July/August 2010 Parking - 24



Tools of the Trade Continued
StreetSmart Technology Announces The Parking Puck™ A Lower Cost Vehicle Detection Solution For Parking Operations Zebra Technologies Introduces New Self-Service Kiosk Printer to Improve Customer Satisfaction and Lower Operational Costs
Zebra Technologies Corporation announces the release of the KR403 kiosk receipt printer, the first product in its new KR400™ series. The new KR403 offers a range of printing solutions for self-service customer kiosks and can be utilized to solve a number of application needs such as couponing, bill pay and self-ordering at delicatessens and restaurants. Designed for quick and easy integration, the KR403 has a compact footprint ideal for space-restricted applications while also offering a wide range of printer and media mounting configurations. It also includes expanded memory, increased driver support and Zebra Programming Language command language that allow for expanded integration capabilities. The KR403 is the only kiosk printer on the market offering Unicodecompliant encoding for international character printing and has the most fonts and bar code sets than any kiosk printer—including GS1 barcodes required in retail. For more information, please call 800.452.4056 or visit www.zebra.com. The StreetSmart Technology Parking Puck™ is the latest innovation from the company that introduced vehicle detection and telemetry to on-street parking management and enforcement. Parking Pucks™ detect vehicles that enter or leave a parking space, and are the first part of the total parking management solution that StreetSmart Technology invented and patented. Parking Pucks™ provide accurate detection, and are quickly installed ‘flushgrade,’ so there is no tripping hazard or problems sweeping or plowing. Parking Pucks™ are self-contained, requiring no leads to any other equipment. They wirelessly communicate parking space status to a network gateway that is installed on nearby street furniture. Pucks monitor parking occupancy 24/7, sending real-time information and alerts to managers and field personnel. They can work in single and multi-space evironments, for both on-street and surface lots applications. Parking Pucks™ are one component of the Unified Parking Interface™ from StreetSmart Technology. UPI™ is the first parking framework to connect parking equipment from almost any manufacturer to a parking workforce and management team. For more information, reach StreetSmart Technology online at: http://streetsmarttechnology.com, via email at info@streetsmarttechnology. com, or by calling Kirby Andrews at 203.856.0337.

24

National Parking Association PARKING July/August 2010



Cireon’s Daylight Sensing Luminaire
Cireon announces the Daylight Sensing Luminaire (DSL) with an integrated daylight sensor. It’s calibrated by a handheld remote and maintains its calibrated light level, dimming in 256 increments as the sun rises and vice versa. The electronics are self-contained within each luminaire, making installation simple a swap with the old luminaire. For parking facilities, at dawn/dusk, the sun penetrates farther into a structure but with little intensity and, when the sun is higher in the sky, the intensity may be greater but it might not penetrate as far into the facility. In all cases, Cireon’s DSLs adjust to make optimum use of natural light. No other commercial lighting technology can make that claim. For more information contact Jim Dilbeck, general manager, CIREON, LLC, 805.557.9090 or go to www.cireonusa.com.



July/August 2010 Parking

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of July/August 2010 Parking

July/August 2010 Parking - C1
July/August 2010 Parking - C2
July/August 2010 Parking - 1
July/August 2010 Parking - 2
July/August 2010 Parking - 3
July/August 2010 Parking - 4
July/August 2010 Parking - 5
July/August 2010 Parking - 6
July/August 2010 Parking - 7
July/August 2010 Parking - 8
July/August 2010 Parking - 9
July/August 2010 Parking - 10
July/August 2010 Parking - 11
July/August 2010 Parking - 12
July/August 2010 Parking - 13
July/August 2010 Parking - 14
July/August 2010 Parking - 15
July/August 2010 Parking - 16
July/August 2010 Parking - 17
July/August 2010 Parking - 18
July/August 2010 Parking - 19
July/August 2010 Parking - 20
July/August 2010 Parking - 21
July/August 2010 Parking - 22
July/August 2010 Parking - 23
July/August 2010 Parking - 24
July/August 2010 Parking - 25
July/August 2010 Parking - 26
July/August 2010 Parking - 27
July/August 2010 Parking - 28
July/August 2010 Parking - 29
July/August 2010 Parking - 30
July/August 2010 Parking - 31
July/August 2010 Parking - 32
July/August 2010 Parking - 33
July/August 2010 Parking - 34
July/August 2010 Parking - 35
July/August 2010 Parking - 36
July/August 2010 Parking - 37
July/August 2010 Parking - 38
July/August 2010 Parking - 39
July/August 2010 Parking - 40
July/August 2010 Parking - 41
July/August 2010 Parking - 42
July/August 2010 Parking - 43
July/August 2010 Parking - 44
July/August 2010 Parking - 45
July/August 2010 Parking - 46
July/August 2010 Parking - 47
July/August 2010 Parking - 48
July/August 2010 Parking - 49
July/August 2010 Parking - 50
July/August 2010 Parking - 51
July/August 2010 Parking - 52
July/August 2010 Parking - 53
July/August 2010 Parking - 54
July/August 2010 Parking - 55
July/August 2010 Parking - 56
July/August 2010 Parking - 57
July/August 2010 Parking - 58
July/August 2010 Parking - 59
July/August 2010 Parking - 60
July/August 2010 Parking - 61
July/August 2010 Parking - 62
July/August 2010 Parking - 63
July/August 2010 Parking - 64
July/August 2010 Parking - 65
July/August 2010 Parking - 66
July/August 2010 Parking - 67
July/August 2010 Parking - 68
July/August 2010 Parking - 69
July/August 2010 Parking - 70
July/August 2010 Parking - 71
July/August 2010 Parking - 72
July/August 2010 Parking - 73
July/August 2010 Parking - 74
July/August 2010 Parking - 75
July/August 2010 Parking - 76
July/August 2010 Parking - C3
July/August 2010 Parking - C4
https://www.nxtbookmedia.com