Skip to main content

Miovision Central makes data handing easier

Miovision Central, a new cloud-based traffic data platform, is the main story on the company’s stand in Hall 11. The system collects, stores and manages traffic data and video evidence and makes all the information easily accessible, enabling it to be viewed and shared by a number of individuals or groups.
April 6, 2016 Read time: 1 min
Timo Hoffmann of Miovision
Miovision Central, a new cloud-based traffic data platform, is the main story on the company’s stand in Hall 11. The system collects, stores and manages traffic data and video evidence and makes all the information easily accessible, enabling it to be viewed and shared by a number of individuals or groups.


The system has primarily been designed to work with Miovision’s video cameras and systems although can take input from other cameras and sensors – be that for data on vehicles, cyclists or pedestrians. It handles user requests for information and produces traffic data reports to facilitate project management.

Initially the system is being used for short term data such as turning counts at intersections although users are able to select the bin duration they require. Video clips can be viewed and data reviewed and the company’s goal is for all other data sources to included in the process.

Related Content

  • Urban utility
    July 24, 2012
    Steve Lane, Commercial Director at Triteq, talks about the successful deployment of ZigBee in Barcelona where a low-cost wireless metropolitan network for location and citizen services was established. The project, he says, demonstrates ZigBee's effectiveness as an urban communications system solution ZigBee is based on the IEEE radio frequency standard 802.15.4 - 2006 for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPAN), which provides a license-free radio frequency for a flexible, robust private wireless network. Z
  • Germany is Mad for Vitronic
    April 30, 2025
    Managed Automated Driving project takes place in German city of Brunswick
  • Flir smart traffic management in Darmstadt
    October 20, 2015
    Part of a larger urban zone, the city of Darmstadt near Frankfurt, Germany, does not escape the problems of traffic congestion. In a bid to improve the situation, the city’s traffic authorities have installed more than 200 video detectors from Flir Systems, along with Flir’s video management system, Flux, which monitors the traffic streams coming from a wide variety of cameras. The city is also using various types of video sensors for vehicle, pedestrian and cycle detection, all of which are used to con
  • Making the case for ALPR in enforcement
    February 2, 2012
    Federal Signal's Brian Shockley uses examples from around the world to make the case for the greater use of automatic license plate recognition technology in the US. It is time, he says, to consider the possibilities of a national network and the use of average speed enforcement