Triple Efficiency in Parking Enforcement with the Carmen® Mobile ANPR/ALPR Application
Budapest’s Belváros-Lipótváros district tripled parking enforcement efficiency using the Carmen® Mobile ANPR app and electric scooters, allowing fewer inspectors to cover more ground with real-time feedback.
Keeping Zambia’s Roads Safe with Easy-to-Deploy S1 Portable Speed Cameras
Empowering Enforcement: How Zambia’s Road Authority Utilizes Portable S1 Speed Cameras to Enhance Safety
Puebla’s Road Safety Revolution:
Monitor Vial Program Delivers Dramatic Results
Collaborative Efforts Between Adaptive Recognition and Autotraffic Propel Puebla’s Monitor Vial Program to New Heights of Road Safety.
Querétaro’s ‘Clicks de Vida’ Program Revolutionizes Road Safety with Vidar Speed Detection Cameras
Embracing cutting-edge technology transformed the state’s roads from perilous highways to havens of responsible driving, saving lives and fostering a culture of safety.
Revolutionizing Toll Violation Processing with Vidar Smart LPR Cameras
Discover How Adaptive Recognition Technology Modernized the Dulles Greenway’s Toll Violations Process
Enhancing Public Safety Through Innovative Surveillance Solutions in Santiago City
Driving Safety Forward: How MicroCAM M402 License Plate Recognition Is Making a Difference in Santiago City
Adaptive Recognition delivers Vidar Smart ANPR cameras for a concession project in Colombia
The technology is part of a vehicle counting system on the Vías del Nus highway of Antioquia region of Colombia.
Adaptive Recognition’s enforcement cameras monitor highway emergency lanes in Greece
The Greek Traffic Police installed a complex system to enable a real time monitoring of emergency lanes on highways in the direction to Athens.
Mobile ANPR/ALPR Cameras Help Police Identify Stolen Vehicles in Brazil
The cameras scan the traffic environment and automatically detect and capture searched vehicles on the go, helping the fight against vehicle theft and other crimes.
Nationwide Traffic Enforcement in Hungary
The Hungarian government had a dream back in 2012: reducing fatal road accidents to half by 2020, decreasing it to near zero by 2050.