Large-Scale Video Archiving?
BondHeadGuy asks: "Ok, say you have 1000+ cameras emitting 30 frames/second worth of 640x480 grayscale video...and you have to store it indefinitely. What do you do? This is a real question, believe it or not. 30 frames/s * 300 KB/frame = 9 MB/s per camera. 100:1 video compression brings that down to ~90 KB/s. But 90 KB/s * 1000 cameras = 90 MB/s, or ~8 terabytes/day. Retrieval, though, can be essentially arbitrarily slow. Reliability should be good enough to not be annoying long term. Is there a solution that: has 8 TB/day storage capacity, can handle the 90 MB/s write speed, and lets you save some bucks on the (slow) read side?"
Rum dum dee dum
Not just a prick, but stupid, too (the usual case, actually). The original question posits 100:1 compression to 3kB per frame.
Brush up on those reading skills here.
What if this guy is planing to archive security video of an airport terminal?
Using FPGA hardware, Rob McCready, the original poster achieved around an 88% face detection rate in real-time from black and white pictures with a 30 frames per second video camera.h tm
This explains his crazy requirements : looks like he is busy thinking about large scale applications of his work.
http://www.nce.gc.ca/en/success/9920/micronet3_e.