Search live or recorded video using plain-language commands and instantly identify weapons, anomalies, suspicious behaviour, and persons of interest. Powered by multi-layer AI models, AIMS gives high-security facilities faster insight, stronger situational awareness, and a smarter way to detect, assess, and respond to threats.
Real-time AI analysis for faster response. Detects weapons, persons of interest, suspicious behaviour, anomalies, vehicles, faces, drones, and license plates.
Integrates cameras, access points, and wearables into one system, without replacing existing hardware.
Centralized web and mobile dashboard for monitoring, alerts, live feeds, location, and personnel status.
Live coordination with first responders, including chat and shared incident logs.
Scales from single sites to enterprise deployments across multiple facilities.
Extends threat detection to mobile devices for immediate action in the field.
At the heart of AIMS is the Unified Threat Response Center: the command portal that fuses every sensor and every channel into a single operating picture for commanders and responders. Its communications core is the Unified Communication Intelligence Platform (UCIP), which merges radio, SMS, web, and PA traffic into one intelligent ledger.
Stylized impression. Actual console shown under NDA.
The Unified Communication Intelligence Platform fuses radio, SMS, web, and PA traffic into one master timeline. Radio is transcribed with voice-to-text and cleaned of RF noise, so nothing said during an incident is lost.
Weapons classifications, confidence levels, and camera locks stream into the console the moment they happen, with subject descriptors pushed to all units.
Floor plans show every door, camera, siren, and motion sensor in real time, including the subject’s movement track from first detection to last known position.
Lock doors, sound sirens, and broadcast PA announcements directly from the map, with confirmation guards against accidental commands.
Automatic 911 dispatch and templated SMS and push alerts to staff, wardens, and visitors, with SAFE replies feeding live muster counts.
Every automated event and operator action is hash-chained and time-stamped for after-action review and legal defensibility.
Wall-mounted triggers, the FACES2 mobile app, and Android two-way radios can all start a lockdown. Indoor and outdoor sirens wire to the F2 Smart Controller's lockdown circuits, up to 24 sirens and 24 pull levers per controller, all commanded from the AIMS console. A door-to-floor mechanical deadbolt adds a hardware failsafe that holds doors shut even without power.
Dual-action press-to-activate station that triggers a facility-wide lockdown the moment it is pressed.
Push-button trigger under a lift-up clear cover that guards against accidental activation.
Authorized staff start, monitor, and end a lockdown from their phone, on site or remote.
Rugged Hytera radio runs the FACES2 lockdown app, putting push-to-talk and lockdown control in one handheld.
Compact siren with blue strobe that announces a lockdown instantly in corridors, classrooms, and offices.
Weather-resistant siren with high-visibility strobe for yards, gates, and building exteriors.
Mechanical deadbolt that anchors the door directly into the floor, holding it shut through a lockdown even if power is lost. Available in silver and black.
AIMS coordinates every stage of an incident through the UTRC: sensing unusual activity, scoring threat level with AI, alerting the right people, coordinating the response in one console, and logging the full event for compliance.
Sensors and cameras capture unusual activity.
System evaluates threat level in real time.
Notifications sent to security personnel and management.
Dashboard shows feeds, location, and personnel status.
Threat neutralized. Event logged and operations resume.
AIMS is where the whole ecosystem converges: video detections, door events, alarms, and sensor alerts all feed one incident timeline.
Walk through a lockdown scenario with a consultant and see how AIMS coordinates people, doors, and video.