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

  • Joining old and new in Canada’s Highway 407
    June 17, 2016
    David Arminas visits Canada’s Highway 407 ETR to see how the concession is working and hear about new arrangements for the roadway’s extension. The Toronto region is North America’s eighth largest metropolitan area and its roads become notoriously congested. In 1997 Highway 407, a 68km concrete toll motorway which skirts the northern edge of Toronto, was opened and initially operated by the province and CHIC - a consortium of four leading Ontario-based companies. Finance came from the Ontario Financing Auth
  • Integrated corridor management aids multi-modal transport planning
    January 24, 2012
    Telvent’s Jorgen Pedersen and Tip Franklin discuss how integrated corridor management can create synergies within a multimodal transportation infrastructure, while promoting modal shift. The mantra ‘We cannot build ourselves out of congestion’ has long been stated and too often ignored. But with the economy in dire straits, funding deficits and pressure to reduce governmental spending, this is now being taken seriously by almost everyone who has an interest in the flow of traffic. By ‘everyone’ we include
  • Growing use of video monitoring in traffic management
    February 2, 2012
    The county-wide expansion of CCTV coverage in Florida Department of Transportation's District Four is detailed by Citilog's Eric Toffin
  • San Diego: Let there be (street)light
    March 30, 2020
    The influence of intelligent streetlights is spreading. David Crawford finds that San Diego’s deployment – and attendant legislation – may offer a blueprint for other cities going forward