We are pleased to announce that our bicycle, vehicle and people counting systems are now available as Virtual Machines. This means that instead of using our VT counting hardware, customers can instead simply run our new Virtual Machine application on their host computer or server.
Virtual Machines can be deployed almost anywhere, regardless of the operating system or configuration of its host. They behave like an actual “machine”, or, in our case, as our Video Turnstile counting hardware.
Previously our systems worked like this:
In the new system, we’ve trained the AI software to run as a Virtual Machine, analysing a video feed and counting people: no counting hardware.
Virtual machine computing is becoming more and more widespread because of the convenience of cutting down the need for physical hardware and making systems independent.
The Virtual VT makes the counts available in real-time, to our reporting dashboards or to clients’ own systems. It can be part of an IoT system and runs, for example, in VMware, Virtual Box and Hyper V.
Spanning 2 million square feet and featuring 270 stores, Yorkdale is a premier retail destination in Canada. The Toronto shopping centre is now using virtual machines from Retail Sensing to monitor large goods vehicles into their loading area.
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