Skip to main content

IRD offers web-based fleet management

IRD’s FleetSphere is a web-based GPS fleet management solution, which helps to optimise management and reduce fleet operating costs. Applications include all sizes of commercial fleet vehicles, including delivery trucks, service trucks, vans, and trailers, as well as snowploughs and emergency vehicles.
June 16, 2015 Read time: 1 min
857 IRD’s FleetSphere is a web-based GPS fleet management solution, which helps to optimise management and reduce fleet operating costs. Applications include all sizes of commercial fleet vehicles, including delivery trucks, service trucks, vans, and trailers, as well as snowploughs and emergency vehicles.

Recently added FleetSphere features include Route Completion Analysis and a Citizen Portal.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Gridsmart introduces web-based traffic solution
    June 1, 2015
    Gridsmart Technologies is introducing new products during the ITS America Annual Meeting, continuing to enhance the company’s commitment to making traffic technology faster, smarter and easier. “Our focus is to continually build the Gridsmart lineup with affordable strategies that allow traffic managers to create safer and less congested communities,” said Dr Jeff Price, Chief of Technology. “Our latest product, Gridsmart Atlas, optimises taxpayer dollars by deploying one product that can be utilised by v
  • How ITS weathers the storm on I-80
    September 7, 2021
    Weather-related closures on Wyoming’s I-80 can cost as much as $11.7m each. But a new initiative is harnessing V2X technology to prevent snow shutting things down
  • Machine vision’s image of road management’s future
    June 11, 2015
    Q-Free’s Marco Sinnema looks at how the commoditisation of high-quality vision-based solutions is widening their application. Machine vision technology’s entry into the ITS/traffic management sector has followed a classic top-down path. This is unsurprising given the extremely demanding performance criteria which are the standard in its market of origin, manufacturing processing. Very high image qualities combined with frame rates often in the hundreds per second range resulted in vision systems with capabi
  • Maintaining momentum: learning lessons from the London Olympics
    November 15, 2013
    Japan will not only host this year’s ITS World Congress but has been selected for the 2020 Olympics. So what can Japan, and indeed Brazil, learn from the traffic management for London 2012 - Geoff Hadwick finds out. It was a key moment when Olympic boss Jacques Rogge signed off London 2012, calling the Games “happy and glorious.” Scarred by the logistical disaster of Atlanta 1996 and the last-minute building panic for Athens 2008, Rogge clearly thought London 2012 was an object lesson in how to plan and