Video telematics in the context of Telematics


Video telematics in the context of Telematics

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⭐ Core Definition: Video telematics

Video telematics is a technology that combines video cameras with telematics data, such as GPS location and sensor readings, to provide a real-time, contextual view of assets and personnel as part of a tracking or automatic vehicle location solution. According to industry analysis, the adoption of video telematics has been the "hottest industry trend over the past five years" and "hasn't slowed down," with primary uptake coming from fleets adding video capabilities to their existing systems. While used in fleet digitalization for managing vehicle fleets through fleet management, its principles are also applied to enhance the safety of lone workers through body-worn cameras.

The technology evolved from earlier, non-connected in-vehicle video recorders (Mobile DVRs) which only stored footage locally. By connecting cameras to a central cloud-based platform and synchronizing video with telemetry data, video telematics provides verifiable visual context to operational events.

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Video telematics in the context of Dashcam

A dashboard camera or simply dashcam, also known as car digital video recorder (car DVR), driving recorder, or event data recorder (EDR), is an onboard camera that continuously records the view through a vehicle's front windscreen and sometimes rear or other windows. Some dashcams include a camera to record the interior of the car in 360 degrees inside camera, usually in a ball form, and can automatically send pictures and video using mobile connectivity. In commercial fleets, dashcams are a core component of video telematics systems, which are a key technology used in the broader trend of fleet digitalization and referred to as AI Dashcams.

EDRs and some dashcams also record acceleration/deceleration g-force, speed, steering angle, GPS data, voltage of the power source (vehicle's electrical net), etc.

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Video telematics in the context of Vehicle location data

Vehicle location data is the big data collection of vehicle locations, including automatic vehicle location data, a core feature of any vehicle tracking system. This usually includes times and often photographs as well, a practice known as video telematics. The process of collecting this data from remote assets via telemetry is a core component of telematics, often managed by a telematic control unit. Its application in the commercial sector forms the basis of fleet digitalization and is central to any fleet telematics system.

Common methods of data collection include automatic number plate recognition from cameras, such as a Dashcam, and radio-frequency identification (RFID) from transponders. In commercial contexts, a dedicated GPS tracking unit is often used for this purpose, forming part of a wider tracking system. Databases of this information are maintained by both government and private entities. For businesses, this data is essential for fleet management tasks like Track and trace, enabling vehicle repossession, and consumer profiling through methods like Driver scoring. Government databases have been subjected to legal orders for location data, and access may be granted in both criminal and civil cases.

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