Scootable for Micromobility Solutions

Micromobility has been developing rapidly in the world in recent years. One of the most important reasons for this trend is its significant contribution to the efficient use of time by its users. Scootable is a software platform that allows vehicles such as electric scooters, electric bicycles, and cars to be rented in a shared model. Our main product is a software solution for micro mobility systems. That product is a device agnostic solution. By the way, companies/municipalities can use this software with e-scooters, bikes, e-bikes, cars or whatever they want to use. Our pricing model is a kind of SaaS model. They pay us for device per month or some alternative methods.  Scootable has a lot of features. Some of main features is these;
  • Rent and End Trip
  • Payment Integrations
  • IoT Integrations
  • Earthquake Mode
  • SMS API Integration 
  • User Friendly Admin Panel
  • Awarded UI Design
  • Advance Statistics
  • Available for hybrid lock (Which is suitable for both docking system and dockless system at the same time)
Read more...

Which Protocol Is Better?

There are two different communication protocols for e-scooters: TCP/IP and MQTT. Both communication protocols are compatible with Scootable. MQTT is defined as Message Queueing Telemetry Transport and is an OASIS standard publish-subscribe network protocol for the Internet of Things (IoT). It transports messages between the scooters and the server. It is designed as an extremely lightweight communication protocol which is ideal for connecting remote devices with minimal network bandwidth. TCP/IP stands for Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol and is a suite of communication protocols used to interconnect network devices on the internet. TCP/IP is also used as a communications protocol in the private scooter network. Both protocols are suitable for Scootable. However MQTT is a more reliable and secure protocol for IoT systems. We recommend you to prefere scooters with IoTs which have MQTT abilities.
Read more...