Skip to main content

Safer Place demonstrates Safe Traffic Platform

Safer Place is showing its new Safe Traffic Platform, a single, video-based enforcement platform that covers a range of high-risk traffic violations. At its stand in the Elicium area of the RAI, the company will be explaining how it brings together several types of smart city infrastructures such as cameras, IT and 4G. The company says that the Safe Traffic Platform delivers a range of applications that can be used on PCs, laptops, tablets and smartphones and generates up to 15 times more tickets per office
April 4, 2016 Read time: 1 min

8316 Safer Place is showing its new Safe Traffic Platform, a single, video-based enforcement platform that covers a range of high-risk traffic violations.

At its stand in the Elicium area of the RAI, the company will be explaining how it brings together several types of smart city infrastructures such as cameras, IT and 4G.

The company says that the Safe Traffic Platform delivers a range of applications that can be used on PCs, laptops, tablets and smartphones and generates up to 15 times more tickets per officer than other systems.

It says that the new platform also reduces the number of appeals against tickets through the legally-compliant video and photographic evidence it produces.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Is DSRC progressive enough for future connected mobility?
    February 3, 2012
    Dedicated Short Range Communications technology, says Cisco's Paul Brubaker, is not by itself progressive enough to sustain long-term innovation in the connected mobility environment - and yet IPv6 and other developments remain largely ignored by policy-makers
  • Transit’s Covid clean-up operation
    August 24, 2021
    The onset of Covid-19 saw ridership on public transport slump drastically. How will the organisations that provide these essential services persuade customers back on board?
  • Do satellites provide a heavenly view of tolling’s future?
    December 16, 2014
    Satellite-based tolling opens up new options for authorities and can be integrated with DSRC systems as David Crawford discovers. As the proud custodian of the European Union (EU)’s longest road network covered by a single (truck) charging scheme – and the only one to include all major roads - Slovakia has become the continent’s poster-nation for the virtues of GNSS/CN (Global Navigation Satellite System/Cellular Network)-based tolling. It is also proved to be a very fast implementer. Speaking at the 2014 I
  • An innovation lab – not a burden
    June 27, 2018
    Travellers want to be able to book multimodal journeys easily – and to be informed of problems and alternatives as they go. Adam Roark might just be able to help, finds Ben Spencer. The global shift in transportation towards members of the public wanting access to multimodal journeys is rapidly changing how people pay and plan ahead. Buying tickets from a machine and dealing with the frustration of discovering your train is cancelled is a scenario commuters want to avoid through technology’s ability to