Skip to main content

LPR analytics partnership

PIPS Technology has entered into an exclusive agreement with Intuidex to bring cutting-edge analytics to the public safety licence plate recognition (LPR) market.
March 23, 2012 Read time: 1 min
RSS37 PIPS Technology has entered into an exclusive agreement with 4261 Intuidex to bring cutting-edge analytics to the public safety licence plate recognition (LPR) market. The partnership promises substantial investigative and alerting benefits, enabling agencies to identify critical patterns and threats beyond simple search functions.

PIPS will be integrating Intuidex’s Watchman Analytics with its Back Office System Software (BOSS) platform for use in a major metropolitan infrastructure protection project in early 2012. The project includes multiple agencies, locations and over 200 strategically deployed fixed LPR cameras.

Watchman employs patent-pending Higher Order Learning technology available exclusively from Intuidex integrated with advanced tools for information extraction, modelling, classification, prediction and recommender systems.

“The combination of PIPS leading-edge LPR technology with Intuidex’s advanced analytics is an unbeatable solution for LPR investigations and real-time crime alerting,"  said Dr. William Pottenger, Ph.D. founder and CEO of Intuidex.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Congestion index for major European cities
    July 11, 2012
    TomTom has launched its first quarterly Congestion Index that identifies and analyses traffic congestion in major cities across Europe. The report, initially covering 31 cities, finds Warsaw the most congested city in Europe. On average, journey times in Warsaw are 42 per cent longer than when traffic in the city is flowing freely and 89 per cent longer during morning rush hour.
  • Nairobi looks to ITS to ease travel problems
    March 6, 2018
    Shem Oirere looks at plans to tackle chronic congestion in the Kenyan capital - where commuters can typically expect it to take up to two hours to complete a 15km journey. Traffic jams in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, are estimated to cost the country $360 million a year in terms of lost man-hours, fuel and pollution. According to Wilfred Oginga, an engineer with the Kenya Urban Roads Authority (KURA), the congestion has been exacerbated by poor regulation and enforcement of traffic rules, absence of
  • Pricing practise for HOT lane operation
    May 11, 2017
    Timothy Compston weighs up the critical elements that keep the wheels of dynamic pricing schemes turning in today's high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes. In the drive towards smarter tolling it is perhaps not surprising that sophisticated pricing algorithms are being rolled out to better reflect supply and demand on the roadway. This is the case with high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes which a growing number of DoTs are seeing as a way of smoothing the operation of their existing, and planned, freeway infrastructure
  • Statistical improvement for short-term travel time predictions
    June 2, 2014
    Researchers at Imperial College in London have developed a generic three-stage short-term travel prediction model that promises to give greater accuracy under both normal and abnormal conditions. As travellers do not like the randomness of non-recurrent traffic congestion and delays, it is particularly useful for network managers to know how the ongoing traffic situation will develop when an atypical event occurs.