Skip to main content

Traficon shows Eye-D and VIP-PTZ products at ITS World Congress

Traficon has brought several exciting new technologies to the ITS World Congress. Earlier this year, the company acquired Sumit, a provider of automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) technology. Traficon has been working ever since to incorporate the Sumit technology into its own portfolio and visitors to its stand can see the result here – Eye-D, a dedicated Traficon camera product for intersection enforcement.
October 22, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Trafricon’s Kristof Maddelein Traficon with the new Trafibot AID camera.
5574 Traficon has brought several exciting new technologies to the ITS World Congress. Earlier this year, the company acquired Sumit, a provider of automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) technology. Traficon has been working ever since to incorporate the Sumit technology into its own portfolio and visitors to its stand can see the result here – Eye-D, a dedicated Traficon camera product for intersection enforcement.

The company has also expanded its AID portfolio with the new VIP-PTZ, VIP-TX, and Trafibot. VIP-PTZ which has been designed to add automatic incident detection (AID) to pan-tilt-zoom cameras in order to improve road safety and mobility over a much longer viewing range than is possible with fixed cameras.

Typical applications for this product include hard shoulder monitoring and highway incident detection. The versatile VIP-PTZ can be combined with PTZ cameras that work either with or without preset positions. In the latter case, VIP-PTZ features automatic smart configuration of detection zones, which results in high detection performance, regardless of camera position.

Another innovation is the new VIP-TX solution that extends the functionality of Traficon’s field-proven VIP-T incident detection board for analogue cameras with powerful video encoding/streaming. VIP-TX can stream H.264, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, and MJPEG simultaneously.

Following this demand of decentralization even more, Traficon is also launching Trafibot, an all-in-one AID camera that combines high-performance camera optics and powerful video encoding/streaming with field-proven incident detection algorithms from Traficon.

%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 12660 0 oLinkExternal www.traficon.com www.traficon.com false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=12660 true false%>

Related Content

  • March 26, 2014
    Lufft shows Marwis mobile contactless weather sensor
    Visitors to Intertraffic will be the first to see the new Marwis mobile contactless weather information sensor from German company Lufft. Marwis can be mounted on any vehicle and provides mobile collection of road weather information including surface temperature, dew point and water film height as well as road conditions (humidity, snow, ice and frost), grip (friction) and other environmental data.
  • February 28, 2014
    Scanacar classifies parking spaces, informs drivers
    The Scanacar Parking Space Classifier recognises and classifies empty parking spaces. This opens the way to mapping out parking areas and informing drivers and navigation systems about available parking spaces. It also enables efficient enforcement of illegal parking, for instance in loading bays or disabled places.
  • February 26, 2014
    Pole mounted safety solution minimises vehicle damage, injuries
    The product consists of a metal box installed under urban equipment, such as streetlamps, pillars, and signposts. In the event of an impact from a vehicle, the equipment will release very easily so damage to the bodywork will be minimised, as will injuries and human losses.
  • October 19, 2012
    Camea introduces high speed WIM system
    Czech company Camea will use the ITS World Congress to present its UnicamWIM, high speed weigh-in-motion system. A complete turnkey solution for variety of weigh-in-motion applications, from high quality traffic reports and statistics to sophisticated enforcement systems, the system enables pre-selection of potentially overloaded vehicles which can then be sent for precise weighing without having any impact on a traffic flow. Camea points out that the system, which has been type-approved for use in the Czec