There are two big industries that stand to be revolutionised by massive increases in data – healthcare and transportation, says Finlay Clarke, the UK managing director of the smartphone sat nav traffic app, 
     
Waze has enjoyed a remarkable increase in uptake. This year it expects to surpass 100 million users worldwide – all of whom are contributing to the wealth of data, the accuracy of the maps and the traffic information that the app has to offer. Anyone who has used Waze – your author tried it out on his family vacation this year – will know that the app has enriched the whole process of using a sat nav device.
     
The temptation is to think the game’s up for all other traffic information providers and sat nav services. Waze has the benefit of the powers of investment and mapping that come with being owned by Google; although, according to Clarke, the app software company has been allowed to continue operating autonomously from its big parent.
     
Waze supplies the app free to users and gathers its revenue from advertisers – companies that can benefit from telling drivers using the system that the end of their journey has brought them just a matter of metres from a restaurant, for instance.
     
 
Data exchange
     
With such a rise in popularity comes a lot of useful data and Waze has a lot of useful data to share; it has 1.7 million users in the UK and around two million driving around Los Angeles alone. Deals are being done with highway and traffic authorities – although not with any money changing hands. Instead, Waze wants to embellish its maps with up-to-date information on planned events, roadworks and any other relevant data that authorities can share for users of the Waze app. 
     
Such agreements look like good news for all involved. 
 
     
Such  developments suggest Mobility as a Service (
     
Sol  Salinas is the connected cities lead for consultant 
     
“Having  spoken with groups of government agency officers recently, I’m not  convinced they’re sensing this is around the corner. At present many are  gathering and building databases and models piecemeal on platforms not  designed for it. Some are embracing the agenda and partnering with apps,  but they’ve got to be thinking about 15 to 20 years from now. Platforms  have to be data-driven, modular and scaleable; generally ready for the  unknown.”
     
According to  Salinas, the key to all this is starting off with a focus on the desired  outcomes; knowing exactly what is wanted at the end. “The technology is  really just a means to an end. Every smart city will be different,” he  says. A good example, is Dubai, which wants to maximise productivity, so  is focusing its data collection and dissemination efforts around the  notion of ‘happiness’.
     
“Other  cities have their own unique needs, although in many cases the smart  city priorities come back to traffic congestion, transportation and  better personal mobility to solve a disconnect across socio-economic  classes. Austin, Texas, has recognised this and has ambitions for  mobilising east-west connectivity with a smart corridor programme, so  that the disenfranchised can benefit more from economic development.
     
“But  it’s early days. Many cities have barely started doing the analytics  and are still figuring out how to gather the data, whether it’s with  dedicated short-range communications (DSRC), bluetooth, Waze, or other  forms of crowd-sourced or floating car data,” Salinas says. 
     
The  game certainly isn’t up for other sources of data. There will be many  sat nav systems built into dashboards and numerous other types of  crowd-sourced or floating-car data, as well as traditional forms of  monitoring traffic.
     
 
Data as a service
     
Earlier  this year, ITS specialist 
 
     
Since   the beginning of June, IRD has been owned by Quarterhill, a holding   company that started out as Wi-LAN and is now reporting to be focused on   the Internet of Things (IoT).
     
Another   company that’s gone through a similar change is 
     
Citilog’s   business development manager for North America, Irv Rosenblum, says:   “Twenty years back ITS architecture was based around central software   systems. As a part of Axis we have the ability to put some of the   software in more hardware. This year we are introducing software as a   service, making the results available to [approved users] on any device   anywhere with an Internet connection.”
     
Such   services are growing in popularity, Rosenblum says, particularly for   temporary traffic monitoring and incident detection in workzone sites,   relaying messages to VMS displays and traffic counts to agency traffic   management centres. “We’re essentially talking about software here; it   evolves rapidly and easily to customers’ demands,” Rosenblum says. With   the hardware end taken care of, it’s an “exciting time” for the  company,  he adds: “We’ve broadened our services and expanded what we  can do.”
     
 
Smart city applications
     
This   includes smart city applications such as real-time control of traffic   signals and street lighting based on vehicle and pedestrian detection   counts. Rosenblum acknowledges that Citilog’s primary experience of this   has been in Norway and Ireland, but the company is currently working  on  a proof-of-concept for a similar project in the US where video  analysis  will be used to count and classify traffic and then control  signals and  street lights accordingly.
     
Processing   power has increased what’s possible. IRD’s Bergan sees data management   as a service as an important step in a significant shift towards more   automation. “Ultimately, in autonomous vehicles, data will be  essential.  At present, it’s mostly highway agencies managing data and  providing  information services for drivers, but for avoiding or  reducing  congestion there will be more sophisticated methods in  vehicles,” he  says.
     
So  does that mean  agencies will be cut out of the process, leaving apps  and sat navs to do  it all? “Authorities will always need oversight, but  they’ll have to  work with the apps and as many sources of data as  possible. The more the  better; decisions have to be made on very good  data. Traffic management  systems can give information for people before  they start their  journeys, but vehicles’ in-built systems will be able  to make better  decisions,” Bergan says.
    
        
        
        
        



