July 23, 2019

Fire Warning

It's time to expect more from your security camera

United States Fire Departments responded to an estimated 1,319,500 fires in 2017. These fires resulted in 3,400 civilian fire fatalities, 14,670 civilian fire injuries and an estimated $23 billion in direct property loss. According to the U.S. Fire Administration (USFA), cooking is the main cause of residential building fires. Other causes include heating, unintentional/carelessness, and electrical malfunction.

Chart source: U.S. Fire Administration - Statistics of Data, Publication & Library

In terms of types of fire, “Residential” is the leading property type for fire deaths (73.2%), fire injuries (76.5%) and fire dollar loss (54.7%) in comparison to Nonresidential, Vehicle, and Outside fires.

In addition to residential building fires, surprisingly 204,000 vehicles fires were reported in 2016 in which unintentional, undetermined, or equipment failure were the major causes.

Chart source: U.S. Fire Administration - Statistics of Data, Publication & Library

According to the USFA, fires are the leading cause of personal property damages for both residencies and vehicles. California, Texas, and Georgia are leading the nation in the number of fire deaths, while West Virginia, Alaska and Alabama have the most deaths per million people.

As the leading company of camera robots, Amaryllo debuts the world’s first fire alert for smart home owners. Our cameras employ state-of-the-art cloud intelligence technology to spot fire hazards and dispatch fire warning alerts via push notifications on the mobile app. Amaryllo uses real-time pixel and object-based classification techniques to identify changes on the premises and can alert users of fires up to 20 feet away. While this system is not meant to replace conventional smoke alarms, it can help you to call emergency services before too much damage is done and locate the cause of the fire early-on.

Amaryllo robotic camera can spot fires up to 20 feet away.

Fire warning demonstration: