Skip to main content

Kria shows T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID products

Italy-headquartered Kria is here at Intertraffic with a stand packed with new designs for the company's T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID line of products.
April 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
Stefano Arrighetti (left) and André Antunes of Kria
Italy-headquartered 83 Kria is here at Intertraffic with a stand packed with new designs for the company's T-Exspeed, T-Xroad and T-ID line of products.


“Our 3D machine vision technology has so far been deployed for more than a decade all around the world, meeting many different applications, both fixed and mobile, and harsh installation and operation conditions,” says Stefano Arrighetti, Kria’s CEO and founder and the main driving force behind the company’s multiple ground-breaking products. “This mature and adaptive nature has translated to very positive feedback and repeating customers,” he said.

“We have been applying a lot of improvements stemming from the mobile world and have reduced the processing unit so much that it has now been integrated into the main camera housing, making for very sleek units. We still maintain modularity, though; our customers can still place the CPU elsewhere if the project so demands,” Arrighetti added.

One of the new releases is also Kria’s new ‘Transparentizer feature’, allowing face recognition-grade images from units such as the all-in-one T-Exspeed.

“T-Exspeed is our flagship product: it incorporates enforcement, security intelligence and infomobility capabilities,” says André Antunes, who handles International Sales at Kria. “This new feature is critical to meet with demands from the security market, responding to increasing needs for intelligence information from these systems.”

Kria is also keen on seeing new interest from upcoming enforcement applications such as WIM (weigh-in-motion), where the company says it can substantially help with speed variation and trajectory enforcement over weight sensor areas to radically improve the number of correct detections.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Cooperative systems and privacy not mutually exclusive
    February 1, 2012
    Are co-operative systems and personal privacy mutually exclusive? Not necessarily, says Neil Hoose. But the more advanced the application, the greater the concession of privacy may have to become. ITS Stockholm in 2009 and the Cooperative Mobility Showcase event which took place alongside Intertraffic in Amsterdam in March this year both featured live, on-street demonstrations of safety and driver information applications that used Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I) and Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communications,
  • Cooperative systems and privacy not mutually exclusive
    February 6, 2012
    Are co-operative systems and personal privacy mutually exclusive? Not necessarily, says Neil Hoose. But the more advanced the application, the greater the concession of privacy may have to become
  • Report forecasts rapidly changing market for drones
    February 19, 2015
    A new IDTechEx report, Electric Drones: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles UAVs 2015-2025, examines the market for drones or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), saying that most of the market value today lies in military applications, both for electric and - the big money - non-electric versions. Nonetheless, small UAVs are increasing in sales fastest and that is primarily down to non-military applications. From 2026, civil uses will greatly exceed military in market value. The report forecasts it all but concentrates o
  • Iteris adds to video detection product suite
    April 22, 2013
    Iteris has used this ITS America Annual Meeting to stage the world launch of Vantage Next, a product addition to its Vantage video detection product suite. The company says the new product represents the industry’s most advanced video detection system, featuring a scalable processing platform that provides full-motion streaming video, real time traffic data collection, and on-board Ethernet communications.