Skip to main content

‘eCall’ app for Android platform launched for worldwide use

Alfom, a German IT company, has announced the TripGuard app (www.tripguard.de) for Android (which will shortly also be available for the iPhone) that provides an eCall service in case of emergency. The inventor of the system was driven to develop the software following the tragic death of his mother in the autumn of 2010. Late one night, her car left the road, overturned and was not visible to passing motorists. Seriously injured but still conscious, it was nearly two hours before she was discovered and rel
April 23, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Alfom, a German IT company, has announced the TripGuard app (%$Linker: External 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.tripguard.de Tripguard App false http://www.tripguard.de/ false false%>) for Android (which will shortly also be available for the iPhone) that provides an eCall service in case of emergency. The inventor of the system was driven to develop the software following the tragic death of his mother in the autumn of 2010. Late one night, her car left the road, overturned and was not visible to passing motorists. Seriously injured but still conscious, it was nearly two hours before she was discovered and released, but she did not survive the incident.

After several months of development and over 10,000 kilometres of motorway testing, TripGuard has been specially developed not only to prevent a similar tragedy, but also provide other features. It runs on a standard Android smart phone and continuously monitors the vehicle's status. In the event of an accident, TripGuard sounds an alarm which the driver can turn off if he/she is conscious and not in need of help.

However, if the alarm isn’t cancelled, the system automatically sends an SMS message to the TripGuard centre, on receipt of which an operator phones the number for verification of a problem. If the user does not respond immediately, the emergency services are called. Meanwhile, the app, using a synthetic voice module which is available in several languages, also calls emergency services, relays GPS information and also switches to hands-free mode for two-way communication between the vehicle and the emergency services.

An emergency call button is also available for manual emergency calling, and additional services, such as advising the driver to take a break at recommended intervals, based on total travel and time of day or night, location-based alerts of potential hazards, such as accidents or fog, and a ‘black box’ feature that records the telematics data for the last 30 seconds before an accident

Related Content

  • Artists help IPAF tell INTERMAT 2012 visitors to ‘spread the load’
    February 2, 2012
    The International Powered Access Federation (IPAF) has hit upon a colourful way of telling show visitors about its key safety message.
  • VIDEO: Rollerman Blondeau takes to the hills, Grimsel Pass
    July 26, 2016
    Sure, it’s a spectacular run down a mountain road. But it’s also an extremely visual reminder that highway infrastructure is important for work and play. Let’s not forget that the road - in this case Switzerland’s Grimsel Pass, 2,164m - has to be smooth enough for Jean Yves “Rollerman” Blondeau to reach those speeds without being chucked over edge and down a cliff. The pass is a driver’s delight as it crosses the continental divide in the Alps where rivers flow one way towards the North Sea and the ot
  • Losing your car ain’t as hard as you would think
    April 29, 2015
    Thankfully it doesn’t happen too often, but forgetting where you parked your car can be an embarrassing moment, or several days, as one man in the UK recently found. Jason Matthews, 40, ran the Manchester City Marathon on April 19 in five hours and 11 minutes and then spent an additional several hours looking for his Saab 93 Sport. He said he couldn’t recall where he had parked the vehicle. He walked back around some of the 26-mile – nearly 42km - course, before driving around in a taxi for 40 minutes an
  • Hi-viz hijinks make a flockery of saftey clothing
    September 16, 2015
    Fashionable they aren’t, but the wearing of high-visibility clothing is increasingly either recommended by businesses or made mandatory by law, especially for construction workers on every kind of site. But has the use of “hi-vis” clothing, especially the vest, gone too far? In Britain, the wearing of the hi-viz clothing has taken off - literally, according to a BBC television news report that shows a flock of chickens wearing the fluorescent coloured vest.