Skip to main content

Dynniq applications streamline traffic flows

Dynniq is looking to implement a holistic approach to help cities streamline their traffic flows, based on different pillars, including ImFLow, GreenFLow, CrossCycle and CrossWalk. And here at Intertraffic, for the first time ever, the company has brought all of these applications together in a single virtual reality experience. Visitors will be able to experience how Dynniq connects (future) urban, regional and national network systems to each other. Other features on the stand include the iTLC traffic
March 19, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Annette Frijns with Haye Mensonides

8343 Dynniq is looking to implement a holistic approach to help cities streamline their traffic flows, based on different pillars, including ImFLow, GreenFLow, CrossCycle and CrossWalk. And here at Intertraffic, for the first time ever, the company has brought all of these applications together in a single virtual reality experience. Visitors will be able to experience how Dynniq connects (future) urban, regional and national network systems to each other.

Other features on the stand include the iTLC traffic signal which is connected via the internet, with individual road users, facilitating smarter traffic management. The Netherlands is the first country in the world to choose a comprehensive, standardised approach for smart traffic signals. With its ability to link smart products and applications, the iTLC makes it possible to display new information on road users’ smartphones, telling them, for example, the time period before the traffic signal changes from red to green.

ImFlow is an adaptive network system to control traffic but with a difference: traffic is regulated based on the amount of traffic, rather than traffic presence, as with traditional traffic control systems.

GreenFlow, a system that ensures that a car exchanges information with the roadside, can be used for three applications: comfort, priority and safety. Comfort, because it can mean always arriving at a green light; priority for emergency services at junctions; and safety because it gives the user information about the road situation.

Meanwhile, CrossCycle is an app that identifies cyclists sooner when they approach an intersection and gives them the green light more quickly, while the CrossWalk app helps the elderly cross the road safely by turning the light green for longer.

Innovative technology based on GPS localisation makes it possible to align the duration of the green pedestrian traffic light with individual needs, depending on the degree of reduced mobility.

Stand 8.524

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.dynniq.com Dynniq website link false http://www.dynniq.com/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • AIT intelligent detection system
    October 29, 2014
    Austria’s largest non-university research institute, Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT), together with industry partner and rail technology leader Bombardier Transportation, has developed a solution aimed at reducing the risk of rail vehicle collisions. They claim that in the future, trams will be able to detect obstacles and correctly assess their potential danger. A specially developed optical 3D sensor system for light rail vehicles such as trams will make them proactive, intelligent an
  • New Jersey DOT unveils travel time information signs
    January 21, 2013
    Capitalising on its investment in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) technology, New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) is to install permanent dynamic message signs (DMS) along New Jersey’s interstate highways. The signs display major waypoints, such as intersecting highways or significant roadway features, and indicate how many minutes it will take to reach that waypoint. The DOT has completed the testing phase on fifteen DMS on I-287 and I-195 and is planning further signs on other major
  • Oberthur Technologies showcases ‘ecosystems’ at CARTES 2013
    October 31, 2013
    Oberthur Technologies has split its booth at CARTES into five ‘ecosystems’, each representing a different part of the company’s offering. Designed to give visitors practical insight into several key issues, they are: • Smart Transactions, where visitors can look at issues around enrolment, card personalisation, issuance and shopping, and learn about migrating to EMV ; • Mobile Financial Services will feature a smart shopping wall, illustrating how cutting-edge payments, loyalty programmes and coupons – all
  • Lime launches free-floating car-share service in Seattle
    November 22, 2018
    Bike-share and electric scooter company Lime has launched a ‘free-floating’ car-share service in Seattle and intends to make 1,500 vehicles available in early 2019. Bloomberg says the company has deployed 50 Lime-branded vehicles and intends to increase this number to 500 by the end of the year. Users can unlock a LimePod vehicle, a customised two-door Fiat 500, via the company’s app for $1 and are charged 40 cents per minute while driving. Toby Sun, Lime’s chief executive officer, says the company is a