Skip to main content

Dat.Mobility showcases mobility monitoring app

Dat.Mobility is featuring its recently launched Sense.Dat, the company’s own app for individual mobility monitoring, sampling and change motivation. With Sense.Dat, all sorts of organisations can get a deep insight into mobility behaviour and the mobility choices people make, interview them on the reasons why, and propose incentives to change.
April 5, 2016 Read time: 1 min

Dat.Mobility is featuring its recently launched Sense.Dat, the company’s own app for individual mobility monitoring, sampling and change motivation. With Sense.Dat, all sorts of organisations can get a deep insight into mobility behaviour and the mobility choices people make, interview them on the reasons why, and propose incentives to change.

Related Content

  • Opinion: MaaSive fail
    January 29, 2021
    Are we in danger of losing our way on Mobility as a Service? Johan Herrlin of Ito World wonders if there is too much focus on the system and not enough on problem-solving...
  • Mobile payment technologies for Australia
    October 11, 2016
    Contactless technology, the ability to tap your bank issued card or enabled mobile device to make a payment, has brought speed and simplicity to the in-store shopping experience. Doug Howe explains how innovations, like Contactless, in the mobile and banking industries have the potential to transform public transportation. Q Why is public transportation ripe for transformation? A Today, more than half the world’s population lives in cities; that’s a figure set to increase to 70% by 2050. International
  • PayiQ exhibits Mobility as a Service
    October 8, 2015
    What is claimed to be the world’s first Mobility as a Service solution, PayiQ, can be viewed on the ITS Finland stand. The service, which is based on a smartphone app developed by iQ Payments, enables registered users to buy transit tickets, arrange ride-sharing and make a car- or bicycle-sharing booking.
  • Arup’s vision of urban mobility in 2050
    May 6, 2015
    Arup’s vision of the Future of Highways considers a wide range of factors that will impact on mobility towards the middle of the century. In its consideration of the Future of Highways through to 2050, international consultants Arup has taken a broad and pragmatic view of where society is heading and the effects that will have on the transport requirements. In terms of major drivers it not only cites