Tech & Data: Page 51
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Virgin Hyperloop One study finds Missouri route feasible
The company found that a connection between Missouri cities St. Louis, Kansas City and Columbia would be commercially viable, safe and cheaper than driving.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 19, 2018 -
NYC names former White House official as Chief Analytics Officer
Kelly Jin, a policy advisor to the U.S. Chief Technology Officer in the Obama administration, will lead the city's data office and Open Data program.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 19, 2018 -
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 -
King County, WA to launch on-demand microtransit service
The Ride2 Park & Ride shuttles, which will begin servicing the area on Oct. 23, are operated by Chariot and Ford Smart Mobility.
By Kristin Musulin • Oct. 19, 2018 -
Sidewalk Labs pitches third-party data storage for Toronto project
Bringing in an independent, non-governmental third party could help assuage concerns that Sidewalk Labs will abuse its power, but opens questions about who would manage the data trust.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 18, 2018 -
DC launches digital taxi-tracking software
The platform allows for real-time tracking of taxis and limos in the District, in addition to showing the identification number of specific vehicles.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 18, 2018 -
Sponsored by Bluetooth
4 ways location services are enabling smart places of tomorrow, today
Bluetooth beacons and sensors are powering smart buildings around the world.
Oct. 16, 2018 -
Q&A
Johns Creek, GA gives residents easy data access with Amazon's Alexa
The city wants to "democratize data" by enabling residents to ask Alexa more than 200 questions regarding city operations, services and common inquiries.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 15, 2018 -
Arizona to open Institute for Automated Mobility
The IAM will include a testing track, several miles of real road with technology-neutral infrastructure, a simulation lab and a Traffic Incident Management project to apply public safety policies to AV tech.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 15, 2018 -
Houston Exponential announces $25M in commitments from 9 companies
The partners committed to the first round of the HX Venture Fund offer "diverse representation across several sectors," including energy, software development and real estate development.
By Kristin Musulin • Oct. 12, 2018 -
City Innovate unveils 81 government contracting opportunities for startups
The program pairs companies with governments for 16 weeks to test new tech ideas, with the goal of landing the firm a contract at the end of the session.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 12, 2018 -
Column
Dockless Digest: Cities craft new scooter and bike regulations
Louisville, KY; Orlando, FL; and San Antonio all approved new rules around the vehicles, while ofo's apparent worldwide retreat continued in the UK.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 12, 2018 -
10 cybersecurity experts to follow on Twitter
Often full of industry insider jokes, security researchers on Twitter offer something many other accounts don't have: a voice of dutiful skepticism.
By Samantha Schwartz • Oct. 12, 2018 -
Indeed job board sees massive growth in AV postings
The company said listings have grown by 668% since 2015, with the San Jose, CA metro area the most popular part of the country for jobs in the field.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 11, 2018 -
NYC's new Transit Tech Lab looks to private sector for subway solutions
Companies will be asked by the MTA to offer new ways to predict and lessen the impact of train delays and make buses run more efficiently.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 11, 2018 -
San Francisco transit tests earthquake alert system
The warning, part of a three-state system, gives people a few seconds headway to take cover, while slowing trains to prevent derailments.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 10, 2018 -
Microsoft partners with Singapore ride-hailing service Grab
The pair will collaborate in areas like machine learning and AI, as well as on other projects like deploying in-car entertainment and productivity.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 10, 2018 -
Q&A
To build a diverse workforce, cities must assimilate diverse talent
Anthony Amato of Workforce Opportunity Services shared his insights on where cities and companies fall short on diversity, and how workforces can be enhanced with proper training strategies.
By Kristin Musulin • Oct. 10, 2018 -
San Francisco transit to modernize fare payment system
The main improvements revolve around a mobile app and virtual payment options, as well as better integration with alternative modes like bike-share and paratransit.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 9, 2018 -
Opinion
Harnessing the power of video to create smart cities
Technologies like AI and machine learning may one day make cities smarter, but in the mean time municipalities should focus on proven, mature tech solutions, such as video surveillance systems.
By Scott Dunn • Oct. 9, 2018 -
Los Angeles to expand cybersecurity lab
Bolstered by a $3 million federal grant, the city will expand the capabilities of a public-private partnership to protect against cyberattacks.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 9, 2018 -
Ford patents system to steer AVs by phone
Cars could be controlled by tilting the phone in one direction, or with a virtual steering wheel on screen to be controlled by the user's finger.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 9, 2018 -
Q&A
How Coral Gables, FL uses smart tech to prepare for hurricane season
As Florida braces for Hurricane Michael, the city will rely on a "well-planned and engineered network" to maintain critical communications and boost resiliency.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 9, 2018 -
Deep Dive
On the smart city journey, everyone goes at their own pace
At Smart Cities Week in Washington, DC, leaders said that progress varies by jurisdiction, while it is key to change the conversation around innovation inside government.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 8, 2018 -
Sidewalk Labs advisor quits Toronto project over privacy concerns
Saadia Muzaffar said organizers showed "apathy and a lack of leadership regarding shaky public trust" over data and privacy concerns.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 8, 2018 -
Deep Dive
Why us? 6 months after ransomware attack Atlanta has no answers
It's possible a vulnerability was found during a random scan and a hacker said, "we got a live one here," according to a security advisor.
By Samantha Schwartz • Oct. 8, 2018