Skip to main content

Alpha release of (SET-IT) software

The USDOT's Intelligent Transportation Systems Joint Program Office (ITS JPO) has announced that the Systems Engineering Tool for Intelligent Transportation (SET-IT) software is available as available as an Alpha release. SET-IT software integrates drawing and database tools with the CVRIA so that users can develop project architectures for pilots, test beds, and early deployments. The Alpha version of the SET-IT software is provided as-is with the current capabilities of the tool at this point in i
July 14, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
The USDOT's Intelligent Transportation Systems Joint Program Office (ITS JPO) has announced that the Systems Engineering Tool for Intelligent Transportation (SET-IT) software is available as available as an Alpha release.

SET-IT software integrates drawing and database tools with the CVRIA so that users can develop project architectures for pilots, test beds, and early deployments.
 
The Alpha version of the SET-IT software is provided as-is with the current capabilities of the tool at this point in its development. Future versions will include additional functionality such as an enterprise view, a communications view, correspondence between views, more output, hierarchical models, etc. Microsoft (MS) Visio 2010 or 2013 (32-bit) is required to use this tool. To utilise tabular output functions, users must also have a copy of MS Word or MS Excel.
 
The Alpha-version designation indicates that the distribution of the software needs wider testing before being upgraded to a "General Availability" release. User input is essential to this wider testing and release. The USDOT welcomes your comments.

Download SET-IT from the Connected Vehicle Reference Implementation Architecture (CVRIA) %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal website Visit: http://www.iteris.com/cvria/html/resources/tools.html false http://www.iteris.com/cvria/html/resources/tools.html false false%>

Related Content

  • Automatic incident detection and traffic data collection training
    March 8, 2017
    The Flir Traficon Academy is offering training on automatic incident detection and traffic data collection in Bruges, Belgium on 22 and 23 March. The training focuses on the solutions and applications Flir Intelligent Transportation Systems (FLIR ITS) offers for fast detection of incidents on highways and bridges, detecting incidents and fire in tunnels and accurate traffic data collection on highways and bridges. After this interactive and hands-on training, participants will be able to select the righ
  • Ticket buying easier with Budapest transport
    July 24, 2014
    Budapest transport operator BKK Centre for Budapest Transport has introduced new ticket vending machines which accept both cash and card payments, enabling all passengers to buy tickets round the clock. The company has added an English language instructional video and interactive demo to its website (link www.bkk.hu/tvm) and the vending machine menus are available in Hungarian and English, with German, French, Spanish, Romanian, Slovak, Chinese and Russian to follow shortly.
  • World Congress hosts ITS Hackathon
    August 7, 2015
    Co-organised by Ertico-ITS Europe, the MobiNET European project and Michelin Bibendum Challenge, in partnership with the eSafety Aware European project and FIA, the ITS Hackathon take places at the ITS World Congress in Bordeaux, from Tuesday 6 to Thursday 8 October 2015. Academics, start-ups, app developers and service providers are invited to come up with new ideas and apps for mobility services using the different components of the MobiNET e-marketplace, the mobility services developed in MobiNET and
  • ITS Australia appoints first academic to board of directors
    November 30, 2018
    ITS Australia has appointed Professor Majid Sarvi from the University of Melbourne to its board of directors. Sarvi, the founder of transport technology programme AIMES, is the first academic to join the board. AIMES (Australian Integrated Multimodal EcoSystem) includes the university’s live test bed on Melbourne’s streets, and has close links with Michigan Department of Transportation. Sarvi described it as a “great honour to be elected by my peers in the ITS industry and to have the opportunity t