This application is a national phase entry under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Patent Application PCT/FR2015/050167, filed Jan. 23, 2015, designating the United States of America and published as International Patent Publication WO 2015/110766 A1 on Jul. 30, 2015, which claims the benefit under Article 8 of the Patent Cooperation Treaty to French Patent Application Serial No. 1450596, filed Jan. 24, 2014.
The invention relates to urban platforms for driving equipment hardware and subsystems.
This equipment, for example, includes public lighting lamp posts, closed circuit television surveillance cameras, collective electric vehicle charging stations, sound sensors, pollution sensors, etc.
The subsystems are, for example, another equipment supervisor, for example, for the acquisition of waiting times in a public service.
For the purposes of this disclosure, “urban” refers to collectively used locations, such as territorial subdivisions (cities, towns, villages), but also districts, commercial or residential areas.
Known in the state of the art is international patent application WO 2013/001227 concerning a technique to configure a physical entity in a supervision and control system built into a communications network, the system comprising a plurality of sensors. The technique comprises the following steps:
The disclosure also relates to a configuration system using such a technique and to a supervision and control system comprising such a system.
Patent application WO 2006/136985 describes a method of controlling a lighting control network. Position information comprising the coordinates of each device in the network is received via a gateway in a data processing device that stores the identified functional requirements. The coordinates of each device in the network are used to derive the required functionality of the device, based on the recorded functional requirements, the instructions to implement the functionality are produced, and the instructions are sent to the network through the gateway.
Patent application WO 2009/121619 relates to a computer-assisted system for the administration and/or control of a building management system with multiple devices, particularly lighting, sensors and/or transmitters of commands located in different rooms, which comprises a database that stores information about the devices, sensors and/or transmitters of commands from the building management system, as well as data on the axes and cell structure of the building. The system is designed to provide a graphical user interface on a display screen on which is shown a graphical representation of the building as well as the location of the devices, sensors and/or transmitters of commands.
International patent application WO 2002/082400 relates to an event detection and storage system comprising: a vehicle detection device connected to an input connection point to detect the passage of a vehicle, a red light detector for a traffic light, a registered vehicle control system, a control module that takes an image of an offense, combined with the registered vehicle control system, a video imaging device providing images to the control module, a radar, a data transmission and reception device connected to the radar, a speeding alert device, and a signaling control connected to an output connection point, the system being configured so that when it operates, a film is generated so that when an event occurs, a film is obtained of the moments preceding the event, during the event and after the event. The disclosure also relates to an event detection system that uses the disclosed system.
Also known is United States patent application US 2013/013544 that describes an exclusive ubiquitous city middleware device to provide services to a ubiquitous city. The middleware device performs a role equivalent to the human brain by collecting ubiquitous city data via converging cabled and wireless networks, analyzing the collected data, and finding an optimum service based on a given command and inferred data concerning a current context, and performs the service. The exclusive ubiquitous city middleware operates using a three-tier method using a ubiquitous city infrastructure and a ubiquitous city portal and performs various functions that are built into it, the operating technique and the performance of the functions using general computer operating systems.
The prior art urban control platforms require heavy programming each time the equipment assets are modified, in particular, when adding new categories of equipment to be controlled.
Modifications to the programming may lead to a loss of coherency in the global platform operations and incorrectly controlled interactions between the various processed data.
Finally, prior art solutions dissociate the processing of data for the technical control of equipment by the local subdivision technical services, from data processing usually carried out on another technical platform for elected representatives and the public administration services in order to make strategic choices requiring more aggregated data.
Prior art solutions also employ redundant technical resources and have a low level of evolutivity and extension to new categories of equipment or new processing.
The solved technical problem is the problem of the modularity of the controlling system, making it possible to reconfigure the control of a plurality of types of equipment, of a heterogeneous type, using simple interventions and avoiding the modification of the control program.
In order to remedy the disadvantages of the prior art, this disclosure concerns a computer and electronic platform in the widest meaning of the term, used to control different categories of urban equipment characterized by the fact that it comprises a database in which are recorded:
Advantageously, the database includes global digital representations composed of:
In a specific embodiment, at least one of the attribute values of an attribute of a globalized digital object is calculated depending on digital data coming from a source other than a connected category-related representation.
In one alternative, at least one of the attribute values of a globalized digital object is calculated according to the attribute values of the linked category-related digital objects related to the subset, the calculation processing being chosen from a processing family comprising:
Preferably, the frequency of the exchanges of digital data between the equipment in each category and the associated digital object controlled by the dialogue and interfacing layer is constant:
In another alternative, some of the equipment is statistical, some of the equipment is mobile and comprises geo-location resources of which the state is transmitted to the communications driver by a radio-frequency link.
In another embodiment, the platform also comprises at least one viewing terminal controlled by a calculator depending on the attribute values of at least part of the globalized digital objects or the category-related digital objects.
Advantageously, the viewing terminal also includes resources to send control data processed by the functions of at least part of the category-related digital objects, to control a change in state of the associated equipment.
