The system is aimed at companies and institutions that have a large number of human assets and require real-time monitoring.
The system consists of sensors and hardware devices, which collect data specific to the user. This data is transmitted through WiFi to a cloud computing system and can be accessed via most mobile platforms.
Through this venture FRCI will become the exclusive re-seller of Masternaut, which was launched in the presence of the president of Daxium, Olivier Levy and a representative of FRCI, Denis Lam at Port Louis on Wednesday.
Levy said the system was used by the Réunion Island police force to collect and open enquiries and generate a database on-the-fly, which can be accessed by officers in real-time.
“It can also send pictures of number plates of stolen vehicles. The system decodes the numbers and analyses the characters,” said Levy.
The system can collect data including the real-time speed of a vehicle, its carbon emission and fuel consumption. According to Lam, the system uses Google Map to replicate the Mauritian road network.
It has been used across 17 countries including Europe with some 220,000 users. The system is in-line with the Maurice Ile Durable project, according to Levy.
“The product monitors the carbon emission and because of cloud computing there is no paperwork,” he said.