Home
I-Cube advantage
  Company Profile
 
Products
      Facial
       IA
     OCR
 I-Cube Biometric Selector
 
RECOGNITION
 3D FACIAL
 
faceit
 faceit_gen 
Discovery
   Facial
       ID
SDK
 Verification
Facial Verification linked to a PIN CODE
 
2D biometric facial identification solutions
 
System Design
 
Value Prop.
 
Access control
 
FRVT
 
 FACEIT
 
   LFA
 
   Accuracy
 
   Technical SPEC
 
   Review
 Solutions Roundup
 Facial USES
 Request Facial CD
 APPLICATIONS
 SVS CASINO SOLUTIONS 
Facial Proposal
  I-Cube stadium biometric solution
Vertical market application (Casinos, Stadiums, Retail and Mines)
REFERENCE SITES:
 
GENERAL ARTICLES
 
Clever cameras have your record
 
facts, features and benefits of Face recognition
 
Technical explanation of the HNeT technology
 
License Plate Recognition (LPR) and Facial Verification FOR ESTATE - minQ
 
PROPOSALS
 
NESTLE facial OPTIONS:  PDF (1 MB)
 
Facial VERIFICATION - Card linked to Face presentation PDF (2 MB)
 
Where to Buy
nterest Form
Application
 
Support
 
 
USER MANUALS
    Start UP Guide
 
I-CUBE 3D user manual. 
 
FRS Discovery System OCX Control Reference Manual
 
FANG LPR FRS USER MANUAL
 
 Technology step be step use
 
DEMO EQUIPMENT
I-CUBE Facial Identification FLASH Presentation zip (8 MB)

 Face Identification .zip  (17 MB)

FACIAL ID, VERIFICATION AND LPR SPEED / ACCESS CONTROL SYSTEM

HW

FRS SDK OCX: ONLINE DB

   SDK
 SDK PDF DOCUMENT (40KB)  SDK WORD DOCUMENT (150KB)Contact Us
Interest Form
FREE CD's  
       - Facial
Feed Back

Welcome to I-Cube South Africa's leading provider of License Plate Recognition; Facial Recognition AND Image Analysis

                 Products  Where to Buy  News  Feed Back   Contact Us  Support



Futuristic gadgets arm LAPD car
BY ANGIE VALENCIA-MARTINEZ, Staff Writer

By 2021, the bad guys might be a lot smarter than they are today. But so will the police cars.

Imagine a patrol car that scans hundreds of license plates an hour, fires Global Positioning System trackers on get-away cars and comes fully loaded with facial-recognition software and a mobile fingerprint identifier.

While only one such car is now in the police garage at Parker Center headquarters, Los Angeles Police Department brass hope that by 2021 every patrol officer will be sitting behind the wheel of one of these specially souped up Crown Victorias - known as the Smart Car.

"The officers absolutely love it," said Sgt. Dan Gomez of the LAPD's Tactical Technology Unit. "Whenever I take it to any of our divisions, the No. 1 question is: `When am I getting one?' or `Can I borrow yours?"'

Costs will delay a rollout to the entire force - the license-plate scanner alone is worth $20,000 - but the department plans to introduce bits of the new technology as early as this year.

Among the gizmos, the car has a digital in-car audio-video recorder, bullet-resistant doors, removable laptop computers and technology that allows live monitoring from surveillance cameras to be viewed on the laptop's screen.

The laptops also allow for the first-time officers in the department's 1,500 patrol cars to file reports while in the field.

Every division will be equipped with some license-plate recognition cameras, and 300 squad cars will be outfitted with audio-video recorders by July.

Officer Jesus Zaragoza of the West Valley Division has tested the license-plate system and said he and his partner impounded 11 stolen cars during one outing.

In seven months, the technology has helped the LAPD recover more than 200 parked stolen vehicles and an additional 50 vehicles that were being driven.

"Every time I've used it, I impound a vehicle," Zaragoza said.

Cameras on the car's roof scan vehicle plates, processing about 8,000 plates through criminal databases in an average 10-hour shift.

By contrast, a single officer can run about 100 license plates manually in that time.

In Los Angeles, where grand theft outnumbers homicides 50-1, the technology is especially valuable in alerting patrol officers to cars wanted

Advertisement

in connection with crimes, including warrants and Amber Alerts.

"The car is designed to be a force multiplier," Gomez said. "Our officers can do more with their time, by doing less. We want the bad guys to know what we're doing."

The Smart Car also has a front-bumper device that shoots and sticks a GPS tracker - about the size of a cigarette box - onto fleeing cars. Officers can then track the car without having to engage in a high-speed pursuit that could endanger the public.

Meanwhile, a handheld fingerprint identification system saves police a drive back to the station when potential suspects don't have proper identification.

Funding for the new technology is expected to be the biggest hurdle, and some local organizations have already started to pitch in.

The Mid-Valley Community Police Council, a nonprofit community service organization, is raising money to buy a license-plate reader for the Van Nuys Division.

Police Commissioner Alan Skobin, a reserve deputy sheriff, said the Smart Cars are expensive but an essential tool in the future of policing.

"Funding is critical, but when you have too few police officers, technology is not a luxury, it's a necessity," he said.

Sgt. Mike Zaboski of the Valley Traffic Division said the new gadgets benefit the department, but like cell phones, the Internet and other technological advances, they can also complicate lives.

"On the one hand, it's going to help the officers do their job more efficiently," Zaboski said.

"On the other hand, it's more systems to be acquainted with and maintain and operate. It kind of changes the focus of police work."

 


I-Cube provides security and recognition systems in the following industry:

                          Government

  Metro

Container Recognition

   Casino

                          Retail

  Mining

  Pricing

   Weighbridges

                          Police

  Shopping center

  Shopping center

   Golf Estate

           

I-Cube.   All rights reserved.  Revised: January 13, 2008 .