Skip to main content

Tattile expands range with ANPR Mobile cameras

Leading Italian ITS company Tattile will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to expand its product range with the launch of new products, including ANPR Mobile and Vega Color. ANPR Mobile, a new cutting-edge technology in support of police forces, incorporates Megapixel sensors enabling it to scan over 100 number plates per second, front and rear, at any light condition. The newly-launched system needs neither embedded processing units nor physical connection between the cameras and the onboard computer/tab
March 3, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Leading Italian ITS company 592 Tattile will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 to expand its product range with the launch of new products, including ANPR Mobile and Vega Color.

ANPR Mobile, a new cutting-edge technology in support of police forces, incorporates Megapixel sensors enabling it to scan over 100 number plates per second, front and rear, at any light condition. The newly-launched system needs neither embedded processing units nor physical connection between the cameras and the onboard computer/tablet. The plates are read directly onboard the camera, which can be installed on the car’s roof, hood or in the boot. Plate numbers are transmitted via Wi-Fi. The new Tattile solution is provided with sophisticated software which allows image acquisition both in greyscale and in colour.

Tattile’s Vega Color family is designed to detect colour licence plate number and/or the colour of plates, a product particularly addressed to the most sophisticated markets. In line with the company’s philosophy, the device is an all-in-one system, with everything embedded in the camera. The onboard web server allows easy and immediate camera set-up and software update, reducing maintenance costs consistently. The embedded proprietary Tattile OCR, is able to recognise not only the vehicle’s number plate, but also the plate’s colour, often very useful in order to identify the Country / State of origin of the vehicle. The Vega Color can operate in stand-alone mode, without a previously set-up data connection, and saves the events on its on-board micro SD.
%$Linker: 2 Asset <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 4 42536 0 oLinkExternal www.Tattile.com Tattile web false /EasySiteWeb/GatewayLink.aspx?alId=42536 false false%>

Related Content

  • Sistemas Palazón demonstrates sliding safety device
    March 25, 2014
    Reducing damage to vehicles and their passengers in impacts with street furniture is the object of a new type of mounting being shown by Spanish company Sistemas Palazón. Despite the huge sums of money spent by car manufacturers on improving the safety of their vehicles, severe damage can still be caused if they hit unyielding objects.
  • Intertraffic heralds debut of Metric’s Elite touch-screen system
    March 24, 2014
    Metric Group predicts that 2014 will go down in its long history as ‘the year of innovation’. The company is bringing to the market several innovations, not only to current concepts, but new ones as well. Visitors to Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 have the opportunity of seeing these Metric innovations, across the parking industry from local government to retail and leisure, at first hand. Here at Intertraffic, pay and display innovations include touch-screen terminals and the company is using the event to de
  • Optimast launches latest passive safety sign
    March 3, 2014
    Signpost Solutions, a UK-based specialist in passive safety since 1996, will use Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 for the international launch of Optimast, a new range of highly competitive passively safe sign masts. The company says that Optimast plugs a gap in its ability to commercially meet the requirements for certain bending capacities which in the past would have necessitated a largely over-engineered design. Optimast was crash rested in the UK at MIRA testing grounds in Nuneaton to BS EN 12767 and ac
  • Coloured Premark signs mark Moscow’s cycle lanes
    March 3, 2014
    Geveko Materials, which combined the sales forces of Plastiroute, Cleanosol and LKF, all of them long-established names in the road marking industry, will have a major presence at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014. An indication of how the company is developing the sector, and providing flexibility involves a bicycle marking project in Moscow. As the company points out, there are many opportunities to include coloured symbols and white signs as informative and guiding elements for traffic. Some signs, symbols,