One of the key features of the VizuCop 360 is a tool that makes archiving easier on the front end of the system. Howard says VizuCop 360 has a Tagging Pad that allows the officer to mark the recording as a felony, misdemeanor, traffic accident, etc.
Another key feature of the VizuCop 360 is its dual-lens, front-firing camera. "In most systems, the officer is required to hit a button to zoom in on a license tag," Howard says. "We eliminated that with a simultaneous wide-angle view and zoom view. You get the wide angle on channel one and the close-up on channel two."
The VizuCop 360 offers up to eight channels of video and eight channels of audio. Features include: 900-line analog-to-digital resolution, 5-inch rearview mirror monitor, Wifi download, streaming video, DVR health monitoring software called MOTOTrax, and evidence management software called MOTOLinks.
Howard says one of the strongest selling points of the new VizuCop 360 is its Virtual Synchronized Mapping (VSM) feature, which encodes the address of the incident and a map showing the location into each video. "We showed VSM to a department in northern Alabama four years ago, and they wanted to know when it was coming out. We've had it in the school bus market for some time, so we knew it would be a hit with law enforcement."
But the patented VSM and dual-lens camera features are not the primary aspect of VizuCop that Howard believes will make the system a fixture in America's patrol cars. He has this message for future law enforcement customers. "Our system is highly reliable," he says. "We are going to make sure that you get your video because we know how important that is for you."