.4.15 VisionTrack ............................................ 167
6 Market forecasts and trends ...................................... 171
6.1 Wireless IoT and video cameras ................................ 171
6.1.1 Cellular IoT device shipments .............................. 172
6.1.2 Cellular IoT network connections ............................ 173
6.2 Market trends and drivers ..................................... 174
6.2.1 Video-based analytics and business intelligence expand the market ........ 175
6.2.2 Smart home cameras lower home insurance premiums ................ 175
6.2.3 Live facial recognition technology trending in the BWC segment ........ 176
6.2.4 Privacy issues expected to soften as video telematics becomes mainstream . 177
6.2.5 The impact of 5G technology on connected cameras ................. 178
6.3 Market forecasts .......................................... 179
6.3.1 Video surveillance systems .................................. 180
6.3.2 Smart home security cameras ................................ 181
6.3.3 Body-worn cameras .................................... 183
6.3.4 Video telematics for commercial vehicles ........................ 184
Glossary .................................................... 189
List of Figures
Figure 1.1: Video cameras for commercial building and city surveillance ............... 4
Figure 1.2: Smart home security cameras .................................. 5
Figure 1.3: BWCs for law enforcement and lone workers ......................... 6
Figure 1.4: Video telematics cameras ..................................... 8
Figure 1.5: Examples of common video resolutions ............................ 10
Figure 1.6: Rollout of 5G Networks (Europe and North America, April 2020) ........... 15
Figure 1.7: Network camera bandwidth requirements ......................... 18
Figure 1.8: Mobile network uplink capabilities ............................... 18
Figure 2.1: Rate of homicide in selected countries (World 2017) .................... 24
Figure 2.2: Crime rates per 100,000 inhabitants (US & EU 2017) .................... 25
Figure 2.3: Number of deaths from terrorism (World 1995-2018) ................... 26
Figure 2.4: Number of incidents per 1,000 premises (England and Wales 2018) .......... 28
Figure 2.5: Common network surveillance camera types ....................... 31
Figure 2.6: Video surveillance system vendor data (World FY2019) ................ 35
Figure 2.7: M&As in the video surveillance market (World 2013-2020) .............. 37
Figure 2.8: Dahua multi-sensor panoramic/PTZ + AI bullet network cameras ............ 42
Figure 2.9: Wisenet SSM video management software ........................ 45
Figure 2.10: Hikvision AI Cloud ....................................... 47
Figure 2.11: Avigilon H4 Multisensor camera featuring self-learning video analytics ........ 52
Figure 3.1: An example of a modern home security system ...................... 60
Figure 3.2: Examples of indoor and outdoor home security cameras ................ 61
Figure 3.3: Blue by ADT smart cameras ................................... 69
Figure 3.4: Arlo Go and Arlo Video Doorbell ............................... 76
Figure 3.5: Nest Cam IQ Outdoor and Nest Hello Doorbell ....................... 80
Figure 3.6: Reolink Go ............................................ 83
Figure 3.7: Wyze Cam ............................................. 90
Figure 4.1: The number of police officers by country (Europe 2017) .................. 94
Figure 4.2: The number of police officers in North America (2019) ................. 95
Figure 4.3: Body-worn camera form factors ................................ 96
Figure 4.4: Lone worker categories .................................... 99
Figure 4.5: Risks of lone working in various occupations ........................ 100
Figure 4.6: Lone worker safety device with camera built-in ..................... 102
Figure 4.7: Body-worn camera solution providers (Europe and North America 2020) .... 107
Figure 4.8: Axon Body 3 .......................................... 109
Figure 4.9: Axon body-worn camera unit sales per year (World 2013-2019) ............ 111
Figure 4.10: Edesix range of VideoBadge Body-Worn Cameras ................... 114
Figure 4.11: Getac Body-Worn Camera ................................. 116
Figure 4.12: The PR5 and PR6 body-worn cameras .......................... 117
Figure 4.13: Bodycam body-worn camera ................................ 118
Figure 4.14: Reveal Media D5 ........................................ 119
Figure 4.15: SoloProtect ID Pro lone worker device with integrated camera .......... 121
Figure 4.16: Front and back of the BodyWorn Camera ........................ 123
Figure 4.17: WatchGuard VISTA one-piece and two-piece body-worn cameras .......... 124
Figure 4.18: WCCTV Body Camera (Connect) ............................. 126
Figure 4.19: Zepcam T1 Live and T2+ body-worn cameras .................... 128
Figure 5.1: Multi-camera video telematics software interfaces .................... 131
Figure 5.2: Video telematics hardware devices ............................ 132
Figure 5.3: D-TEG’s TX1000D and TX2000 ............................... 137
Figure 5.4: KeepTruckin Asset Gateway, Smart Dashcam and Vehicle Gateway ......... 139
Figure 5.5: Lytx DriveCam Event Recorder ................................ 143
Figure 5.6: Nauto’s AI-powered multi-sensor device .......................... 145
Figure 5.7: Samsara’s CM31 front-facing and CM32 dual-facing AI dash cams .......... 149
Figure 5.8: Schematic overview of Seeing Machine’s Guardian system ............. 152
Figure 5.9: SmartDrive’s latest generation SmartRecorder (SR4) hardware ........... 154
Figure 5.10: Schematic overview of video telematics based on SmartWitness’ SmartAPI .... 156
Figure 5.11: Streamax’ C6D-AI, X1-H0401, TP2 system, D5X-AI, X7-Pro and AI Box Max .... 160
Figure 5.12: Streamax’ mobile DVR sales quantities by region (2019) ................ 161
Figure 5.13: Sales and production quantities by category (2016-2019) ............. 162
Figure 5.14: VisionTrack’s VT2000 and VT2.2 connected vehicle telematics cameras ...... 168
Figure 6.1: Cellular IoT connections in the video camera industry (Europe and NA 2019) ... 172
Figure 6.2: Cellular IoT video camera device shipments by region (2019-2024) ......... 173
Figure 6.3: Cellular IoT video camera device connections by region (2019-2024) ...... 174
Figure 6.4: Video surveillance camera shipments and installed base (NA 2019-2024) ..... 180
Figure 6.5: Video surveillance camera shipments and installed base (Europe 2019-2024) . 181
Figure 6.6: Home security camera shipments and installed base (NA 2019-2024) ........ 182
Figure 6.7: Home security camera shipments and installed base (Europe 2019-2024) .... 182
Figure 6.8: Body-worn camera shipments and installed base (North America 2019-2024) .. 183
Figure 6.9: Body-worn camera shipments and installed base (Europe 2019-2024) ....... 184
Figure 6.10: Video telematics market forecast (North America 2019-2024) ........... 185
Figure 6.11: Video telematics market forecast (Europe 2019-2024) ................ 186