Plates are public by design, but the tech around them is evolving. Automatic license plate readers can scan numbers at scale to manage tolls, find stolen vehicles, or monitor traffic. Data policies vary, and so do retention practices. If you care about privacy, it’s worth understanding how your region handles plate data. Digital plates are also emerging in some places, swapping paint for screens that can display messages like registration status. They’re convenient but raise new questions about cost, durability, and who controls the display.
We see license plates every day, but it’s easy to forget they’re more than decoration. A plate is your car’s unique ID tag in the real world. It ties a vehicle to a registration record, a tax status, and usually an owner. That little rectangle can unlock parking lots, pay tolls automatically, and help recover stolen cars. When there’s an accident or a hit-and-run, witnesses don’t memorize a VIN; they write down a plate number. It’s the bridge between a physical object and the paperwork that proves where it belongs.
Parking spaces are one of those everyday details you barely notice—until you can’t find one. They quietly set the tone for errands, nights out, school runs, and work commutes. A good parking experience feels seamless: you arrive, glide into a spot, head off without a second thought. A bad one adds friction and stress, costs time and fuel, and sometimes even changes your plan. The humble rectangle of paint on pavement is really a miniature system: it negotiates space between people, cars, buildings, and streets, and it’s where infrastructure meets behavior.
If you like rules of thumb, here are practical picks based on common trips. For a couple’s long weekend, a small box (300–370 L) swallows two soft duffels, jackets, shoes, and camp chairs, leaving your cabin uncluttered. For a family of four doing a week away, a medium (380–450 L) usually handles extra clothes, toiletries, beach gear, and a stroller or travel crib, so the trunk can focus on heavier items.
Car28 is useful the moment it can tell you “hey, this code actually matters.” But the value goes beyond fault codes. For everyday drivers, you get smart maintenance reminders tied to real usage, not guesswork; trip history that makes expense reports painless; charging or fuel insights that highlight habits costing you money; and optional driving context like harsh braking or late-night trips that can help coach teen drivers. For folks juggling multiple vehicles—families, side gigs, small fleets—you get live status at a glance, configurable alerts for when a vehicle enters or leaves a place, and simple rules like “if fuel drops below a level before a long trip, remind me to refuel.” Developers get a stable API for building features like automated mileage logs, insurance integrations (with consent), or custom dashboards for EV health. Mechanics and service shops can attach a shared vehicle log to reduce back-and-forth guessing. None of this requires you to read a CAN diagram or learn every sensor name. You pick the outcomes you want; Car28 does the wiring underneath.
Vehicle data is personal, so Car28 treats control as a first-class feature. You decide what is collected, for what purpose, and for how long. Location can be disabled entirely, limited to certain times, or shared only in summary form (for example, total miles without maps). Raw data stays minimized—processed insights are favored over streaming every second. Everything in transit is encrypted, and the connector stores only what it needs to forward safely if you are temporarily offline. Sharing is explicit: you can grant a mechanic read-only access to diagnostics for a week, share trip summaries with a tax app, or keep everything private. You can also delete data or pause collection, and the system will respect that choice without breaking. On the developer side, API keys are scoped, auditable, and revocable, so integrations cannot reach beyond what you allow. Security is not a one-and-done checkbox; it is baked into defaults, with clear language instead of confusing toggles. The promise is simple: your car, your data, your call.