jisaac 0 Posted February 10, 2006 The other day one of our referalls referred me to about 10 different people. Welll I wallked into one business and introduced myself. And the business owner told me,"oh your to late. We got broken into last night". Of course I am thinking, "no I am just in time". Because if i came before they got broken into she would have told me no thanks she doesnt need one. But now she is dying to get one because Brinks security sells there alarm systems and tells people that criminals will pick a business without an alarm. Or once they here the alarm go off they will not stay. Both were proven wrong this time and time and time again. She cant complain to Brinks because the alarm system actually "worked". They broke in, the alarm went off, and they called the police. The police showed up 45 minutes later and the burglars were gone. It did its job. What I tell people is exactly the opposite. I say," look you cant stop criminals. You cant deter criminals. Criminals that are determined will do what they do regardless of the fact. The only thing you can do is preper for it. Video surveillance will provide you with a complete video documentation of who was there and what they took. All an alarm company will tell you is that you where broken into. Heck you would know that". I think the alarm/monitoring based companys that base their whole company on alarms and year and a half contracts for monitoring fees are going to be left in the dust if they dont change soon. Especially areas that are going to a non response. Any thoughts? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 10, 2006 I think alarm systems are more useful for homes than retail anyway, i see it as a line of defence, at least when you are home. It will let you know someone is coming, its helped me plenty of times. I couldnt live where i live, without some yard beams and 3 loud sirens ... Another thing, if it is monitored, or self monitored with a dialer, then you get an alert and can deal with the situation, if you have video, even better. There's definately a need for Alarm Systems, thing is I left doing just alarm systems for the same reason you posted, here in the Bahamas you're lucky if the cops turn up at all. But then again, if the clients are buying cheap video systems, once again they will be lucky to catch the perps anyway. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 10, 2006 i am talking about for business Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
securitymonster 0 Posted February 11, 2006 The Visonic Powermax+ alarm we sell now has web cams that integrate to the alarm. You can place a camera and tie it to a zone, lets say the front door. Its designed to capture 10 burst images, 10 post images of an event and email them to you! Its also treated just like a webcam, so you can log on anytime and view whats going on! Its no surveillance system but its kinda neat how it works! But majority of the time, my customers that get alarms also end up buying surveillance. Just knowing who was in your house, where they were, and what they took is often enough reason for my customers to purchase surveillance. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 11, 2006 where are they, the cameras ?? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CSG 0 Posted February 11, 2006 Alarm systems are a very important part of security. What good is reviewing video footage of a break in unless the burglars have their social security number tattooed across their forehead? And you can't monitor your DVR 24/7. Motion sensing functionality from a CCTV system is not as reliable as contacts, PIR's, shock sensors, and beams. With alarm systems, yes, some areas have slow to non-existant police response. But some areas have very good police response. For instance with my building, the central station can always reach me on my cell phone, and tell me which zones were tripped. If i'm near a computer I can log in to my DVR and see what's going on. If I verifed a break in and called the local precinct, they would respond even faster. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 11, 2006 ill tell you what you do if they dont have their ssn tattoed on their forehead. What you do is when you design your system be sure to have some cameras designated for face shots. Kind of like when you want License Plate Recognition you have it only designated for that. And not for anything else. Same concept. Get an excellent face shot. Then send it to the news. We have a great relationship with the biggest news channel around here and we do that all the time. I have yet to send them one that has directly resulted in people calling and will identify them. That gets the warrants and they are usually arrested within atleast 2 weeks. Works every time. Plus is great for publicity. We dont ever have to spend money on advertising because the news likes us and mentions our name every time. Best advertising I could ask for. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 11, 2006 yeah they wont do that here ... then again we only have 1 station and its prehistoric .. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
securitymonster 0 Posted February 11, 2006 statistics are showing around here that the majority of the residential burglaries are comitted by somebody that you know, somebody that knows you, or somebody in the neighborhood. With that being said, you will have a good chance at reviewing video and recognizing someone! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 11, 2006 definately not around here ... but alot of them are repeat offenders so alot of the time the cops can recognise them ... thats when the cops actually take the time to investigate it .. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CSG 0 Posted February 12, 2006 If I was a defense attorney I'd take the same camera and DVR and record a lineup with 6 individuals at the same distance, and see if the jury could pickout the defendant, beyond a reasonable doubt. It takes more than video footage to get a conviction. