Skip to main content

Dynniq’s Flow Experience comes to life

Dynniq, which offers integrated mobility, parking and energy solutions and services, will feature new innovations at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018, which will be presented through a unique virtual reality (VR) experience and several highly engaging talks and workshops. The Dynniq CrossCycle is an app that provides extra services to cyclists. Cyclists approaching a traffic light are detected earlier than at the stop bar, when they would be able to push the button. It means an individual cyclist has a
February 19, 2018 Read time: 2 mins

8343 Dynniq, which offers integrated mobility, parking and energy solutions and services, will feature new innovations at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2018, which will be presented through a unique virtual  reality (VR) experience and several highly engaging talks and workshops.

The Dynniq CrossCycle is an app that provides extra services to cyclists. Cyclists approaching a traffic light are detected earlier than at the stop bar, when they would be able to push the button. It means an individual cyclist has a higher chance of getting green while groups of cyclists will get priority as a whole.

Meanwhile, the Dynniq CrossWalk app helps the elderly or people with a handicap to cross the road safely by turning the light green for longer. This innovative technology based on GPS localisation makes it possible to align the duration of the green pedestrian traffic light with individual needs. The light remains green for longer depending on the degree of reduced mobility.

At the Smart Mobility Theatres, Dynniq and WPS, a Dynniq company, will hold six engaging talks/workshops, dates and times of which will be published later. Topics include Parking as a Service (PaaS) – keep up the pace of changing consumer behavior, by WPS;  C-ITS deployment in Europe (in cooperation with MAPTm and Blervaque Sprl); The Flow Experience Showcase Aurora: safe and secure automated transport in all conditions (in cooperation with Finnish Transport Agency); Smart cities link available data on emission to smart mobility ; GreenFlow: the potential of connected trucks; and The Flow Experience Workshop: parking and energy solutions for cities and municipalities by WPS.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Connected Signals improves driver safety in Florida
    September 5, 2018
    Connected Signals is providing drivers in Gainesville, Florida, with real-time predictive traffic information to let them know when traffic lights are going to change. The company says sharing the data with vehicles and drivers can improve fuel efficiency by 8-15% and reduce red-light crashes by 25%. Aggregated real-time signal information, fed through predictive algorithms, is sent to Gainesville drivers via the company’s Enlighten mobile app. The app will eventually be integrated with connected car dis
  • Coming round again
    June 28, 2012
    A colleague of mine, Mike Woof, the Editor of World Highways magazine, recently attended an open day event at a major ITS research establishment, the object of which was to showcase how the use of in-vehicle ITS technologies could improve fuel consumption and reduce emissions. Mike's expertise brings him into daily contact with the types of plant and equipment used to build roads and, as he related to me afterwards, he'd gone to the event filled with enthusiasm and came away somewhat disheartened.
  • Jenoptik uses sensor fusion to avoid monitoring confusion
    January 26, 2018
    Jenoptik’s Uwe Urban looks at the advantages of ‘sensor fusion’ for the ITS sector. When considering the ideal sensing and monitoring system to enable the ITS sector to deliver improvements in mobility and road safety, for general policing security and border protection, we have to think beyond radar-base systems or laser scanners. What is needed today are solutions for detecting and tracking vehicles while recording evidence to deacide if any action is necessary. There is no sole sensor capable of
  • Port of Hamburg launches intelligent traffic light
    June 3, 2015
    The Hamburg Port Authority (HPA) in Germany and NXP Semiconductors have partnered on an intelligent traffic light for the port that they claim optimises the flow of truck traffic and guides drivers through the increasingly heavily used port more quickly and safely. The smartPORT traffic light was developed by the HPA in conjunction with its partners NXP, Siemens, Heusch/Boesefeldt and Hamburg Verkehrsanlagen. NXP supplied the solutions for the wireless communication, V2X and RFID, and ensures data pro