Jump to content

INRIX

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Kforeman1 (talk | contribs) at 18:09, 19 September 2014 (update employees). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

INRIX, Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryTraffic Information
FoundedJuly 2004
FounderBryan Mistele, Craig Chapman
HeadquartersKirkland, Washington, USA
Key people
Bryan Mistele
Number of employees
350 (July '14)
Websitewww.inrix.com

INRIX is an American SaaS and DaaS company which provides a variety of Internet services and mobile applications pertaining to road traffic and driver services. INRIX provides historical, real-time traffic information, traffic forecasts, travel times and travel time polygons to businesses and individuals in 37 countries (as of Sept 2013) including the United States, Canada, most of Europe and Brazil. It also gathers, curates and reports roadway incidents such as accidents, road closures and road works. INRIX was founded by former Microsoft employees Bryan Mistele and Craig Chapman in July 2004.[1] The headquarters is located in Kirkland, Washington, USA.

Technology

As of April 2012, INRIX collects trillions of bytes of information about roadway speeds from nearly 100 million anonymous mobile phones, trucks, delivery vans, and other fleet vehicles equipped with GPS locator devices.[2] Data retrieved from consumer cellular GPS-based devices including the iPhone, Android, BlackBerry and Windows Phone phones, Ford SYNC and Toyota Entune. The data collected is processed in real-time, creating traffic speed information for major freeways, highways and arterials across North America (United States,[3] Canada), as well as much of Europe, South America, and Africa.

The company keeps a database of variables that affect traffic, including weather forecasts, special events, school schedules and road construction, and combines them with the real-time probe data collected.[1] INRIX uses software originally exclusively licensed from Microsoft[4] to turn those variables into traffic predictions.

In July 2011 – INRIX announced its intent to acquire Manchester, United Kingdom-based ITIS Holdings for approximately $60 million (£37 million). Previously, ITIS Holdings had acquired Trafficlink, the company best known for providing traffic reporting services to the BBC and other UK-based radio stations.

In June 2014 - INRIX and the Traffic Audit Bureau of Measurement announced that the US [out of home advertising] (billboard) industry had standardized their audience measurement vehicle speed data on INRIX data.

Consumer Applications

The company develops and distributes INRIX Traffic, a free mobile application for iOS (iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch), Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone smartphones and Windows 8.

References

  1. ^ a b "Inrix Looks for Express Lane". Red Herring. August 31, 2007.
  2. ^ White, Joseph B. (August 14, 2008). "New Services Gather Data In an Effort to Track Current And Future Traffic Jams". The Wall Street Journal.
  3. ^ "INRIX Flow Coverage". INRIX, Inc.
  4. ^ "Seattle startup Inrix will bring Microsoft Research technology to market". Microsoft PressPass. April 11, 2005.