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 12, 2006 well of course it takes more than video evidence. No prosicuting attorney is going to go into court and say here is the video I rest my case. Even if the video was the best video you could ever imagine. You have to bring everything to the table. But what I am saying in this whole realm of this topic is that with the alarm industry around here. That the infectiveness of them helps our industry alot. Because most of the time the person is never caught. Because what is an alarm going to tell you besides the fact that you had been broken into? If the suspect is gone. You have no video. Pretty much they were able to tell you that you were broken into. You would have figured that out. When we had to go through the NBFAA certification the guy that heads the Arkansas BFAA said and I quote, "the national average is not measured in minutes its measured in hours. We are allowed to call the police once an hour. And we will call 3 times to ensure they have responded". Thats real assuring. You might say that that is the polices fault for the response time. Well if the alarm industry did not have a 98% false alarm rating they would respond faster. What other industry can you think of that you can fail 98% of the time and still be in business? For businesses I think an video is way more critical than an alarm. Tie them into together and you get a bonus. But most businesses could care less. That type of failure rating multiplied times the inneffectivness of the system compared to the way they tell you it will be makes the alarms look like a selling point for surveillance systems. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 12, 2006 If the installer was as knowledgable and professional as they should be then exact same camera with the exact same dvr focused and set exactly the same should get that persons identity without any doubt every time. Thats what may be the problem. Some people may not think of them as professionals and do substanderd work. I will walk away from a job before i will put in a cheap system that is not going to be used to fulfill all their needs. every system we put is going to be custom designed and set up to get a shot everytime. So if the defense attorney did that on one we did he would be sentencing his own client Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 12, 2006 Mace IS cheap stuff Alarms do work though to scare the criminal away most of the time, they dont want to be seen or heard so when the siren goes off ... I have 3 loud sirens and 2 indoor ones in my small apt... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jasper 0 Posted February 12, 2006 Mace cameras look cheap, but they seem to produce a pretty good picture. Everything is going to look bad compared to EXTREME products. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 12, 2006 or compared to GE, Sanyo, etc. ... back to alarms ... Brinks TV Commericals crack me up, its like the lady can answer the phone from Brinks but cant dial 911 herself. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 12, 2006 Mace is not cheap in the sense of just putting together a camera and doesnt care if it works. Mace is extremely good at producing cameras that are not as expensive as extreme. I have not seen much GE products so I cant compare it. But I would not agree that they dont look at as good if not better than SANYO. If I try out a new camera and dont think it is what I thought it would be (which has only happeaned one one). Then I can guarantee that a better one will be on my door step by 8 in the morning. Go to my website and look at my experience page. Contact anyone of them and ask them if mace is cheap (as in low quality). They will think you are crazy person off the street. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 12, 2006 do any of these look cheap? every single one of them mace. The top are the least expensive cameras they sell. Never had a complaint. And the top two were used a job for the homeland security department anti terror job to secure a critical building. Was our first job for the government and actually is how we got our military account and dhs account. That one jobs quality has more almost trippled my income because of that ONE job. its obviously not CHEAP Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jasper 0 Posted February 12, 2006 Well coming from you Rory that isn't saying much. Considering you equate COP cameras to X10 or Radio Shack cameras. Really the Cam53CIR is the one that looks cheap. Not all of them. I don't know I think a comparison between similar priced cameras would have to be done for a fair comparison. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 12, 2006 Mace is basically in the same quality range as the Eclipse products, not near as bad as COP, but still low quality due to inexpensive components and low cost manufacturing. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jisaac 0 Posted February 12, 2006 what about the results? how do you feel about that? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jasper 0 Posted February 12, 2006 (edited) The results look OK. Nothing spectacular. But for selling them for a living I think they will satisfy most people. If they are inexpensive for you to buy, people are satisfied and you can make enough profit to make it worthwhile than that is all that really counts. Edited February 12, 2006 by Guest Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rory 0 Posted February 12, 2006 (edited) L-side is the only one i can truly say looks high quality. But there is alot more to a high quality product than what the image comes out with, such as power boards, and other components used, as well as the firmware. The Koreans and Japanese make the high quality CCTV gear these days, but they cost more. Then again what does that say about the GE cameras which are made in Taiwan Once your clients are happy, and you're making a living, thats all that counts. . Edited February 12, 2006 by Guest Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jasper 0 Posted February 12, 2006 The L-side shot does look real good compared to the others. The one in the dark isn't bad. What camera is that one? What are the low light spec on it? I wouldn't name drop the Homeland Security. We all know how good a job they are doing. Just messin with you. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites