Bronze BlackBerry World 2012 Sponsorship – A Golden Opportunity for Mobile Innovations

Toronto, Ontario (PRWEB) April 13, 2012

Toronto, Ontario. Mobile Innovations President Gary Bauer announced his company’s Bronze Sponsorship for the upcoming BlackBerry World Conference to be held at the Marriott World Center, in Orlando Florida, April 30 to May 3, 2012. Rubbing shoulders with vendors such as HP, Information Week, Ingram Micro as well as many of the worlds biggest mobile carriers, the company intends to build on its performance as a 2011 winner of the Wireless Achievement Award for innovation in the public sector. At last year’s event the company won the coveted award as recognition for its outstanding mobile law enforcement work for the Chatham Kent Police Service.

Rather than presenting at a booth like most other BlackBerry World sponsors, Mobile Innovations will be demonstrating its suite of game-changing apps for mobile law enforcement from a Dodge Charger Police Enforcer, parked (legally of course) on the show floor. Seamlessly integrated for BES users who run BlackBerry smartphones, the apps are now available for BlackBerry PlayBook OS 2.0 tablets as well as well as other BlackBerry platforms. “Our apps all run on BlackBerry smartphones, and now we offer the same functionality for BlackBerry PlayBook tablets,” explains Bauer. “So we’re ahead of the curve in anticipation of having our apps running on BB10 just as soon as the new devices become available.”

Mobile Innovations apps will be demonstrated live in-vehicle by veteran Chatham Kent Police Services (CKPS) Constable Ken Koke – an long-time user of the apps. “We have been using Mobile Innovations apps for over five years now,” says Koke. “And I can’t say enough good things about them. They make our job easier, safer and faster by turning our cruisers into police stations on wheels.” Koke will be joined in the cruiser by Bauer and Paul Grierson, VP Business Development for D&R Electronics, the company that has partnered with Mobile Innovations to provide upfits for all police vehicles including mounts, lights and sirens as well as many other on-board IT components for the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet in-vehicle platform.

The growing list of apps used by CKPS and over fifty other law enforcement agencies in North America and Europe allows secure 2-factor access to criminal and Records Management databases, license scanning and error-free eTicket issuing and printing. Officers can also access their BeatBlog, Vehicle Inspection Forms, Business Activity reporting and more. Mobile Innovations’ proprietary suite of solutions for secure tablets and smartphones is boosting productivity, increasing operational efficiencies and overcoming current budget challenges facing police services everywhere.

On Government Day, and during regular sessions, Constable Koke and CKPS IT specialists Anita Scott and Quentin Sprik will be presenting on behalf of their agency and Mobile Innovations, with Bauer in attendance to field questions from the audience. Their Public Services sector seminar will provide government personnel and law enforcement officials with the opportunity to hear firsthand about compelling on-the-beat user experiences with Mobile Innovation applications for the BlackBerry solution.

Mobile Innovations is a privately held company dedicated to enhancing law enforcement with the most advanced mobile data products available. Based in Niagara Falls, Canada, Mobile Innovations also has operations in Toronto and works with over fifty agencies across Canada, the United States and in the United Kingdom. Mobile Innovations is a member of the BlackBerry Alliance Program with six years of service developing and deploying advanced mobile solutions for BlackBerry devices.

Introducing the CaseMaker – Mobile Innovations and BlackBerry

From BlackberryEmpire.com
By Geoffrey Smith

Mobile Data Terminals (MDT)  in police vehicles have been around since the mid 1980′s, but the implementation, support for the infrastructure, and cost to maintain was very expensive.  Currently, most mobile data terminal’s are large bulky laptops that aren’t removable from a police vehicle, and require officers to sit in odd positions to do work.  Mobile Innovations has helped solve these problems, making an officer truly mobile, yet at a fraction of the cost using BlackBerry Smartphones & PlayBooks .

In 2011, BlackBerry Empire reported the feature overview of the  PlayBook  incorporated in a patrol unit.

The BlackBerry PlayBook tablet includes the full BlackBerry Tablet OS, allowing officers to access core and third-party applications on top of the custom tools tailored to police work. All of the existing BlackBerry PlayBook tablet features are included in the device, such as the popular multi-tasking functionality. BlackBerry PlayBook tablet applications specific to police work include access to databases, communications, task lists, and more.

