Railroad remedy: Fishtech-backed app could bring added efficiency to local transit system

July 3, 2019  |  Austin Barnes

What started out as a joke between coworkers at Fishtech Group, could solve a community-wide pain point in Martin City — and beyond, explained Michael Wilson

Michael Wilson, Fishtech

Michael Wilson, Fishtech Group

“Every single day there’d be a train come by, blowing its horn, interrupting us on conference calls and they would also make a lot of people late for meetings,” Wilson, director of engineering at Fishtech, said of the problem he and his colleagues face working at the company’s sprawling, Martin City cyber campus. 

“It’s a daily thing. We are right next to the train tracks,” he emphasized, referencing the startups location along Holmes Road. 

Gary [Fish, founder and CEO] had the idea of putting something out there to track when the trains come and what time of day they come, how often they come,” Wilson noted, detailing the development of a company-backed web application that tracks trains through Martin City in real time. 

Gary Fish, Fishtech Group

Gary Fish, Fishtech Group

“We used a lidar sensor to track whether or not there is a train on the tracks. And that was kind of the very first objective. We just wanted to know,” he said. “If I’m driving into work, I can pull up this app and see, is there a train on the tracks currently? And if so, we have alternate paths where we can go and bypass that particular train track.”

Additionally, the Fishtech-backed app works to predict when a train will make its way down the tracks, Wilson explained. 

“We took the data from about two- to three-months worth of training and we ran it into some models. We had the best success with this one library that got us to about a 70-percent certainty within a period of about 10 minutes,” he said of the accuracy of the app. 

“Whenever you actually look into how they’re scheduling the trains, everything’s actually pretty manual. There isn’t really a lot of routine to them,” Wilson said in reference to findings made by the Fishtech team, which included several wide-sweeping patterns. 

“Weekdays there are times where the train comes up more often than not. It seems to come more before traffic starts and after peak hours of traffic,” he said. “We noticed there’s more trains, for instance, before 7 a.m. than there are between 7 and 9 a.m.  There’s more between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. than there is between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.”

Taking the side project a step further, Wilson used hobby videogame building skills and crafted a user interface for the web app that mimics a retro arcade game — giving the tech some needed personality, he noted. 

“I figured, you know, why not make this a fun, whimsical thing and also solve the problem that we have here in the office?” he said. 

Beyond Fishtech’s campus, the app could easily be used to track similar modes of transportation, with potential to bring the Kansas City streetcar into a more predictable user interface. 

“Depending on the location, the challenges that you would have with this would be that you would need to install those sensors in a variety of locations. Obviously the more sensors that you get, you’re going to have better readings and can predict things a little bit better,” he explained. 

The streetcar currently runs its own tracking app, which can be downloaded for 99-cents, according to RideKC. 

“[Our app] would definitely work for streetcars, as long as you could have power and Internet available wherever you put the sensors and you would have to own the location that the sensors were at, or have buy in from the city,” Wilson said of the Fishtech developed app and the added efficiency it could fold into the current RideKC platform. 

As Wilson and his co-workers continue to push boundaries in the tech space, they’re ever eager for opportunities to innovate, he said, noting the app has taken a backseat as platform upgrades and other behind the screen changes take hold at Fishtech. 

“It’s definitely a really cool passion project that we point to sometimes to kind of show our culture and the constant desire to innovate and just find ways to use technology in new, exciting ways to solve problems,” he said.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Just-launched retail hub gets first tenant, battling ‘blight of the heart’ on Troost corner

        By Tommy Felts | June 3, 2025

        ‘We are each other’s bootstraps’ Transforming a long-vacant building along Troost into a space for neighborhood small businesses is about empowering the entrepreneurs already living and working in the east side community, said Father Justin Mathews. The newly unveiled RS Impact Exchange — built within the renovated, 1920-built Baker Shoe Building at 3108-3116 Troost Ave.…

        Hog Island to Parkville: Justus Drugstore owners docking new seafood concept in historic Parkville

        By Tommy Felts | June 3, 2025

        The Parker Hollow builds on Chef Jonathan Justus’ mission to put small town Missouri on the menu PARKVILLE, Mo. — A bright yellow, nearly 150-year-old former Italian restaurant could become Kansas City’s go-to seafood destination with help from the world-renowned hometown culinary team behind Justus Drugstore and Black Dirt. Chef Jonathan Justus and his wife…

        KC’s Enduralock secures $1.25M SpaceWERX contract to boost satellite docking tech 

        By Tommy Felts | June 2, 2025

        A Lenexa tech company has been selected by the innovation arm of the U.S. Space Force to address one of the most-pressing challenges facing military operations in the skies and beyond. Enduralock just announced its selection for a $1.25 million contract aimed at using the company’s new connector system, OneLink, to enable modular in-space servicing…

        You can’t plan for this: ‘Mr K’ finalists wary of another ‘wrench into the face’ from Washington

        By Tommy Felts | May 30, 2025

        An upended national political and economic climate has rippled down to Main Street, acknowledged leaders of this year’s Top 10 Small Businesses, bringing concerns about racism, DEI backlash, tariffs, and supply chain disruptions to Kansas City’s front door.  “We’ve had people come into the shop and harass our employees, our customers,” explained Dulcinea Herrera —…