Join or Sign in

Register for your free asmag.com membership or if you are already a member,
sign in using your preferred method below.

To check your latest product inquiries, manage newsletter preference, update personal / company profile, or download member-exclusive reports, log in to your account now!
Login asmag.comMember Registration
https://www.asmag.com/rankings/
INSIGHTS

802 Global and Verint Systems at Forefront of Fire Fighting

Fire and rescue crews in Northern Ireland are using a wireless communications technology from 802 Global and Verint Systems to fight fires more effectively and with less risk to their officers by relaying live video of the event back to a central command and control room.
Fire and rescue crews in Northern Ireland are using a wireless communications technology from 802 Global and Verint Systems to fight fires more effectively and with less risk to their officers by relaying live video of the event back to a central command and control room.

Working alongside Verint partner, 802 Global, Verint's technology is at the heart of a new Rapid Deploy Mesh Network (RDMN), a communications solution for the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service (NIFRS) that can be implemented in the field within around five minutes of the vehicle becoming operational.

Images from rugged PTZ cameras mounted onto a command vehicle, tripod units or aerial ladder platforms (ALPS) can be viewed locally or transmitted securely to headquarters or other "Gold" locations where senior commanders can provide strategic support to the commander on the incident ground.

Use of this technology on ALPs and command support units (CSU's) has proved especially effective in that they can relay both thermal and optical images, looking down on a scene to identify “hot spots” or hazards such a building integrity failure, gas sylinders in need of priority attention or to identify people who may be trapped inside a burning building.

The second of four mobile CSUs are operational with this enhanced technology. "The service are continuing to exploit this exciting technology which is enabling an enhanced level of situational awareness for incident commanders who are supported via command units in such a way as to maximize efficient use of resources at the incident and overview the safety of firefighters being deployed,” said Robin Bigger, an Assistant Group Commander with NIFRS who leads the CSU project.

"The equipment is being used alongside our existing investment in equipment onboard command support units and aerial ladder platforms and by using satellite communications we are able to broadcast incident ground information to our headquarters command suite not only from towns and cities but from the remotest part of the province."
Subscribe to Newsletter
Stay updated with the latest trends and technologies in physical security

Share to: