Tech & Data: Page 21
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NYC, DC lead 10 US cities in global smart city rankings
The Institute for Management Development said the world's smartest cities have embraced technology, allowing them to fare better in managing the coronavirus pandemic and related recovery efforts.
By Chris Teale • Sept. 17, 2020 -
Q&A
An urbanist's guide to creating effective mobility pilots
Harvard Kennedy School visiting fellow David Zipper outlined the dos and don'ts of piloting mobility tech to aid governments in navigating uncertainty.
By Kristin Musulin • Sept. 15, 2020 -
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 -
Austin, TX affordable housing map illustrates perks of transit proximity
Ahead of a vote on Austin's proposed $7.1B Project Connect transit system, the city built an interactive map tracking income-restricted housing to aid equitable mobility and prevent potential displacement.
By Cailin Crowe • Sept. 11, 2020 -
The economic, social impacts of AV delivery services: study
A new assessment of autonomous delivery services found the continued development of on-road delivery AVs could generate 3.4 million jobs and $4.1 trillion in total value to the economy.
By Kristin Musulin • Sept. 10, 2020 -
PSU team maps Philadelphia's telework trends
Students with the Nittany AI Alliance developed an AI-driven algorithm to illustrate the "teleworking risk" of regional census tracts and inform potential transit changes.
By Kristin Musulin • Sept. 8, 2020 -
Amazon Prime Air gets clearance for drone delivery on 'highly rural' test range
Amazon said drones will help realize 30-minute delivery and expects its current model to carry 85% of the products sold on its marketplace.
By Matt Leonard • Sept. 2, 2020 -
New resource aims to help cities improve data sharing across boundaries
US Ignite and the Alliance for Telecommunications Industry Solutions recommend smart cities pursue a common data-sharing approach.
By Chris Teale • Aug. 31, 2020 -
Ransomware attacks 'raising the bar' as cities struggle to respond
Smart Cities Dive looked at the increasingly sophisticated methods hackers deploy to extort money and ways cities can better prepare.
By Chris Teale • Aug. 27, 2020 -
Opinion
It's time to make more affordable broadband a reality
While it took COVID-19 to drive home the urgency of the digital divide, it also clarified the path forward: joining Wi-Fi and fixed wireless technologies can accelerate affordable broadband.
By Atul Bhatnagar • Aug. 25, 2020 -
Pandemic has expedited digitization of government services: survey
Tight budgets, legacy systems and bureaucracy have historically prevented governments from going digital, but COVID-19 has tipped the scale for operations to move online.
By Cailin Crowe • Aug. 24, 2020 -
Tennessee dedicates $3M to bridge Chattanooga students' digital divide
The Tennessee Community CARES funding will support a public-private partnership that aims to provide free high-speed internet to 28,000 students learning at home.
By Katie Pyzyk , Kristin Musulin • Updated Sept. 30, 2020 -
HUD count likely underestimates homeless populations: GAO
The report highlights limitations of the Point-In-Time count and recommends that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development strengthen its oversight of the data collection process.
By Cailin Crowe • Aug. 19, 2020 -
Pilot shows early COVID-19 detection in city wastewater
The project in the City of Ashkelon, Israel, can pinpoint coronavirus infections by streets and neighborhoods, which could help mitigate spread and keep lockdowns localized.
By Chris Teale • Aug. 19, 2020 -
Gilbert, AZ gets creative with its digital strategy during COVID-19
The town has kicked its digital planning into high gear, tapping new tactics for routine operations like using augmented reality for building inspections and TikTok for information-sharing.
By Chris Teale • Aug. 18, 2020 -
Young entrepreneurs dream up IoT-powered scooter sanitization system
The patent-pending device from KirbyPod may offer a solution to the pandemic-related health risks currently plaguing shared mobility.
By Kristin Musulin • Aug. 13, 2020 -
Cities can't rely on autonomy to solve pedestrian safety: LADOT head
In an AV webinar hosted by Axios, Seleta Reynolds said cities must apply digital transformation to their infrastructure to complement the goals of the autonomous driving sector.
By Kristin Musulin • Aug. 12, 2020 -
Nevada permits Motional to test AVs without a driver
The "driverless milestone" will be followed by a "rigorous, self-imposed testing and assessment period" in the coming months, said Motional CEO Karl Iagnemma.
By Kristin Musulin • Updated Nov. 18, 2020 -
Companies shed 134K tech jobs in July
Of the top 10 metro areas for IT job postings, Washington, DC saw the biggest drop, followed by San Francisco and Los Angeles, according to CompTIA.
By Roberto Torres • Aug. 12, 2020 -
Lyft, Uber ordered to reclassify California drivers, putting all eyes on Prop 22
The ruling puts added pressure on a state ballot measure that would classify app-based drivers as independent contractors.
By Kate Tornone , Kristin Musulin • Updated Oct. 23, 2020 -
Census count to end Oct. 15
The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that the Trump administration can end counting early for the 2020 census, approving the suspension of a lower court decision that had extended the count deadline.
By Cailin Crowe • Updated Oct. 14, 2020 -
Uber focuses on delivery as pandemic erodes ride business
Uber Connect, a consumer-to-consumer delivery service, puts the tech company in competition with parcel carriers and USPS, though not on price.
By Emma Cosgrove • Aug. 10, 2020 -
NUMO tool evaluates micromobility data against policy goals
More than 50 partners convened to develop a recourse site that details appropriate ways to implement data-sharing requirements and use the data.
By Kristin Musulin • Aug. 10, 2020 -
Opinion
Reaping the benefits of the hyperconnected city
A city must unlock the full economic, social, environmental and business value of technology — through IoT, AI or mobile connectivity — to become one hyperconnected urban epicenter.
By Arnaud Legrand • Aug. 6, 2020 -
San Diego turns off smart streetlights ahead of surveillance ordinance vote
Mayor Kevin Faulconer said the city had "no choice" but to turn the controversial technology off, days after it offered police to run the Smart Streetlights program.
By Chris Teale • Updated Sept. 14, 2020 -
Group calls for national police accountability database
A report from The New Center proposes a comprehensive database with information on physical use of force, no-knock warrants and misconduct, in an effort to drive evidence-based policy changes.
By Kristin Musulin • Aug. 3, 2020