Avigilon

Avigilon Corporation (TSX: AVO) is a Vancouver-based company that designs, manufactures and markets video surveillance software and equipment. It was founded in 2004 by Alexander Fernandes in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Avigilon software protects and monitors many locations including stadiums, retail environments, casinos, critical infrastructure, transportation stations, schools, and several other locations.

History

Avigilon Corporation was founded in 2004 by President, CEO and Chairman, Alexander Fernandes in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Avigilon publicly announced the first high-definition surveillance system built from the ground up at ASIS in 2006 and began selling its products in December 2007. The system included an 11 MP camera and high-definition network video recording software. Since then, Avigilon has extended its range of cameras and has introduced 16 MP and 29 MP models in addition to video management software and analog encoders to integrate legacy equipment into new high-definition video surveillance systems.

The company grew quickly, quoted as the third fastest growing Canadian company by PROFIT Magazine and picking up two awards as a fast-growth company by Deloitte. Avigilon went public on November 8, 2011 on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX).[1][2] Avigilon currently sells into over 113 countries worldwide with the help of 1,500 resellers.

Products

The Avigilon Control Center (ACC) software records and manages audio and video,[3] using high-definition stream management (HDSM) technology.[4] to handle the bandwidth and storage requirements of multi-megapixel video streams.

References

  1. Jameson Berkow, The National Post. “Vancouver’s Avigilon goes public on the TSX.” Nov. 8, 2011. Retrieved July 16, 2012.
  2. Jameson Berkow, Financial Post. “Going Public not for weak.” November 14, 2011. Retrieved July 16, 2012.
  3. John Adams, Security Electronics & Networks. “All Seeing Eyes.” March 30, 2011. Retrieved July 16, 2012.
  4. Scott Simpson, Vancouver Sun. “Avigilon spies opportunities in surveillance.” November 30, 2011. Retrieved July 16, 2012.

External links

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