  • The tablet, even while remaining as a portable and detachable device, is hooked right into the mechanical functions of the vehicle. Pressing the right buttons on the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet’s touch screen can toggle the emergency lights, raise the caution sign on top of the vehicle, control sirens, and eventually, video feeds from the car’s cameras.
  • Bluetooth keyboard is equipped below the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet. Both of these are mounted onto a swivel that allows each to be positioned in the most convenient way possible for driver, passenger, or both to have access.

How is it connected?

The setup employs the BlackBerry® Bridge™ application to extend a BlackBerry smartphone’s security and data to theBlackBerry PlayBook tablet. This allows an officer to access information on their smartphone when away from the car, and then to continue where they left off on the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet once they return. Bluetooth technology is also leveraged to connect the keyboard to the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet, as well as to aid in interaction between the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet and the technology built into the vehicle.

Encased in an Otterbox (www.Otterbox.com),  the PlayBook is capable of operating for 6 or more hours on battery alone and is connected to a charger while in the mount of the Patrol Cruiser.  Laptops, along with all the other electronics in a Patrol Cruiser (PC) are a huge drain on a PC’s on-board battery, and often officers may find the car battery dead when returning to the vehicle.

The system is connected through a USB smart-hub which is essentially a mini computer server that hosts all the connected equipment. The smart-hub runs Angstrom, a version of Linux designed for embedded systems, and the custom programs that make everything work together are written in the open-source Python programming language. In place of a hard drive the system works off a MicroSD card.

Mobile Data On A Budget

Cover Story from February 2012 issue of Blue Line Magazine.

The introduction of mobile data terminals in police vehicles back in the mid-1980s, was a huge step forward in access to information for police officers in the field.

Suddenly, officers no longer needed to rely solely on the dispatcher to run checks on persons or vehicles. They could now access large amounts of information at any time without having to interrupt an already busy dispatcher with “just” a plate check.

This new electronic data-access also greatly increased the number of checks done by officers because of its self-serve nature. It facilitated trolling for stolen autos, suspended drivers and ne’er-do-wells regardless of how busy the voice-radio system was or how strongly the officers’ intuitive senses tingled.

Car-to-car messaging also now allowed officers to communicate privately amongst themselves without being overheard by the dispatcher, the road-sergeant, or citizens (and criminals) that were eavesdropping on voice radio transmissions. This offered a number of tactical and operational advantages, but also got a few officers in hot-water when inappropriate messages were sent.

It must be remembered that this all came in the days before cellular phones were affordable or readily available to everyone.

Thankfully the dumb mobile data terminals soon gave way to real computers such as the Panasonic Toughbook laptop computers which arrived in the early 1990s. These real computers introduced actual processing power in the field, and added the ability to access in-house records management systems (RMS) and to prepare and submit reports from the field electronically.

Global Positioning System (GPS) mapping and automatic vehicle location (AVL) technology add-ons followed in the 2000s further leveraging the mobile data equipment and the increasing operational efficiencies that it offered.

Expenses

Supporting mobile data and related technologies unfortunately brought with it complex and expensive infrastructure both in the car and back at HQ.

Prior to the arrival of higher-speed cellular data technology and almost ubiquitous access to it, the implementation of mobile data also required the construction of expensive private wireless data networks that often suffered coverage issues that caused dead-spots.

Implementing and operating mobile data services and equipment in police vehicles typically involves substantial capital and operating costs. Expensive rugged computers that can survive 3 or more years in the rough and tumble environment of a police vehicle, particularly in the typical four-season Canadian climate, are the norm.

Protecting all the expensive hardware against theft or damage, while still keeping it ergonomically placed and out of air-bag deployment zones also add to the costs.

Despite the numerous advantages of mobile data for front-line policing, the costs associated with the acquisition and operation of the systems often takes it out of the budgetary reach of many smaller police agencies. Many of these smaller agencies also do not have the in-house experts required to implement and operate it.

Mobile Innovations

Fortunately, a substantially cheaper solution will soon be offered by Niagara Falls, Ontario based Mobile Innovations (www.mobinnoco.com). Their existing Blackberry smartphone based policing products has been in use for several years in Canada, the UK and Australia, and with 17,000 users they certainly have extensive experience in this field. In the Canadian implementation officers have access to CPIC and the Niche RMS products.

Their “Mobile Police Assist” product line is being enhanced with the addition of the Blackberry Playbook tablet as the in-vehicle display for data from the Blackberry smartphone. Custom applications also allow it to operate the vehicle’s emergency lighting and other police systems. The Chatham-Kent Police Service (www.ckpolice.com) in south-western Ontario currently has two field-test version of the prototype deployed.

The affordable off-the-shelf components that make-up this system is what really makes it affordable. While none of the components are rugged to military specifications such as many of the regular police mobile-data systems, the Playbook tablet and Blackberry phone are both relatively cheap and can be readily replaced at a local retail cellular phone or computer vendor.

The entire upfront hardware costs for the system (including mounting hardware and connecting components) is under $2,000, well within the budgetary reach of even a small agency with only a few cars. Compare this to the upfront costs of a rugged laptop or mobile computer system at upwards of $10,000 and it’s a real bargain.

Two Dodge Charger prototype demo-vehicles were demonstrated at last year’s OACP and CACP annual conferences and trade shows and on-tour elsewhere across Canada where they were well received.

The prototype systems consist of a 16GB Blackberry Playbook tablet, a pre-production Blackberry Bluetooth keyboard for Playbook, a Blackberry smartphone for the cellular data connection, an E-Seek M250 2D card reader for reading driver’s licences, a Brother PocketJet printer for e-ticket printing, and a smart-hub mini-server to connect all the components together and make it all work.

D&R Electronics (www.dandrelectronics.com), of Bolton, Ontario worked with Mobile Innovations to design and build a customised mounting system designed specifically for the prototype units. D&R Electronics also has many years of experience in designing and building custom in-vehicle mounting systems.

The mount for the Playbook is designed so that the Playbook can be removed from the vehicle and taken into scenes to facilitate investigations and report writing. The mounting bracket holds the Playbook securely to the dashboard but still allows adjustments of up to 35 degrees horizontally and 40 degrees vertically, allowing officers to easily orient the unit in a comfortable position towards themselves (and away from the guy in bracelets in the back seat).

The keyboard mount has two articulation points which allow the keyboard to be positioned more conveniently for either driver or passenger and includes a LED light to illuminate the non-backlit keyboard.

The Parts

The Blackberry Playbook is a 178mm (7”) tablet computer that was launched by Research in Motion in April 2011. With a crisp and bright HD 1024×600 LCD display in 16:9 aspect ratio (think big-screen TV proportions) the Playbook makes a great little in-car display that doesn’t block vehicle heating/cooling controls or stereos as larger displays do.

The Playbook operates on RIM’s exclusive secure QNX operating system and is powered by a 1GHz dual-core (two processors on one chip) processer, with 1GB of system memory and 16, 32 or 64GB of user memory depending on model. Even at the regular retail list price of $499 for the entry-level 16GB version, the Playbook is substantially cheaper than replacing only the screen portion on a rugged laptop or mobile computer.

Although the Playbook is capable of operating for 6 or more hours on battery alone, this setup has it connected to a charger while in the dashboard mount so the battery is always topped up. To protect the Playbook from bumps and bruises it is enclosed in an Otterbox (www.otterbox.com) brand case.

In the prototype version the system is connected through a USB smart-hub which is essentially a mini computer server that hosts all the connected equipment. The smart-hub runs Angstrom, a version of Linux designed for embedded systems, and the custom programs that make everything work together are written in the open-source Python programming language. In place of a hard drive the system works off a MicroSD card.

The prototype system is pre-configured with 3 screen brightness settings: dim, office and sunlight, allowing the user to customise the brightness level for the ambient lighting conditions. An optional negative image night-mode setting is being investigated to further improve night-time usability.

Since tablet computers are really not very effective at large amounts of text entry, this system includes a pre-production RIM designed Playbook keyboard that uses Bluetooth wireless to connect to the system. The final production version of this keyboard was expected to be released during January 2012.

One of the major advantages of using mobile data systems is the ability to electronically capture driver’s licence data to conduct checks and prepare tickets. With this system, an E-Seek (www.e-seek.com) brand M250 2D card reader is used. It can read the data on both the magnetic stripe and linear 2D bar codes found on most drivers’ licences, health cards and other government issued ID cards.

Electronic tickets are prepared from the data captured from the driver’s licence (eliminating transposition errors), and printed using an optional Brother (www.brother.ca) PocketJet thermal mobile printer. The PocketJet prints tickets on a roll of paper that has a 500 – 8½ X 11” sheet equivalent page capacity.

