Skip to main content

Worldline and Here join forces to accelerate connected vehicles

Worldline, Atos subsidiary in e-payment and transactional services, and global mapping and location solutions provider Here are joining forces to accelerate the global roll-out of connected vehicle solutions. François Gatineau, head of Business Division M2M Mobility at Worldline, explains: “Our open, robust, scalable and flexible platform can integrate all content and service suppliers, allowing new revenue streams to be generated and improving customer satisfaction via an income and risk sharing model.
March 6, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
7644 Worldline, Atos subsidiary in e-payment and transactional services, and global mapping and location solutions provider 7643 HERE are joining forces to accelerate the global roll-out of connected vehicle solutions.

François Gatineau, head of Business Division M2M Mobility at Worldline, explains: “Our open, robust, scalable and flexible platform can integrate all content and service suppliers, allowing new revenue streams to be generated and improving customer satisfaction via an income and risk sharing model. Worldline and HERE combine their expertise in connected services to bring innovative end to end solutions to the manufacturer market”.

“HERE offers the most comprehensive and flexible location platform in the market. We have a long history in creating complete solutions for a wide range of industries, as well as offering parts of our offering to partners,” says Floris van de Klashorst, head of Connected Car at HERE. “Our cooperation with Worldline will make the promised connected vehicles a reality even faster.”

Related Content

  • February 25, 2025
    EasyPark finalises Parkopedia acquisition
    Combination provides accurate mapping and payment solutions
  • February 1, 2012
    IP technology the route to efficient multi-agency control rooms
    As IP-based technology makes its presence felt in the control room sector, it makes for greater economies of scale and also offers a migration path for many other traffic management technologies. So says Barco's Guy Van Wijmeersch. Efficient control room collaboration and decision-making is only possible if operators and decision-makers have easy and timely access to information. In many cases, that information also needs to be accessible to multiple users at the same time. This is certainly so in the case
  • November 23, 2018
    Venkat Sumantran: ‘Smart cities are more hype than reality’
    For all the talk of smart cities, investment in systems lags significantly behind organic expansion in most places. Andrew Stone talks to Venkat Sumantran, who has been looking at how to create a coherent framework which could help authorities answer multiple mobility questions Two megatrends are posing unprecedented challenges to those trying to keep people moving around the world’s urban areas now - and in the years and decades to come. The first is rapid urbanisation. One in six of us lived in urban a
  • December 11, 2014
    Sorting sensible from shiny in tolling technology
    Instead of always striving for the latest shiny toys Kevin Hoeflich of HNTB advises a 10-steps method for selecting the most appropriate technology. Amid the hype and razzmatazz surrounding the launch of Apple’s iPhone 6, the company also announced its new mobile payment system, Apple Pay. Built into the new iPhone 6, Apple Pay works at 220,000 merchants across America and is supported by major US banks and the big three credit card companies.