Visão geral do hardware para micromobilidade compartilhada (3/3): fechaduras inteligentes e estações de encaixe

Visão geral do hardware para micromobilidade compartilhada (3/3): fechaduras inteligentes e estações de encaixe

Na ATOM Mobility, sabemos que há muito a considerar ao iniciar uma empresa de mobilidade. Para ajudar a facilitar o processo, reunimos alguns dos fabricantes mais frequentemente recomendados de fechaduras inteligentes e estações de encaixe no mercado. Entre em contato conosco caso precise de orientação ou mais informações.

Spin tested solar-powered charging stations by Swiftmile in a pilot program

A Spin testou estações de carregamento movidas a energia solar da Swiftmile em um programa piloto

Embora o modelo de flutuação livre (quando scooters e bicicletas podem ser estacionadas em qualquer lugar dentro da zona de estacionamento) esteja enfrentando uma demanda crescente, ele também enfrenta alguns desafios, como o problema de veículos descarregados, vandalismo e pressão do município. Em alguns casos, fechaduras inteligentes ou até mesmo uma estação de acoplamento/carregamento são uma boa opção para dar uma olhada. Neste breve artigo, daremos uma breve visão geral dos fabricantes que, em nossa opinião, podem fornecer uma solução de qualidade para esse problema.

Fechaduras inteligentes

Omni

A Omni é uma das principais fornecedoras de fechaduras inteligentes para compartilhamento de bicicletas, usada por empresas como Ofo, Mobike e muitas outras. Preço acessível e GPS embutido são uma combinação vencedora. A capacidade opcional de recarga solar significa tempo de espera ilimitado e não precisa se preocupar com a duração da bateria.

Adequado para: bicicletas e bicicletas elétricas

Preço: 50-70 USD/45-65 EUR dependendo do modelo e da quantidade. Exigirá um cartão SIM com dados para rastrear a localização

Omni smart lock

Fechadura inteligente Omni

Linka

Linka tem dois modelos principais: Original e Leo. A diferença é que o Original Lock não tem GPS embutido, o que significa que você dependerá dos dados do telefone do usuário e não terá informações em tempo real sobre a localização da bicicleta. É por isso que preferimos o Linka Leo - que é um produto de alta qualidade com ótimo design.

Adequado para: bicicletas e bicicletas elétricas

Preço: 169 - 269 USD/150 - 250 EUR dependendo do modelo e da quantidade. O modelo Leo requer um cartão SIM com dados para rastrear a localização

Lattis

A Lattis oferece fechadura tipo U com estojo e corrente especiais para scooters. É um produto de alta qualidade, mas, da mesma forma que o Linka original, não possui GPS embutido. No entanto, acreditamos que pode ser uma boa camada de segurança adicional para o compartilhamento de scooters (onde você já tem Iot com dados de GPS).

Adequado para: scooters, bicicletas e bicicletas elétricas

Preço: 150 - 199 USD/160 - 180 EUR dependendo dos acessórios e da quantidade

Lattis smart lock

Fechadura inteligente Lattis

MACHADO

A Axa, da Holanda, está no mercado há algum tempo e suas fechaduras são usadas pela Donkey Republic e pela Zagster. Infelizmente, esses bloqueios também não têm GPS, então você precisará confiar nos dados do telefone do usuário.

Adequado para: bicicletas e bicicletas elétricas

Preço: 130 USD/115 EUR

 

Estações de encaixe e carregamento

Se você estiver interessado em uma estação de carregamento/acoplamento, você precisa levar em conta que o preço médio de 1 ponto de carregamento para 1 scooter é de aproximadamente 650 - 1100 USD /600 - 1000 EUR. Portanto, se você tem uma pequena frota de 100 scooters e deseja ter um local de acoplamento/carregamento para 30% delas, seu orçamento será de cerca de 30.000 euros.

Swiftmile

A Swiftmile é líder em estações de carregamento e acoplamento para scooters com pilotos bem-sucedidos com maiores operadoras de mobilidade compartilhada. Eles suportam sistemas de scooters acoplados e sem doca e operam usando sistemas de energia solar, alimentados por bateria ou plug-in. Seu software é adequado para integração via API. Você pode conectar 4, 8, 12 ou 16 scooters/portas a uma estação.

Pato

A solução modular de carregamento e encaixe Duckt é uma obra de arte, é pequena e compacta e terá uma aparência visualmente atraente em quase todos os lugares. É por isso que adoramos isso. Outra coisa legal é que a solução é flexível e você pode colocar esses módulos um por um (1,2,3 e assim por diante).

