Skip to main content

Sense.Dat makes sense of mobility behaviour, mobility choices

Dat.Mobility will be featuring its recently launched Sense.Dat, the company’s own app for individual mobility monitoring, sampling and change motivation. With Sense.Dat, all sorts of organisations can get a deep insight into mobility behaviour and the mobility choices people make, interview them on the reasons why, and propose incentives to change.
February 18, 2016 Read time: 1 min
8188 Dat.Mobility will be featuring its recently launched Sense.Dat, the company’s own app for individual mobility monitoring, sampling and change motivation. With Sense.Dat, all sorts of organisations can get a deep insight into mobility behaviour and the mobility choices people make, interview them on the reasons why, and propose incentives to change.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Your values are your values: how do you want to be seen?
    March 8, 2025
    Evidence suggests that firms – including ITS firms - which embrace diversity might do better at the one thing they are created to do: make money
  • The future of mobility: designed for life
    August 16, 2019
    The future of mobility…sounds exciting, doesn’t it? But try to define it and you soon find it’s like putting a fence round a cloud. What will it look like? When will we get there? Who decides? And why are we still not wearing jetpacks? Maybe next year. The Royal College of Art in London does not seem like the most obvious place to look for hard-headed thinking on these things. But it has a long heritage in designing beautiful cars – and it is also home to the Intelligent Mobility Design Centre, which is lo
  • Making sense of it all with NEC
    September 18, 2024
    Vehicle-type and traffic-volume data collection in real-time and predictive congestion planning for road agencies just got easier with new optical fiber sensing technology from NEC.
  • Atlanta ponders Mobility as a Service for seamless transit
    June 29, 2018
    Drivers in Atlanta spent 70 hours in peak-time traffic jams last year. As the MaaS Market conference moves to the US’s fourth most congested city, we ask how Mobility as a Service can help. Colin Sowman winds down his window to listen. It is not by accident that ITS International’s first MaaS Market conference outside London is being hosted in Atlanta. The event is being supported by Georgia State Road & Tollway Authority and the City of Atlanta – and again not without a reason as metro Atlanta is looking