Skip to main content

Introducing streaming video and video wall solutions from Skyline

Visitors to Skyline Technology Solutions’ booth at the ITS America Annual Meeting can experience two innovative products, Claris and Vero. As the company points out, the ability to communicate clearly and efficiently within your own agency and with your partners directly impacts how quickly and safely the collective can respond to events affecting roadways and public spaces. Sharing live streaming video and data with key decision makers and partners is a crucial element to making this happen. Skyline Techno
June 1, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
Skyline Technology Solutions’ Brent Isenberg demonstrates the technology
Visitors to 5564 Skyline Technology Solutions’ booth at the ITS America Annual Meeting can experience two innovative products, Claris and Vero. As the company points out, the ability to communicate clearly and efficiently within your own agency and with your partners directly impacts how quickly and safely the collective can respond to events affecting roadways and public spaces. Sharing live streaming video and data with key decision makers and partners is a crucial element to making this happen. Skyline Technology Solutions developed the Claris platform to provide agencies with the ability to manage and share live streaming video and data, then deliver that information to any device, helping facilitate faster coordination and a safer response. Claris normalises, aggregates and distributes live streaming video from any camera on any network and delivers that video, along with multiple layers of supporting data, to any device.

Meanwhile, the new Vero virtual video wall product uses an innovative, energy-saving approach to disp lay video inside TMC’s and remote command centres. Vero is a video wall software that eliminates the need to standardise through costly proprietary hardware-based solutions. Skyline says that for a fraction of the cost, Vero delivers the command/control and management of your agency video within your operations centre with ease and simplicity.

Claris and Vero are flexible and innovative products that facilitate an agency’s ability to make urgent decisions that impact lives. Skyline Technology Solutions will be conducting live demonstrations during expo hours at its booth. Be sure to stop by booth 820 to see Skyline’s products in action at PennDOT’s virtual TMC.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Harnessing the power of smart technology
    June 28, 2018
    Keeping the public safe in a changing world requires smart thinking and sensible deployment of technology. Peter Jones of Hitachi Europe examines some available options From human threats, such as terrorism, to digital threats like hacking, the growing sophistication of crime is posing serious challenges to public safety. At the same time, mass urbanisation threatens to exacerbate these problems as there are more people to keep safe. According to a new whitepaper from Hitachi and Frost & Sullivan, Public
  • Solar-powered traffic detection improves communication
    January 31, 2012
    Pete Goldin reports on a new wireless, solar-powered traffic detection system being used by Caltrans District 12. As more and more traffic data is necessary to satisfy the needs of traffic management centres and traveller information systems, and as traffic detection technology becomes more ubiquitous, transportation authorities are pressured to find more economical ways of expanding their detection systems. Caltrans District 12 is leading this push by deploying the latest detection system from Case Global
  • More openness - the simple answer to transport's data issues
    October 22, 2018
    Public transit agencies create a lot of data – but using it constructively to solve transportation issues has been a problem. Ben Winokur and Luke Segars think they have the answer: greater openness. Today, more people are connected through smartphones than ever before - and they’re using them for more than texting and calling. People are searching for jobs on their devices, dating, shopping and even managing their finances. But Forbes reports that only a select few companies leverage all the technology at
  • Digital Light Processing transforms travel information
    July 19, 2012
    David Crawford investigates the potential of new projection technology. Fifty years on from its invention of the microchip, US company Texas Instruments (TI) has compressed the technology into a surface area of just 4.3mm. As such, it forms the heart of a new Pico Digital Light Processing (DLP) system that is set to transform travel information delivery for millions of users on the move - by making it projectable.