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

  • Bit by bit insurers agree data protocol
    November 7, 2013
    Telematics technology may be a game changer for the automobile insurance industry but it comes with some caveats as Colin Sowman discovers. James Bielak, (P&C) program manager at the US office of ACORD (the Association for Cooperative Operations Research and Development), has an unenviable job: to devise a standard form of communicating vehicle data between telematics providers and insurance companies. To that end he has gathered together a group composed of insurers, telematics providers and other intere
  • Masks and AI: the new mobility reality
    June 26, 2020
    French authorities are using artificial intelligence to track face covering compliance
  • Arup picks 8 ways ITS can save the planet
    January 6, 2022
    The solutions we need to accelerate carbon-free transport are known, available and ready to be deployed. Tim Gammons from Arup explains what the ITS industry can do now to help…
  • 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,