I'm starting to get the feeling that we've hit the peak of the IP camera market.
We've had some pretty huge jumps in performance in about the last 6 years. Common resolution went from 0.3MP to 4MP. Built-in infrared emitters that match the camera's ability to resolve an object at distance are now standard. All form factors imaginable, all-weather, impact resistant, lenses available from long to 120degree horizontal to 360x180 degree fisheye. Pricing dropped by about a factor of 6, from the glory days of Axis and Pelco charging $800 for a 640x480 mpeg4 camera to a common 2mp camera being in the $120 range. Smarter encoding has made incredible progress in video compression, going from 2mbps constant with 640x480 to averaging 100kbps for an indoor 4MP scene with minimal movement.
And don't forget that even the analog market tagged along with HD over coax or twisted pair.
My reading of the tea leaves lately is that the product improvement has stagnated and pricing is steady or rising.
We've had some pretty huge jumps in performance in about the last 6 years. Common resolution went from 0.3MP to 4MP. Built-in infrared emitters that match the camera's ability to resolve an object at distance are now standard. All form factors imaginable, all-weather, impact resistant, lenses available from long to 120degree horizontal to 360x180 degree fisheye. Pricing dropped by about a factor of 6, from the glory days of Axis and Pelco charging $800 for a 640x480 mpeg4 camera to a common 2mp camera being in the $120 range. Smarter encoding has made incredible progress in video compression, going from 2mbps constant with 640x480 to averaging 100kbps for an indoor 4MP scene with minimal movement.
And don't forget that even the analog market tagged along with HD over coax or twisted pair.
My reading of the tea leaves lately is that the product improvement has stagnated and pricing is steady or rising.