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ICT Strategy

ICT Strategy. Intelligent Highways Infrastructure. DfT Drivers. External influences. DfT System of Systems. Foresight Intelligent Infrastructure Futures. System of Systems. NTDF, NaTII, Information Framework, RIF. Data - structures, consistency and availability. Agile Infra-

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ICT Strategy

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  1. ICT Strategy Intelligent Highways Infrastructure

  2. DfT Drivers External influences

  3. DfT System of Systems Foresight Intelligent Infrastructure Futures System of Systems NTDF, NaTII, Information Framework, RIF Data - structures, consistency and availability Agile Infra- structure Wider role of Intelligent Transport Systems Spatial Planning – Land Use and Transport Impacts Modelling, simulation, assumptions, forecasts, scenarios

  4. Foresight IIS – Changing Presumptions Past Present Future

  5. Strategic Traffic Management • CVHS - Cooperative Vehicle Highway Systems • EVI - Electronic Vehicle Identification • Legend

  6. Intelligent Vehicles European its developments

  7. Continuous Air-interface for Long- andMedium-range communications (CALM)

  8. European ITS Communication Architecture - Components

  9. ITS Station ReferenceArchitecture

  10. Co-operative Vehicle Infrastructure System (CVIS)

  11. TPEG - Content andDelivery Segment

  12. Deployment View RSU - Road Side Unit

  13. Integration View

  14. 3GRSE Third-generation roadside equipment

  15. Context Diagram

  16. Typical Architecture Diagram

  17. Portuguese Integration Model The itsibus approach

  18. ITSIBus and SOA • Uses an Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) for integration middleware – in production since 2004. • Everything as a service • A functional component in ITSIBus is always a service • A service implements an open interface and generates subscribe-able events (by other services) • • Services run on Systems • Systems are service execution containers offering core services for common functions (e.g. security, management, monitoring) • • Services are available from multiple technologies • Being standard, services can be called from different technologies.

  19. Architecture

  20. Strategic implications HA To-Be architecture

  21. Intelligent Highways Infrastructure • Adopts Portuguese ESB model as an exemplar. • Federated ESB approach fits with OGD and EU developments – Defra (INSPIRE), Police (ISS4PS), Customs & Excise (XSIZE), etc.

  22. Legacy Integration • Smart endpoints provide an abstraction layer for “Encapsulation”: • Java, C++, DCOM, CORBA • Adapters (e.g. JCA – J2EE Connector Architecture)

  23. Conclusions • The Intelligent Highways Infrastructure requires future-proofed ESB Endpoints which need to include RSU’s that can accommodate: • Legacy transponders • 3GRSE-based Data Hubs • CVHS-based Roadside Gateways • These need to be based on: • Industry standards (e.g. UTMC/Datex II) • Ruggedised PC hardware • IPv6 network interfaces/addressing

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