A Knot é uma empresa europeia que fornece estações de carregamento para scooters Segway. É acessível e, usando 1 estação, você pode carregar até 8 scooters.

Kuhmute

A estação de carregamento Kuhmute funciona com muitos tipos de scooters, bicicletas elétricas e até skates. Outra coisa legal é que eles oferecem assinaturas mensais se você não quiser pagar antecipadamente pelas estações.

Meredot

A Meredot tem um conceito muito interessante para carregamento sem fio de scooters (no entanto, nenhum encaixe é fornecido). No momento, a startup executa alguns pilotos com os primeiros clientes.

  

Entre em contato com a ATOM Mobility para quaisquer perguntas ou dúvidas adicionais que você possa ter sobre os produtos e fornecedores disponíveis.

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🚀 New feature alert: Web-booker for ride-hail
🚀 New feature alert: Web-booker for ride-hail

🚕 Web-booker is a lightweight ride-hail widget that lets users book rides directly from a website or mobile browser - no app install required. It reduces booking friction, supports hotel and partner demand, and keeps every ride fully synced with the taxi operator’s app and dashboard.

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What if ordering a taxi was as easy as booking a room or clicking “Reserve table” on a website?

Meet Web-booker - a lightweight ride-hail booking widget that lets users request a cab directly from a website, without installing or opening the mobile app.
Perfect for hotels, business centers, event venues, airports, and corporate partners.

👉 Live demo: https://app.atommobility.com/taxi-widget

What is Web-booker?

Web-booker is a browser-based ride-hail widget that operators can embed or link to from any website.
The booking happens on the web, but the ride is fully synchronized with the mobile app and operator dashboard.

How it works (simple by design)
  • Client places a button or link on their website
  • Clicking it opens a new window with the ride-hail widget
  • The widget is branded, localized, and connected directly to the operator’s system
  • Booking instantly appears in the dashboard and mobile app

No redirects. No app-store friction. No lost users.

Key capabilities operators care about
🎨 Branded & consistent
  • Widget color automatically matches the client’s app branding
  • Feels like a natural extension of the operator’s ecosystem
  • Fully responsive and optimized for mobile browsers, so users can book a ride directly from their phone without installing the app
📱 App growth built in
  • QR code and App Store / Google Play links shown directly in the widget
  • Smooth upgrade path from web → app
🔄 Fully synced ecosystem
  • Country code auto-selected based on user location
  • Book via web → see the ride in the app (same user credentials)
  • Dashboard receives booking data instantly
  • Every booking is tagged with Source:
    - App
    - Web (dashboard bookings)
    - Booker (website widget)
    - API
🔐 Clean & secure session handling
  • User is logged out automatically when leaving the page
  • No persistent browser sessions
💵 Payments logic
  • New users: cash only
  • Existing users: can choose saved payment methods
  • If cash is not enabled → clear message prompts booking via the app

This keeps fraud low while preserving conversion.

✅ Default rollout
  • Enabled by default for all ride-hail merchants
  • No extra setup required
  • Operators decide where and how to use it (hotel partners, landing pages, QR posters, etc.)
Why this matters in practice

Web-booker addresses one of the most common friction points in ride-hailing: users who need a ride now but are not willing to download an app first. By allowing bookings directly from a website, operators can capture high-intent demand at the exact moment it occurs - whether that is on a hotel website, an event page, or a partner landing page.

At the same time, Web-booker makes partnerships with hotels and venues significantly easier. Instead of complex integrations or manual ordering flows, partners can simply place a button or link and immediately enable ride ordering for their guests. Importantly, this approach does not block long-term app growth. The booking flow still promotes the mobile app through QR codes and store links, allowing operators to convert web users into app users over time - without forcing the install upfront.

Web-booker is not designed to replace the mobile app. It extends the acquisition funnel by adding a low-friction entry point, while keeping all bookings fully synchronized with the operator’s app and dashboard.

👉 Try the demo
https://app.atommobility.com/taxi-widget

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How bike-sharing apps encourage eco-friendly urban travel
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🚲 Cleaner air, less traffic, and better city living - bike-sharing apps are making it happen. With seamless apps, smart integration, and the right infrastructure, shared bikes are becoming a real alternative to cars in cities across Europe.💡 See how bike-sharing supports sustainable mobility and what cities and operators can do to get it right.

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Bike-sharing apps are reshaping urban mobility. What began as a practical way to get around without owning a bike is now part of a bigger shift toward sustainable transport. 

