Skip to main content

Rekor offers number plate recognition app 

Rekor Go is smartphone solution which identifies vehicles parked in restricted areas
By Ben Spencer January 22, 2021 Read time: 2 mins
Rekor Go allows users to manage alerts through the app (image credit: Rekor Systems)

Rekor Systems has launched an app which it says turns a smartphone into a handheld tool that identifies vehicles and their numberplates.

The Rekor Go app provides the user with confirmation when the data matches a customer generated 'hotlist' record.

According to Rekor, the app does not need to continuously connect and stream to the cloud, enabling operations in areas where WiFi or cellular service is limited or unreliable.

It captures data on the move, operating in real-time on a live video stream, the company adds. 

Identified plates are compared to a user-generated list, which Rekor insists helps shorten the time from capture to insight and issuing an audible alert.

Rekor CEO Robert Berman says the app can alert campus safety officers to vehicles of interest, whether it is associated with criminal activity, a protective order or a recently terminated employee.

“It can be used by event staff to track VIP arrivals; identify a vehicle’s location for asset recovery, and validate vehicles that are parked in restricted access lots, even in a parking garage where WiFi or cell phone service is limited,” he adds. 

Rekor Go allows users to manage alerts by entering number plate information directly or uploading a list. They can also capture and review images of all reads and export data using native phone capabilities.

Other features include an export tool that creates a .csv read file that can be downloaded and shared and a companion website that allows users to create and upload bulk lists, differentiating between 'allowed' and 'not-allowed' number plates. 

The app is available to iOS and Android users. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Want intelligent transit? Then share data
    March 2, 2022
    How will the US deploy intelligent transit networks that enable connected vehicles? Data sharing is crucial if urban mobility users are to benefit, explains Timothy Menard of Lyt
  • Streetline heads for first European deployment of smart parking technology
    October 23, 2012
    Streetline’s smart parking technology, which is already well established in the US in cities such as Los Angeles, Indianapolis and Washington, DC, is about to achieve its first European deployment, in the German city of Braunschweig. This follows the announcement earlier this year that Streetline and Siemens had entered into a strategic partnership to offer integrated parking solutions to municipalities around the globe. Streetline’s sensor technology sits in the road surface and provides real-time informat
  • WiM avoids bumps in the road
    May 5, 2020
    Road surfaces are deteriorating as years of budget squeezes bite among local authorities. Adam Hill asks leading Weigh in Motion players what effect this might be having on the accuracy of their technology – and how authorities can be made to see that WiM is a helpful tool
  • DKT beats the blues
    March 31, 2022
    In The Blues Brothers, Jake and Elwood Blues famously stole a police car as they attempted to raise the necessary money to keep open the orphanage in which they had been raised.