Despite
how camera manufacturers claim that their devices are smart or
intelligent, the fact remains that they will not work unless they are
connected to the Internet. Qualcomm wants to change this trend by
developing a cutting-edge chip that will allow a security camera to be
aware of what it is shooting or aiming at while offline.

“Moving
the video analytics processing from the server to the camera at the
point of capture will open up a new class of big data applications,”
said Anthony Murray, senior vice president and general manager, IoE,
Qualcomm Technologies International Ltd. “Qualcomm Snapdragon processors
already power over 500 smartphone designs with 4K UltraHD video
capability, so it’s natural for us to bring this same technology
leadership into IP camera space.”
The
Snapdragon 618 IP Camera platform is a comprehensive reference design
for a 4K HEVC IP camera with incredible computation power and robust
connectivity. Built around the 64-bit Snapdragon 618 processor, it
features:
- Integrated X8 LTE with Global Mode and advanced Carrier Aggregation up to 2x20 MHz in both downlink and uplink
- LTE Cat 7 with support for peak speeds of 300 Mbps download/100 Mbps upload
- Comprehensive, fast connectivity including 802.11/a/b/g/n/ac Wi-Fi®, GPS, Ethernet, and Bluetooth® Smart 4.1
- Six-core, 64-bit CPU with dual 1.8GHz ARM® CortexTM-A72 + quad 1.2GHz Cortex-A53 cores
- Next generation Qualcomm® Adreno™ GPU and Qualcomm® Hexagon™ DSP together with the six-core 64-bit CPU to provide complete, heterogeneous computing platform for conscious camera advanced analytics and imaging
- Dual image signal processors (ISP) to offer support for up to 21MP images and 4K video with dedicated hardware h.264 and HEVC encoding, offering as much as a 50 percent reduction in bandwidth
- Power management IC with integrated audio codec supports efficient battery operation
That
could potentially lead to a new class of always-on, always-connected
devices (think medical wearables that don't need to pair with a phone)
with tremendously long battery lives.
Cameras and devices using its new platforms could start to appear in the first half of next year.