In another alternative, the platform also comprises automated resources to send control data processed by the functions of at least part of the category-related digital objects, to control a change in state of the associated equipment.
In another specific embodiment, the database also comprises reference value records, and regular comparison resources of the attribute values and the reference values to conditionally trigger an action.
Preferably, at least some of the attribute values are recorded with a history of the variations in the values.
This disclosure can be better understood on reading the following description of a non-limiting embodiment, in which:
This equipment comprises:
Each item of equipment (1 to 6) comprises a communications driver allowing:
Usually, a single driver is interfaced with several items of equipment of the same type.
The platform 100 comprises an open program interface allowing integrators to directly develop equipment drivers that are not available on the platform as a standard.
The platform 100 also comprises a library of downloadable drivers 23 for the purpose of installing them on a computer system designed to dialogue with the platform 100.
The platform 100 comprises a central server 7 hosting the control application meta model, and storing the digital data in a relational database (SQL, for example). This database is organized into a set of tables, each corresponding to an object type (or object model).
The table structures are defined dynamically, depending on project constraints and the types of object to supervise.
The objects are described in a hierarchical structure using a modelling application 8 to create maps, object models, etc.
The modelling defines a hierarchy of levels connected by 1 to N relationships between the higher and lower level.
For example, the upper level corresponds to the “CITY,” the next level down is the “DISTRICT,” and the lowest level, the item of “EQUIPMENT.”
The relationships are of the “is part of” type, defining a “parent/child” relationship. They are configured using an object and relationship management tool 16.
These relationships define the tree structuring of the objects using a modelling tool 15. This structuring defines the aggregating processes of unit data from the equipment, to calculate significant aggregated data at a higher level. This aggregated data is, for example:
The data is processed by an aggregation engine 9 in cascade, i.e., with a first level of aggregation processing at the level directly higher than the equipment (1 to 6) level, then by a second processing using this aggregated data to calculate a new level of aggregation at the directly higher level.
These processes are fully modular, and a modification of the composition or number of items of equipment (1 to 6) does not require the modification of the central server 7.
All of the unit and aggregated data can be archived with a timestamp on an archival server 10, depending on the attributes assigned to each property of the object models. These attributes define:
This solution makes it possible to optimize the resources assigned to archival.
The central server 7 is interfaced with a messaging server 11 to automate functions such as:
Central server 7 is also interfaced with a geographical information system 12, supplying map backgrounds and the coordinate reference and graphic representation (geographical projections).
Each object can be represented on a map projection using an icon that represents its location, its type, and its status.
The central server 7 is also interfaced with an automatic report system 13 that directly uses the data recorded in the relational database 8.
The central server 7 comprises the resources to manage and configure the interactions between the objects, in addition to aggregation, especially:
The central server 7 also comprises a scheduler 19 controlling the activation of scripts or functions in a defined order and at a pre-defined frequency.
The central server 7 also optionally comprises a planning manager 20, for example, to manage on-call duties, and an event manager 21, making it possible to manage an event for each object model and the action control at the level of an associated object.
The workflow engine 22 is used to control the sequence of tasks.
The central server 7 finally comprises tools to represent objects in graphic forms 24, 25, 26 controlling the generation of the graphic representations of each object, and the graphic effects depending on the status of each object.
These tools are used to operate the graphic representations on web access hardware, such as a computer 27, a tablet 28, or a “smartphone”-type digital telephone 29.
Some applications are pre-configured in the form of a configuration file and/or a pre-configured database 30, 31, 32, for example, for urban lighting control applications or closed circuit surveillance.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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14 50596 | Jan 2014 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2015/050167 | 1/23/2015 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2015/110766 | 7/30/2015 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7188085 | Pelletier | Mar 2007 | B2 |
20030093430 | Mottur | May 2003 | A1 |
20050254505 | Chang | Nov 2005 | A1 |
20060187032 | Kunkel | Aug 2006 | A1 |
20060248557 | Stark | Nov 2006 | A1 |
20070036525 | Chang | Feb 2007 | A1 |
20130013544 | Lee | Jan 2013 | A1 |
20130054280 | Moshfeghi | Feb 2013 | A1 |
20130262557 | Kim et al. | Oct 2013 | A1 |
20140364153 | Ren | Dec 2014 | A1 |
20150087323 | Srikanteswara | Mar 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
02082400 | Oct 2002 | WO |
2006136985 | Dec 2006 | WO |
2008069409 | Jun 2008 | WO |
2009121619 | Oct 2009 | WO |
2013001227 | Jan 2013 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report for International Application No. PCT/FR2015/050167 dated May 28, 2015, 5 pages with translation. |
International Written Opinion for International Application No. PCT/FR2015/050167 dated May 28, 2015, 7 pages. |
French Search Report for French Application No. 1450596 dated Oct. 8, 2014, 2 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170153612 A1 | Jun 2017 | US |