Fujitsu today announced the development of a prototype of an artificial intelligence-enabled digital police car of the future. In collaboration with an ecosystem of partners, and working closely with KIA Motors Australia, Fujitsu is able to remove surplus equipment, software, hardware, and cabling from police highway patrol vehicles by integrating the required information systems and response controls into KIA’s standard Stinger model.
Fujitsu created a software-based platform that links disparate technologies, reducing the cost of installation and de-installation, while providing a cleaner and safer cabin for law enforcement officers.
Fujitsu and KIA collaborate on prototype of artificial intelligence-enabled digital police car of the future
News facts: Fujitsu is working with KIA Motors Australia to develop an artificial intelligence-enabled digital police car of the future. Fujitsu is developing a software-based integration platform that links disparate technologies, allows the removal of unnecessary costly technology, and reduces the cost of installation and de-installation, while providing a safer cabin for law enforcement officers.
If you’ve ever taken a peek inside the front of a police car, then you’ll know that there’s a lot of gear on or around the dash. Fujitsu and Kia Motors Australia have developed an alternative to such clutter, in the form of a prototype system that could actually make cop cars safer by being simpler.
Installed in a Kia Stinger, which is already used as a highway patrol vehicle in Australia, the setup utilizes the car’s existing infotainment screen to present the sort of data that would ordinarily be presented on a separate laptop – this could include things like the codes and addresses for emergency calls.
Additionally, instead of being in a dash-mounted box, the speeder-detecting radar unit is now built into the car’s head-up display.
Fujitsu and Kia create a techier yet simpler police car
If you’ve ever taken a peek inside the front of a police car, then you’ll know that there’s a lot of gear on or around the dash. Fujitsu and Kia Motors Australia have developed an alternative to such clutter, in the form of a prototype system that could actually make cop cars safer by being simpler.
https://www.applewoodkiasurrey.ca/2018-kia-stinger/
Fujitsu and Kia team up for smart cop car prototype
Fujitsu Australia and Kia Motors Australia have combined to produce a police car prototype that the pair states could make it cheaper and simpler for police forces to operate vehicles.