Sign Up to our newsletter for latest updates?
You need to create a form using Contact form 7 plugin to be able to display it using this element.
Tech Tomorrow Issue #3: CCTV Storage, AI Analytics & what actually matters. Plus: How 6,000 AI cameras manage 100,000 daily visitors at Tirumala Temple. By Fgtech Store.
Posted by Akhil Bhatia | January 18, 2026 | Issue #3 | 12 min read
In this issue: CCTV + AI Analytics 101, Storage Sizing Guide, Tirumala Temple Case Study, CCTV Buying Guide
for you, with you
If you’ve ever looked at a CCTV quote and wondered, “Why does one shop need 2TB while another needs 20TB?”, or scrolled through camera specs thinking “Do I really need AI analytics?” – you’re not alone.
CCTV has quietly evolved from ‘just recording everything’ to something much smarter. Cameras can now tell the difference between a dog and a person, send you alerts when someone loiters near your gate, and manage crowds of 100,000 people at a temple – all without you staring at screens 24/7.
But here’s the thing: most of this tech already exists and works today. The question isn’t “Is this real?” – it’s “What do I actually need, and what’s just expensive marketing?”
Let’s break it down.
AI-powered CCTV sounds like science fiction, but the basics are already working in systems you can buy right now. Here’s what’s real and what you should care about:
Traditional motion detection triggers on everything – leaves blowing, rain, even lighting changes – causing 90-99% false alarms. That’s not a typo. If you get 100 alerts, 90-99 of them are useless.
Intelligent motion detection powered by AI analyzes the type and pattern of motion. The result? 85-95% fewer false alarms. Instead of 100 useless alerts daily, you get 5-15 that actually matter – someone entering your property after hours, not a cat walking by. Here’s what we are talking about

Modern cameras can automatically detect and classify what they see – people, vehicles, bags left unattended – and track them in real-time using AI across multiple camera feeds. This is useful for:
Anything promising ‘predictive threat analysis’ or ‘behavioral anomaly detection’ that claims to predict crimes before they happen is overselling. Yes, AI can spot patterns in historical footage, but thinking your ₹15,000 camera will operate like Minority Report is unrealistic. Stick to proven features: motion zones, object classification, and basic alerts.
How many days, how many cameras, what resolution, how many TBs do you actually require – here’s the formula you need – no fluff, just math:
Storage (GB) = Bitrate (Kbps) × 1000/8 × 3600 × 24 × Cameras × Days / 1,000,000,000
You have 4 cameras recording at 1080p (bitrate: ~2048 Kbps), and you want 30 days of footage:
Storage = 2048 × 1000/8 × 3600 × 24 × 4 × 30 / 1,000,000,000 = 2,654 GB (~2.6 TB)
So a 4TB NVR hard drive gives you room to breathe.
1. Compression codec – the biggest space saver
In real terms, the same 30-day, 4-camera setup that requires 2.6 TB with H.264 would need 13 TB with the older MJPEG. That’s the difference between a ₹8,000 hard drive and a ₹40,000+ storage nightmare.
2. Recording mode – 24/7 recording vs. motion-triggered recording cuts storage by 60-70%. A back gate camera that records 24/7 uses 648 GB/month. Same camera on motion-only? Around 200 GB/month.
3. Resolution – Adjust resolution based on importance: 4K for cash counters, 1080p for general areas, 720p for perimeter zones
4. Audio recording – Disabling audio where unnecessary (parking lots, warehouses) saves 15-20% space. For that 4-camera, 2.6 TB setup, that’s 400-500 GB saved.
The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams recently deployed a ₹28 crore AI system with over 6,000 cameras to manage 50,000-100,000 daily visitors. The scale is staggering: 360,000 payloads are processed per minute, and 2.5 billion real-time inferences are made daily. Here’s the full story.
Facial recognition cameras at 20 strategic points (railway stations, bus stands, temple entry gates) capture devotees’ faces and cross-reference them against a database of ~1 million images from the past 30 days. The system issues time-slotted darshan tokens linked to your face, preventing duplicate bookings and queue-jumping.

Unless you’re managing 50,000+ people daily, you don’t need facial recognition databases. A small retail shop, coaching center, or even a 20-camera factory can achieve 90% of the security value with:
What actually matters when you’re shopping:

Most cameras claim “night vision,” but effective range varies wildly. Look for 20-30 meters for outdoor cameras, 10-15 meters for indoor. Anything less is nearly useless beyond your front door.
If you’re installing 3+ cameras, buy PoE-enabled cameras and a PoE switch. One cable does power + data – no messy power bricks, no hunting for outlets near ceilings.
Regular desktop HDDs fail quickly under 24/7 recording. Use WD Purple or Seagate SkyHawk drives rated for surveillance.
Why? They’re designed to write continuously. Regular drives are rated for 55 TB/year workload. Surveillance drives handle 180-360 TB/year. Your 4-camera, 24/7 setup writes ~100 TB/year.
Got a CCTV setup you’re proud of? Or one that’s a complete mess and you want help fixing? Hit reply and tell us:
We’d love to feature a reader’s CCTV setup in Issue #4 with a “what to fix first” breakdown.
How did you feel about the 3rd issue of Tech Tomorrow?