Skip to main content

Fluidtime’s data flow solutions on show in Bordeaux

Fluidtime Data Services is using its stand in Bordeaux to publicise its mobility app and server solutions. These solutions offer intermodal route planning, real-time data collection and booking as well as cross-modal tariffs and ticketing options.
October 7, 2015 Read time: 2 mins

8241 Fluidtime Data Services is using its stand in Bordeaux to publicise its mobility app and server solutions. These solutions offer intermodal route planning, real-time data collection and booking as well as cross-modal tariffs and ticketing options.

It provided the technical management for Austria’s Smile Project and the award-winning smile app which brought together 14 mobility partners from public transport to sharing providers, taxis and parking garages. The company is also providing technical management to the smile app’s recently-launched successor, the BeamBeta app.

Aimed at those in traffic management seeing an ever increasing array of data inputs, the company is showing its new FluidTex traffic data management system which streamlines the acquisition, processing and distribution of traffic data. The system is said to ‘think for itself’ and automatically structure data inputs from traffic sensors, emergency services and road operators as well as feedback from road users, to create an overview of the current traffic situation.

FluidTex comes with a free text entry facility for new notifications and is said to reduce workload for all involved. It is suitable for road operators, control rooms and emergency services and there are additional functions for use in radio and television traffic newsrooms.  

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Big data bonus for Dublin’s buses
    August 19, 2014
    Dublin’s smart research partnership speeds buses More than 50% of people travelling into and across the Irish capital rely on public transport, and four out of 10 these use buses meaning Dublin Bus carries some 120 million passengers a year.
  • Traffic to flow freely over world’s widest bridge
    November 13, 2012
    Pete Goldin reports on a new Egis project in Canada, providing open road tolling operations for the widest bridge in the world. A bridge can present a bottleneck in a system of roads or it can support the smooth and unobstructed flow of traffic. Much depends on the bridge design, surrounding infrastructure and tolling system. By adding lanes and deploying open road tolling (ORT), the new Port Mann Bridge located in the metropolitan Vancouver area in British Columbia, will alleviate congestion at one of the
  • Co-operative infrastructure reduces congestion, increases safety
    January 30, 2012
    ITS Japan's Chairman Hiroyuki Watanabe talks to ITS International about his country's progress with cooperative infrastructures and how the experience gained to date can benefit similar initiatives elsewhere. Japan gave the rest of the world a taste of the cooperative infrastructure future when, in 1996, it went live with the Vehicle Information and Communication System (VICS). Designed to provide real-time traffic information and alerts to in-vehicle navigation systems with the dual aims of increasing safe
  • Aptiv: we need overhaul of AV nervous system
    August 20, 2019
    Autonomous vehicles are changing a lot of things: Aptiv’s Christian Schäfer suggests that we need to look again at traditional approaches to vehicle architecture to find viable options for the future