LOOK OUT FIRE...YOU'RE ON CAMERA

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND AND

MARYLAND TECHNOLOGY ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

September 12, 2006

CONTACTS: Eric Schurr, 301.405.3889, schurr@umd.edu; or Megan Hartley, 301.405-4548, mhartley@umd.edu

COLLEGE PARK, MD. -- A hidden electrical wire shorts in an art gallery.

Smoke smolders and a fire erupts under the brushstrokes of Monet and Manet. Before the smoke can reach the vaulted ceiling to signal the smoke detectors, countless sensitive, irreplaceable works are destroyed.

This is the fate of many buildings where smoke detectors fail to sense a fire and notify the fire department before significant damage occurs.

axonX LLC, a Sparks, Md.-based company, plans to put an end to ravaging fires by teaming with the University of Maryland to validate its intelligent video-camera system, which can spot a small fire in less than five seconds.

axonX's SigniFire system can detect fire, smoke and intrusion in structures such as warehouses, energy plants, art galleries and homes.

The camera assesses minute pixel changes within its three dimensional field of view-occasionally using reflections to get around large objects blocking the line of sight-to detect fire faster and more accurately than any currently available commercial product.

"It's the only video detection system that recognizes the big three

dangers: smoke, fire and intrusion," said George Privalov, chief technology officer and founder. "It eliminates most nuisance alarms because it actually sees the fireball and corona of a blaze. The camera knows it's a fire rather than a light or hot surface."

The company came to the University of Maryland to work with Jim Milke, associate chair and professor of the department of fire protection engineering, through a Maryland Industrial Partnerships (MIPS) project.

This collaboration will help axonX get classified as a life-saving device by Underwriters Laboratories, as well as by Factory Mutual, an insurance company that tests fire protection equipment.

Milke will prove the camera system's versatility and precise algorithms through tests in simulated dorm rooms, as well as a possible test in Cole Field House, which seats 12,125.

"This is a leading edge technology and a significant advancement in fire detection," said Milke. "They developed the device, and we will help them prove its capabilities."

The camera's feeds can be sent to any remote location that has installed axonX's SpyderGuard software, most likely a security company such as ADT, who--when a fire occurs--will get a notification of the fire as well as a structural plan of the building.

The National Fire Protection Association recently approved video surveillance systems as an effective way to detect fire, marking a significant change to its detector code.

Although axonX has yet to be approved by UL and FM, various customers are already installing SigniFire's general eight-camera system, which costs around $20,000-half as much as some of their competitors. The system is scalable to fit any size and/or shape of building.

The U.S. Navy tested SigniFire with other video image and spot-type detection systems, and found that axonX's technology was far more accurate.

According to the concluding report from the Naval Research Laboratory's Advanced Damage Countermeasures Volume Sensor Project, SigniFire responded faster and to more fires than all of the other video or spot-type detection systems.

"We hope the U.S. Navy installs SigniFire on its new Destroyers, and Great Britain's Royal Navy is testing our product right now," said Lynch.

axonX yesterday won a Technology Innovation Award in the Security

(Facilities) category from The Wall Street Journal. The company was selected from over 600 applicants.

axonX is also collaborating with: Cameco, a uranium processing plant; a Family Fun Center in Aberdeen, Md.; the Maryland Golf and Country Club; and Chicago's Children's Hospital.

The company has received funding from Johnson Controls, TEDCO, and angel investors.

The A. James Clark School of Engineering's department of fire protection engineering is the only accredited undergraduate program, and one of only two graduate programs of its kind in the country. The department celebrates its 50th anniversary in October.

About axonX (www.axonX.com)

Founded in 2002 by George Privalov, axonX LLC is the leading developer of innovative, vision-based technologies for Early Warning fire detection. Using image analysis, artificial intelligence, and patented signal processing technologies, axonX converts ordinary video surveillance set-ups into advanced safety and fire protection systems.

The SigniFire solution is ideal for larger volume structures with high value assets to include warehouses, hangars, industrial facilities, data centers, museums, and utilities.

About MIPS (www.mips.umd.edu)

The Maryland Industrial Partnerships Program, an initiative of the A. James Clark School of Engineering's Maryland Technology Enterprise Institute, brings university innovation to the commercial sector by supporting university-based research projects to help Maryland companies develop technology-based products.

Published September 12, 2006