Skip to main content

Tattile has eyes on Vietnam highway

Tattile has installed a number of automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras on a major road in north Vietnam.
By Adam Hill March 26, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Tattile has installed ANPR cameras on the Noi Bai-Lao Cai highway

The devices on the Noi Bai-Lao Cai highway are part of a road safety and traffic monitoring programme for a local system integrator whose end customer is the country’s traffic police.

The Tattile Vega Smart 2HD, Vega Smart Speed and Vega Smart Traffic Light cameras are equipped with embedded artificial intelligence, and can perform “real-time analysis without needing an external computer or costly IT infrastructure”, the company says.

Enforcement of speed limits and detecting red-light running at key intersections are among the main reasons for the installation.

“All these applications will have the common goal to reduce casualties and to protect the citizens,” Tattile adds in a statement.

The system will also allow the government to collect and use a large amount of traffic pattern data.

“This innovative project will last three years, and we’re just at the beginning,” said a Tattile spokesperson.

The plan is for the project to be extended to Tiền Châu, Bình Xuyên and Vĩnh Phúc.
 

Related Content

  • October 28, 2020
    Tattile brings free-flow tolling to Slovakia
    Cameras will also monitor trucks using highways in Czech Republic
  • May 29, 2013
    Israel aspires to ITS-led future
    Shay Soffer, Chief Scientist with the Israel National Road Safety Authority, talks to Jason Barnes about his country’s current ITS outlook and how he sees this developing in the future. Israel ranks alongside countries such as the US and France in the road safety stakes, with an average 7.1 deaths per billion kilometres driven. But at that point the similarities end, as the country’s overriding issue is pedestrian safety. This is driven by several factors, including being a relatively small country where pe
  • October 26, 2016
    Building the case for photo enforcement
    As red light enforcement is returning to some intersections and being shut down at others, new evidence has been released backing the safety campaigners, reports Jon Masters. In 2014, 709 Americans were killed in red-light-running crashes and an estimated 126,000 were injured according to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS).
  • June 2, 2014
    Machine vision makes progress in traffic applications
    Machine Vision technology is easing the burden on hard-pressed control room staff and overloaded communications networks.