Rear View Safety Offers Dash Camera With Wi-Fi, GPS
Rear View Safety has announced the featured product of the month for June, the LK-7950 Lukas Dual Lens Dash Camera with Wi-Fi and GPS, the company announced.
by Staff
July 5, 2016
Photo courtesy of Rear View Safety.
1 min to read
Photo courtesy of Rear View Safety.
Rear View Safety has announced the featured product of the month for June, the LK-7950 Lukas Dual Lens Dash Camera with Wi-Fi and GPS, the company announced.
The LK-7950 Lukas Dual Lens Dash Camera with Wi-Fi and GPS features two cameras, for front and rear full HD video recording. The front camera boasts an ultra-wide 135-degree viewing angle, while the rear lens has a 130-degree viewing angle.
Ad Loading...
The camera allows two cards (one SD and one microSD card) saving you space and keeping important footage protected. With a combined storage capacity of 512GB, the driver never has to worry about running out of space.
Using the built-in Wi-Fi and the free Lukas app for smartphones, live footage can wirelessly be viewed and downloaded from both cameras. Built-in GPS records your vehicle's location and driving route as well.
With the built-in G-Sensor, the camera can detect an impact and will activate Event Mode. The footage recorded during Event Mode will not be overwritten. This ensures important recordings will be available when needed. Continuous recording guarantees no footage will be missed, while motion detection in parking mode will protect the car even when the car is parked.
Distracted driving remains one of the most persistent risks in fleet operations. New approaches focus on removing mobile device use entirely while adding real-time safety support.
As distraction risks evolve, fleets are turning to smarter, more connected technologies to better understand what’s happening behind the wheel. Part 2 explores how these tools are helping identify risky behaviors and improve visibility across operations.
Distracted driving is often measured by what we can see—phones in hand, eyes off the road. But what about the distractions we can’t? A recent incident raises a bigger question about awareness, attention, and why subtle risks so often go unnoticed.
Fleets have more driver data than ever, so why isn't behavior changing? Training requires more than reports and coaching — it requires real-world practice.
A two-part conversation with Stefan Heck on how AI is transforming the fight against distracted driving. As fleets adopt smarter tools, the focus shifts from reacting to preventing risk. In Part 1, we look at where AI is making an impact for fleets today.
An 11% drop in pedestrian fatalities in early 2025 signals progress in U.S. road safety, but elevated death rates and ongoing risks underscore the need for continued action from fleets and policymakers.