Skip to main content

Complementing traditional ITS with new technologies

For a long time, the ITS industry agonised over how to make itself better known to the public. There were pragmatic reasons for this – greater awareness of what it is and does leads to greater lobbying power, an important consideration for a small industry pitched against the might of the road-building fraternity in the fight for budgets – but there was also an element, it must be said, of just wanting to be ‘loved’. But that desire runs up against several realities. The first is that even ‘experts’ strugg
April 11, 2013 Read time: 4 mins
For a long time, the ITS industry agonised over how to make itself better known to the public. There were pragmatic reasons for this – greater awareness of what it is and does leads to greater lobbying power, an important consideration for a small industry pitched against the might of the road-building fraternity in the fight for budgets – but there was also an element, it must be said, of just wanting to be ‘loved’. But that desire runs up against several realities.

The first is that even ‘experts’ struggle to define what ITS is. Indeed, on any given day it can be one or several different things according to application. Also, the technologies are often shared with other, non-transport applications – taken across the ITS sector as a whole, surprisingly few solutions can be held to be wholly unique.

Another is that people simply aren’t interested. Traffic management is like refuse or waste water management – the masses don’t care how it happens, just so long as it does.

Go find yourself a marketing agency willing to take on that product. It’ll have to be one of the better ones, and it’ll charge you a pretty sum for taking on the task.
Salvation of sorts has come from without, rather than within. ‘Without’ in so many ways, in that the devices delivering ‘ITS’ – smart devices – are from an industry (consumer electronics) which doesn’t consider itself a part of ITS.

To the public, ITS was always going to be about the brand in the hand, not a bunch of disparate systems struggling to co-exist under some amorphous acronym. That’s no bad thing, as anonymity confers an ability to just quietly get on and do things. It means that systems can be developed and improved without undue public scrutiny. That doesn’t mean we should husband or accept failure or mediocrity – no, it means that solutions and applications can be developed in the fullness of time to the fullest of their potential.

The aim should be to complement, rather than control. The consumer electronics industry is massive – the ITS industry cannot ever hope to subsume it. Moreover, many of the applications which smart devices host can exist entirely independently of ITS. The smart devices themselves are both the data source and the delivery means.
But are we setting ourselves for a bit of a fall?

I’m happy to see much of what we do migrate to or be hosted on smart phones, tablets and the like. I actually think that in many cases that should be positively encouraged. 4G telecommunications and whatever follows thereafter will break down many of the wired/wireless assumptions and objections but they won’t do away entirely with a need for the ‘old’.

Far from it. Without data services to support it the bright, shiny, handheld ‘new’ is but an expensive – and empty – bauble. It cannot exist without the humble, near-invisible grey box at the roadside, the camera, loop or other detection system. Not yet, despite what many protagonists may claim.

So let’s get back to that fall. There’s a rush to embrace the new, I suspect at the expense of the old. Policy-makers and news-people like new. Old doesn’t provoke or inspire. It just does.

We need to keep an eye on anonymity. It doesn’t necessarily mean ineffective. Or superfluous. Make that mistake and we’ll undo all the good that the new has managed to do for us in such a very short time.

Jason Barnes, Technology Editor

Related Content

  • Smart cities - better world, says A-to-Be
    May 19, 2020
    Smart city adoption in the US has been sluggish, thinks Jason Wall of A-to-Be USA. But there is still time to learn lessons from the European experience...
  • Will standardisation increase ITS interoperability?
    February 1, 2012
    Theoretical balance Kallistratos Dionelis, secretary general of ASECAP, comments on the European Commission's new ICT Standardisation Work Programme. I've just read a proposal from the European Commission on the 2010-2013 ICT Standardisation Work Programme. As ASECAP Secretary General this is one of my responsibilities. I work to receive information, to disseminate information and to build bridges and mutual understanding between policy-makers and the industrial world, between ASECAP and others.
  • Loop detection still has a part in traffic management
    March 2, 2012
    Bob Lees, co-founder of Diamond Consulting Services, on why the loop detector just refuses to go away. The more strident proponents of newer and emergent detection technologies are quick to highlight what they see as the disadvantages, and hence the imminent passing, of the humble inductive loop. The more prosaic will acknowledge that loops continue to have a part to play in traffic management, falling back on the assertion that it is all a question of application. And yet year after year the loop, despite
  • Governments must look beyond short-term spending of public funds
    February 2, 2012
    Phil Pettitt, Chief Executive of innovITS, the UK's ITS Centre of Excellence, argues that governments need to look beyond the short-term when looking to pump-prime economic recovery with public funds. It seems, in the current economic climate, that a 'good' day is one in which no company is announcing job cuts or going into administration. Consumer demand is down and businesses are retrenching, cutting costs and fretting over the consequences of shrinking opportunities and order books. It has not been this