This article is sponsored by Cisco.
Police1 Staff
Results from a survey conducted by the International Association of Chiefs of Police and Major Cities Chiefs Association show an estimated 53 percent of U.S. counties are working with fewer staff today than they were a decade ago.
As a result, police are turning to technology as a force multiplier to compensate for recent reductions in staff as department budgets have been drastically reduced in the past 10 years.
The Cisco Public Safety, Justice, and the Internet of Everything white paper examines how the increasingly ubiquitous connectedness of our world through technology can help provide public safety and justice agencies with new opportunities to meet and overcome the challenges they face.
The Internet of Everything (IoE) is a continuous interaction among people, processes, data, and things. Sensors, networks, and smart devices are ever-present, providing a torrent of streaming data, or “data in motion.”
The Cisco Public Safety, Justice, and the Internet of Everything white paper examines this topic through applications in law enforcement, emergency response, corrections, courts and national security, and shows how IoE can help agencies to better protect citizens and make communities safer.
Indeed, IoE is capable of helping public safety and justice agencies increase cost efficiency, improve safety and security, provide better response times, and increase productivity.
The white paper also provides recommendations on strategy implementation to enable agencies to take the next steps.
Cisco is helping customers and strategic partners take advantage of the immense potential of IoE to achieve radical results across all sectors and industries.
To learn more, download the Cisco Public Safety, Justice, and the Internet of Everything white paper or the Cisco Public Safety, Justice, and the Internet of Everything infographic.