Skip to main content

Success of first MOBiNET meeting

MOBiNET, the new ERTICO-led project which plans to develop and run an internet of mobility, a platform that links transport services and end users, recently concluded its first meeting. By developing a set of common tools and standards (collectively known as MOBiNET), the idea is make to mobile transport services, such as journey planning, automated ticketing, billing and vehicle tracking more accessible and more usable. As a 'cloud based' system MOBiNET will make it much easier for software developers to c
February 21, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
MOBiNET, the new 374 Ertico-led project which plans to develop and run an internet of mobility, a platform that links transport services and end users, recently concluded its first meeting.

By developing a set of common tools and standards (collectively known as MOBiNET), the idea is make to mobile transport services, such as journey planning, automated ticketing, billing and vehicle tracking more accessible and more usable.

As a 'cloud based' system MOBiNET will make it much easier for software developers to create new online transport services (good for business) and make it much easier for people like you and me to use them - which is good for consumers.

By creating a standardised platform, MOBiNET would increase the compatibility of transport services. This increased compatibility means less duplication, less duplication means less confusion, and less confusion naturally makes life easier.  Ease of access sits at the core of MOBiNET.

Jacques Amselem, CEO of 6027 Allianz Telematics and a member of the MOBiNET project team explained the problems with the current market: “The issue we have with telematics is that all the solutions we have seen so far are very vertical and very propriety and this is causing some issues in terms of business development and customer perception. That is why we believe that MOBiNET is the right way to go and we believe that it is the solution for the future development of telematics”

Marco Annoni, innovation area manager at 1983 Telecom Italia, said his company had joined the project to help define a common set of standards: “In our view, the project is innovative because it is a common approach which is not just targeting common interests. In the past we have seen many vertical deployments based on local requirements. With MOBiNET we are aiming to find a solution which is more general, more flexible and more re-usable. Once we have a common view at a European level it will become an enabler for many different stakeholders.”

MOBiNET, with partners from across the continent, aims to continue as a working organisation at the end of the project. This means there are both technical and administrative aspects that need to be considered and the consortium will have to set out a viable business case for MOBiNET.

Project coordinator Paul Kompfner, head of SmartMobility at Ertico, is under no illusion that this will be easy: “Our ambition is to establish MOBiNET as the connected mobility and transport service platform for all of Europe’s travellers and transport service suppliers; it seems a staggering challenge but we are confident we can achieve this since we have the right solution features and partners to do it.”

To help deliver a working and useable system, MOBiNET has adopted a method of accelerated development known as ‘agile’. This means that a fully operational, first-generation system will be released just sixteen months after the project is launched. Tests will take place at eight pilot sites across Europe and the feedback and results gained will then provide input for the development of the system ahead of the next product release. Testing will be conducted with businesses from both inside and outside the project consortium and potential users of the platform are thus invited to work alongside the project team to gain an early experience of MOBiNET’s advantages.

More details on the first MOBiNET meeting can be found here: %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal http://www.ertico.com/the-internet-of-mobility-building-better-its-services-in-europe/ http://www.ertico.com/the-internet-of-mobility-building-better-its-services-in-europe/ false http://www.ertico.com/the-internet-of-mobility-building-better-its-services-in-europe/ false false%>

Related Content

  • Your life in their hands
    March 27, 2018
    Rail, bus and taxi operators are realising significant savings by switching to ride scheduling, booking and monitoring apps that help them greatly automate their operations - while simultaneously offering their smartphone-wielding passengers the information they crave. Indeed, most of today’s transportation apps offer customers instant access to your system via mobile phone, where they can book and pay for a ride, get real-time status on their train, bus, or taxi - greatly reducing the overhead you normally
  • Nashville meeting smooth path to Tokyo
    May 29, 2013
    Plans for each ITS World Congress to smoothly transition into its successor took a step forward at the April 2013 ITS America Annual Meeting in April. Dr Hiroyuki Watanabe, organising committee chairman for the 2013 event in Tokyo met Jim Barbaresso, his counterpart for the 2014 follow-on in Detroit, Michigan to progress high-level cooperation. Barbaresso, vice president for ITS at engineering company HNTB and a former president of ITS Michigan, told ITS International there will be a common focus on lesson
  • Siemens snaps up Aimsun in deal agreed at Intertraffic
    March 22, 2018
    Intertraffic was the venue for the announcement of one of the biggest deals of the year as electronics giant Siemens acquired Barcelona-based mobility modelling specialist Aimsun for an undisclosed sum. Initially spun out from a university research lab team, TSS-Transport Simulation Systems, as the company was initially known, has spent 20 years developing its microsimulator into a multi-level integrated modeling platform. Aimsun systems and algorithms use real-time traffic data to optimise traffic flows
  • ETSI standards available to all on CD-ROM
    October 24, 2012
    Visit ETSI, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute, on stand P32 to discover the latest developments in European standardisation and to pick up a copy of ETSI’s CD-ROM collection of transportation related standards. ETSI develops standards for all aspects of ITS communication systems, working in close cooperation with other standards bodies including CEN, ISO, IEEE and with the Car2Car Communication Consortium. Interoperability is key, so ETSI, with Ertico, organises events for suppliers of coo