These services are doing more than replacing short car trips. They help cities cut emissions, reduce congestion, improve health, and connect better with public transport. 

As more cities rethink how people move, bike sharing continues to grow as one of the fastest and most affordable tools to support this change.

Why bike sharing is important

Bike-sharing services now operate in over 150 European cities, with more than 438,000 bikes in circulation. These systems help prevent around 46,000 tonnes of CO₂ emissions annually and reduce reliance on private cars in dense urban areas. They also improve air quality, lower noise levels, and make cities more pleasant to live in.

A recent study by EIT Urban Mobility and Cycling Industries Europe, carried out by EY, found that bike-sharing services generate around €305 million in annual benefits across Europe. This includes reduced emissions, lower healthcare costs, time saved from less congestion, and broader access to jobs and services.

For cities, the numbers speak for themselves: every euro invested yields a 10% annual return, generating €1.10 in positive externalities. By 2030, these benefits could triple to €1 billion if bike-sharing is prioritized.

Connecting with public transport

Bike sharing works best when it fits into the wider transport system. Most car trips that bike sharing replaces are short and often happen when public transport doesn’t quite reach the destination. That last kilometer between a bus stop and your home or office can be enough to make people choose the car instead.

Placing shared bikes near metro stations, tram stops, or bus terminals makes it easier for people to leave their cars behind. This “last-mile” connection helps more people use public transport for the long part of their trip and hop on a bike for the short part. Over time, that encourages more consistent use of both bikes and transit.

In cities where bike sharing is integrated into travel passes or mobility platforms, users can combine modes in a single journey. That flexibility supports wider access and makes shared bikes part of everyday mobility, not just something used occasionally.

What the app brings to the experience

The digital experience behind bike sharing is a big part of why it works. People can check availability, unlock a bike, pay, and end their trip – all in one app. This makes it quick, simple, and consistent.

Good bike-sharing apps also offer:

  • Real-time vehicle status
  • Contactless ID verification and onboarding
  • Support for short trips and subscriptions
  • Usage history and cost tracking
  • Optional features like carbon savings or route suggestions

When users don’t need to think twice about how the system works, they’re more likely to build regular habits around it. That habit shift is what makes a long-term difference for both users and cities.

Wider city-level benefits

Bike sharing isn’t just a transport service. It helps cities meet public goals – cleaner air, lower traffic, healthier residents, and better access to services. When someone chooses a bike instead of a car, it reduces the demand for fuel, parking, and space on the road.

The €305 million annual benefit includes health savings due to increased physical activity, avoided emissions, time gained from reduced congestion, and the creation of jobs tied to fleet operations. Many bike-sharing schemes also improve equity by giving people access to mobility in areas that are underserved by public transport or where car ownership isn’t affordable.

Shared bikes are especially useful in mid-sized cities where distances are manageable and car traffic still dominates. With the right policy support, even small fleets can have a noticeable impact on mobility patterns and public health.

What makes a system work well

Not every bike-sharing system succeeds. To be reliable and scalable, a few things must work together:

  • Safe, protected bike lanes
  • Well-placed stations near high-demand areas
  • Bikes that are easy to maintain and manage
  • Operators that monitor usage and shift bikes to where they’re needed
  • City policies that support cycling and reduce reliance on cars

Successful systems often grow in partnership with city governments, public transport agencies, and private operators who bring technology, logistics, and know-how.

The role of software and operations

Reliable software is what keeps all parts of the system connected. From unlocking a bike to seeing usage trends across the city, operators need tools that are stable, flexible, and easy to manage. For those launching or scaling a fleet, platforms like ATOM Mobility offer ready-made solutions that handle booking, payments, ID checks, live tracking, and fleet control in one place.

The platform supports both electric and mechanical bikes, offers branded apps, and integrates with smart locks or IoT modules for remote vehicle access. It also lets operators adjust pricing, monitor vehicle health, and manage customer support in real time. That means smaller teams can launch faster and scale smarter, without having to build every tool from scratch.

A small change with a big effect

Bike sharing won’t replace all car trips, but even a small shift makes a difference. A few short rides per week can reduce emissions, improve fitness, and save time spent in traffic. When these trips are supported by good infrastructure, public awareness, and seamless apps, the impact grows.

As cities continue to prioritise sustainability, shared micromobility will play a bigger role in helping people move in cleaner, healthier, and more flexible ways. With the right technology and planning, bike sharing becomes more than a service – it becomes a habit that supports better cities for everyone.

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