While the Playbook is the core of the system, all the data transmission is accomplished through a Blackberry smartphone and over public cellular data networks. The two devices are wirelessly connected over a Bluetooth connection which is secured against eavesdropping by Blackberry’s state-of-the-art security protocols and encryption. Again, because of this connection between the Playbook and Blackberry smartphone, the two pieces can be removed from the car and used at a scene to facilitate investigations and report writing.

All data transmitted using the smartphone or smartphone/tablet combination system relies entirely on the mobile data services of the locally available cellular telephone service providers such as Rogers, Bell, Telus or others. This is both an advantage and a disadvantage.

With public mobile cellular data, agencies simply need to purchase data blocks and negotiate priority access agreements so that police systems always have a reserved portion of bandwidth, regardless of how busy the wireless data networks are. Also, with public mobile cellular data services, the provider is entirely responsible for the system, relieving the police service from this burden.

Some police agencies might be uncomfortable with this arrangement because they are not entirely in control of a critical part of their infrastructure.

Generally, users of this product have unlimited bulk voice and data plans for their Blackberry smartphone, so voice data costs are not prohibitively expensive. An added advantage is that users also automatically have cellular voice communications.

Think of the cellular data side in terms of car-leasing; the costs are fixed and every few years you get a new car (or in this case a cellular data system) without the worries of replacing it outright once it gets old.

Since GPS is a native feature on Blackberry smartphones it can also be used with this product to assist officers in finding their way about town and out of town. Because the Playbook is much larger than even the largest standalone GPS or built-in vehicle navigation units it provides much better mapping functionality.

Future additions to this system include in-car camera hardware and software and voice dictation software.

Further Information

Gary Bauer may be reached at info@mobinnoco.com or visit mobinnoco.com. D&R Elctronics may be reached at DandRelectronics.com. You may also make enquiries about this project through RIM at pdenarda@rim.com. Tom Rataj is Blue Line’s Technology Editor and he may be reached at Tom@BlueLine.ca.

Blackberry Future With Police

November 10, 2011 – Blackburn News

The Chatham-Kent Police Services Board has congratulated the team that implemented its Blackberry program while a key government official suggests a number of other police services will soon be moving in a similar direction.

John Dimarco with the Correctional services told the board a key to using the devices is both its portability, and the fact that is secure.

He says a number of municipal police services “and the OPP are already looking at this”.

Dimarco says the province likes the program because it keeps front line officers in touch with more information at all times.

Story by Simon Crouch, Blackburn News.

Mobile Innovations puts BlackBerry PlayBook tablet in Driver’s Seat with a complete In-Vehicle Law Enforcement Solution

Mobile Innovations has partnered with D&R Electronics to create ‘Mobile Police Assist’ for the BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablet, providing data access and entry for the NICHE RMS police records management system, the Canadian Police Information Centre (CPIC), GPS mapping and tracking, as well as dictation for a total mobile law enforcement solution. Each BlackBerry PlayBook tablet armed with MPA software provides its user with a secure, comprehensive and costeffective alternative to more costly ruggedized laptop solutions typically used today.

More information on the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet

Video: Waterloo Police Gear up with MPANiche

Yet another Police force that had amazing success with the implementation of Blackberry Smartphones and the Mobile Innovations MPANiche product. Check out the video for all the details.

7th Annual Canadian Niche User Group

Mobile Innovations and its CEO Gary Bauer is proud to announce their presence at the 7th Annual Canadian Niche User Group in Winnipeg, MB from May 29th to June 1st. For more information or to book a media appointment please email info@mobinnoco.com.

More BlackBerrys for North Wales Police

A pilot project giving North Wales Police officers BlackBerry mobile devices has proved so successful that its deployment is being increased. The devices are networked to North Wales Police Niche Records Management System (RMS), so officers can quickly access crucial information and identify and apprehend criminals. Read the complete article:

http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/1849177/more-blackberrys-north-wales-police#ixzz1McOjNVyx

6 Steps To Get Started with MPANiche

With six short video bytes, Mobile Innovations President Gary Bauer explains the basics of getting MPA products up and running. Check out the video links below:

Video Basics 1

Videos Basics 2

Video Basics 3

Video Basics 4

Video Basics 5

Video Basics 6