Tech & Data: Page 18
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Cornell illustrates model for mass COVID-19 testing
The university tests between 6,000 and 7,000 samples a day, which is the result of community buy-in, efficiency and partnerships, leaders said in a webinar.
By Chris Teale • Jan. 12, 2021 -
Automotive tech takes the digital stage at CES 2021
Leading OEMs and automakers remotely tuned in to the annual electronics show to tout new innovations in V2X, electric and driverless technologies.
By Kristin Musulin • Jan. 12, 2021 -
Trendline
Smart Cities Technology and Data
Cities are increasingly looking to technology and data to address real-world issues from traffic safety to law enforcement.
By Smart Cities Dive staff -
Pandemic highlights perks of $1M digitization effort in Salem, MA
The city has digitized about 1.3 million files dating back to the 1600s, which has reduced burdens on staff and eased access for city residents as operations shifted largely online.
By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 11, 2021 -
Philadelphia RFP looks to measure city's digital divide
The RFP follows the launch of PHLConnectED, a two-year program to provide free in-home internet and cellular devices to K-12 families.
By Chris Teale • Jan. 11, 2021 -
Podcast
City Surveillance Watch: Balancing Act
In this first episode of City Surveillance Watch, a new limited podcast series, reporter Kate Kaye explores the inherent dichotomy of data-hungry technologies that, while promising to make cities safer, can be considered forms of surveillance.
By Kate Kaye • Jan. 11, 2021 -
Urban mobility will center on MaaS, driverless delivery: report
As cities look to manage their curb space amid increasing dependence on shared mobility and delivery services, cooperation between cities and the private sector will be essential, Lux Research found.
By Chris Teale • Jan. 8, 2021 -
NYC sued over homeless shelters' lack of Wi-Fi for students
The lawsuit aims to accelerate the deployment of Wi-Fi in shelters, as remote learning continues for many of the city's 114,000 students experiencing homelessness.
By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 6, 2021 -
FAA: New drone rules address safety, boost operational flexibility
While the U.S. has seen a flurry of drone activity, regulation and investment hurdles have precluded more widespread adoption for delivery operations.
By A.B. Brown • Jan. 6, 2021 -
5G misinformation likely provoked Nashville, TN bombing: reports
The bomber may have been paranoid about the technology's debunked roles in spying or in spreading the coronavirus, according to local media reports.
By Chris Teale • Jan. 5, 2021 -
7 mobility startups to watch in 2021
These startups offer compelling solutions to the range of challenges the pandemic has introduced to U.S. cities.
By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 5, 2021 -
Q&A
Meet the 'anti-tech bro' scooter CEO calling out her competition
Veo CEO Candice Xie says her company reached profitability in May, months ahead of Lime. Now, she's clapping back at her competitors' "PR plays."
By Kristin Musulin • Jan. 5, 2021 -
The smart city news that shaped 2020
Smart Cities Dive identified 20 stories detailing the prevalent and groundbreaking trends that influenced a year like no other.
Jan. 4, 2021 -
Opinion
Cleantech needs to be useful first, sustainable second
While the cleanest tech may be what many retailers and consumers are looking for, it's the precise opposite of what our commercial buyers want.
By Darren Anderson • Dec. 21, 2020 -
Spin touts on-vehicle AI platform in NYC permit application
An exclusive partnership to bring DroverAI's PathPilot technology to Spin's fleet could help the operator stand out in New York's highly-competitive scooter pilot.
By Kristin Musulin • Dec. 18, 2020 -
Opinion
5 ways smart infrastructure shapes communities for the better
From improved transportation to data-driven decisions, smart cities are using technology to raise the bar for the world of tomorrow.
By Forrest Senti • Dec. 18, 2020 -
New Orleans leaders share lessons from 2019 cyberattack
CIO Kimberly LaGrue said early and intensive preparations were key to preventing disaster and recovering without paying a ransom to the hackers.
By Chris Teale • Dec. 18, 2020 -
Motional, Lyft to launch multimarket robotaxi service in 2023
The plans will expand on the partners' current robotaxi service in Las Vegas, which has served over 100,000 rides since its 2018 launch.
By Kristin Musulin • Dec. 17, 2020 -
Amazon gives first look at Zoox autonomous robotaxi
The subsidiary said the electric, autonomous vehicle is built for "dense, urban environments" and can reach up to 75 miles per hour in both directions.
By Chris Teale • Dec. 16, 2020 -
Chicago dashboard tracks local trust in police
The Chicago Police Department partnered with data research company Elucd to gain a hyperlocal pulse on how residents feel about their safety and trust for the police.
By Cailin Crowe • Dec. 15, 2020 -
Opinion
How IoT can help cities survive the holiday 'shipmageddon'
The sooner delivery services begin tapping available technologies, the sooner we can reduce chronic issues like holiday congestion and shipping delays.
By Jonathan Sparks • Dec. 14, 2020 -
Deep Dive
5G health concerns sow uncertainty amid ongoing rollout
While deployment continues unabated across the U.S., a small coalition of groups and leaders are trying to put the brakes on 5G in a bid to learn more about the technology.
By Chris Teale • Dec. 14, 2020 -
Qualcomm: Our plug-and-play IoT suite 'cracked the code in smart cities'
The new IoT Services Suite is designed to remove the complexity and fragmentation of smart city digitization with ready-to-deploy solutions, said Qualcomm's Sanjeet Pandit.
By Kristin Musulin • Dec. 11, 2020 -
Dive Awards
Technology of the Year: Biobot Analytics
The MIT-born company brought wastewater epidemiology to more than 400 U.S. cities, free of charge, to analyze sewer systems for traces of COVID-19.
By Kristin Musulin • Dec. 9, 2020 -
Dive Awards
The Smart Cities Dive Awards for 2020
In a year where cities and local officials had to weather unprecedented crises, the following awardees stood out for their bold leadership.
By Smart Cities Dive Team • Dec. 9, 2020 -
Vehicles traveled at faster, deadlier speeds at onset of COVID-19: study
Transportation analytics company INRIX found a dramatic increase in average speed traveled from April to July among the U.S.' top 25 metro-areas, with Philadelphia seeing the biggest jump at 64%.
By Chris Teale • Dec. 8, 2020