Specifications include, but are not limited to: The proposed solution should have the ability to meet Metro's, specifically Metro Nashville Police Department (MNPD) strategic goals for body and in-car cameras systems, utilize state of the art technology, support upgrades to remain state of the art technology, meet MNPD's requirements (detailed requirements will be provided in round 2 of solicitation) and provide a complete integrated solution for body and in-car video system. On-Premise is preferred but cloud based storage will be evaluated. MNPD has approximately 1500 officers that will be outfitted with body worn cameras and 870 patrol vehicles that will be outfitted with in-car video systems. The body and in-car video must be integrated and use the same video management system. MNPD will require a minimum front view of 180 degrees and 1 backseat camera for the in-car video solution. MNPD will retain a minimum of 1 year of video, ongoing investigations and court cases. Officers will have a working body camera all times they are on duty including transit to and from work and any secondary employment jobs. In 2016, officers spent 934,000 hours on calls for service (dispatch to complete) and 75,000 hours at secondary employment jobs. Storage sizing should use the full 934,000 hours on duty and an estimated 10% of secondary employment hours (7500 hours) for body and in-car video system usage. MNPD intends to record all videos at a minimum of 720p HD resolution. Solutions must allow for Wi-Fi, cellular 4G and dock uploads. MNPD will support 15 Wi-Fi hot spots throughout Davidson County including 8 precincts using 802.11ac wave 2 compliant with private fiber backbone for video uploads. MNPD intends to utilize store-n-forward servers at each precinct to quickly offload video at the end of each shift