Skip to main content

Australian security group targets ITS sector

Australian DTI Group, which provides advanced surveillance systems, solutions and services to the global mobile security industry, is setting its sights on the intelligent transportation systems (ITS) sector, with a compact in-vehicle enforcement system. The system utilises high definition recording with internal and external vehicle cameras, including thermal imaging cameras and integration of automatic number plate recognition (ANPR). Data from the cameras is transmitted to a sunlight readable touch s
January 5, 2016 Read time: 1 min
Australian DTI Group, which provides advanced surveillance systems, solutions and services to the global mobile security industry, is setting its sights on the intelligent transportation systems (ITS) sector, with a compact in-vehicle enforcement system.

The system utilises high definition recording with internal and external vehicle cameras, including thermal imaging cameras and integration of automatic number plate recognition (ANPR).  Data from the cameras is transmitted to a sunlight readable touch screen data terminal or existing on-board data terminal.

It provides instant vehicle GPS location with back to base live vehicle streaming via 3G/4G/LTE, along with fully automated incident downloads via the DTI fleet manager suite, route data and vehicle behaviour analysis, using vehicle inputs and sensors to match video with vehicle events.

Related Content

  • TrafiBot Dual AI camera has tunnel vision
    September 23, 2024
    Multispectral system automates incident detection and delivers early fire detection
  • Latest in IP video technology from Axis
    September 8, 2014
    Axis Communications is here at the ITS World Congress to demonstrate the latest innovations in IP video technology, something the company is uniquely qualified to do. Twenty years ago, all surveillance cameras were analogue and delivered video via a coaxial cable to a recorder that stored the video on a VHS tape. Axis Communications says that when it invented the network camera in 1996, it made it possible to connect a video camera directly to a computer network. The shift from analogue to digital technolog
  • New York pioneers online mobile real-time bus tracking
    May 22, 2012
    An unusual technology collaboration. David Crawford investigates Early in January 2012, the New York City Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) rolled out the first borough-wide implementation of its pioneering Bus Time online mobile real-time tracking service. The system allow commuters to track each bus on every route in real-time on the internet, via smartphones and by text messaging to a mobile phone. The MTA chose Staten Island for its first live launch due to it being the only one of the five Ne
  • Tattile launches Vega Basic and Vega Smart cameras
    April 5, 2016
    Tattile has used Intertraffic Amsterdam 2016 to launch a new range of innovative smart cameras including the Vega Basic and Vega Smart lines. “Addressing both the immediate and future requirements of the ITS market, these cutting-edge cameras set Tattile a step ahead in the industry,” says Massimiliano Cominelli, sales manager, Tattile Traffic Division.