The AXON computer can hold about eight hours of audio-video files, even more if the user loads a Micro-SD memory card into the device's flash memory slot. It also has a battery life of eight hours per charge.
Smith believes that eight hours will be plenty of capacity for covering the average officer's shift and even more. "Our expectation is that most agencies and police unions will not want to have officers record their entire work shift because of privacy concerns."
AXON's recording priorities are agency configurable, but most agencies will probably set up AXON like their in-car video systems with a continuous one-minute video loop. Such a configuration lets the camera record 60 seconds before an incident. Then when the officer hits the event button, he or she can capture audio and video of the entire incident. There will also be a privacy mode so that officers can take a break, eat lunch, go to the bathroom, etc., without producing a video record.
Smith says AXON is intended to help officers not keep track of them or invade their privacy. He explains that the primary purpose for AXON is to capture the events leading up to an incident and the actions taken by an officer in the field, to "protect truth," as the company's advertising campaign for the new product says, and protect the officer.
"We have developed a real core competence in understanding the needs of the law enforcement officer in terms of the force that they have to deploy and what they have to do afterward to document that force," Smith says. "AXON is not just an on-officer camera. It's integrated into the value chain of what the cop on the street needs to deploy force, record it, and defend it."