Skip to main content

Sensys ascends to the cloud

All of Sensys’ wireless sensors are now being shipped with capability for use with Cloud Connect – the company’s new data hosting service. Traffic engineers can monitor an entire region’s intersections without necessity for servers or software. The technology is claimed to have completely eliminated uncertainty or guesswork over whether signal control detection equipment is working properly. Cloud Connect provides data in real-time, so there is no reason to have broken inductive loops at intersections.
May 22, 2012 Read time: 1 min
All of 119 Sensys Networks wireless sensors are now being shipped with capability for use with Cloud Connect – the company’s new data hosting service. Traffic engineers can monitor an entire region’s intersections without necessity for servers or software. The technology is claimed to have completely eliminated uncertainty or guesswork over whether signal control detection equipment is working properly. Cloud Connect provides data in real-time, so there is no reason to have broken inductive loops at intersections.

%$Linker: Asset 4 62592 0 oLinkExternal <span class="mouselink">www.SensysNetworks.com</span> www.SensysNetworks.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=62592 false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Toyota trials Next Generation Vehicle Infrastructure Co-operation Service
    October 24, 2012
    Toyota is trialling a new driver information system which, if successful, could start to appear in Japanese cities around 2015. Trials started in March this year. The Next Generation Vehicle Infrastructure Co-operation Service consists of sensors mounted on city streets that communicate with vehicles by radio. Vehicles would require an onboard unit to receive the data. The information is particularly designed to help drivers in crowded urban streets whose visibility is obscured by large vehicles such as
  • Frogparking displays GPS-enabled electronic permit
    March 25, 2014
    New Zealand-based Frogparking is showing a new, GPS-enabled electronic parking permit that gives parking companies more visibility of their customers’ movements. The permit can be scanned by parking wardens to check its validity, while a built-in accelerometer allows the parking company to know exactly when a driver has parked or moved off, enabling precise billing of the time used.
  • High performance embedded reflective road stud
    February 28, 2014
    Ennis Prismo, which has changed its name to Ennis-Flint, will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to launch the Stimsonite 380c click stud reflector, an embedded-type reflective road stud for use on highways, airfield roads, service roads and all trafficked areas requiring high performance delineation and marking to guide drivers. The stud, which is fitted with a high performance prismatic reflector system, incorporates a unique system for fixing the reflector body providing lifetime retention of the reflector
  • CA Traffic launches new EVO-X ANPR camera
    March 25, 2014
    UK-headquartered CA Traffic, a leading traffic monitoring company, is here at Intertraffic with a major new product launch – the EVO-X camera. Featuring a completely new design combining state-of-the-art technology and extensive functionality, the EVO-X targets the middle ground of the ANPR market although it’s not just an ANPR camera.