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Government CIO Outlook | Tuesday, December 27, 2022
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An urban area that uses technology and sensors to collect data for resource management is considered a smart city by technical definition.
FREMONT, CA: A "smart city" is where technology and sensors are utilized to collect data for resource management, which may not sound all that fascinating to the average person. The underlying technologies driving smart cities, such as AI and the IoT, are becoming understood, but many need to realize the scope of their cumulative impact in the future.
Smart city technologies could save expenses, boost safety, better protect the environment, and enhance the quality of life by making services more accessible and efficient and reducing inhabitants' overall carbon footprint.
Following is a discussion of the new and growing smart city technologies that will significantly enhance the functionality of metropolitan areas:
Smart Parking Spots: In urban regions with a lack of parking spaces, intelligent parking spots provide a possible solution to parking management issues. This innovation will enable citizens to reserve parking spots using a mobile application, decreasing the time spent hunting for parking spots, limiting urban traffic, reducing carbon footprint, and conserving gasoline.
Automated Order Fulfillment: The fulfillment of last-mile delivery, including e-commerce, food delivery, and medications, will be more automated. Expect smaller, automated robots to fill the void created by a shrinking labor pool and restricted capacity for delivery vehicles.
Water Conservation Technology: Using real-time weather data and the Internet of Things to optimize water use will become commonplace. Water conservation is essential to ensuring water availability for future generations, and we should maximize water conservation through technology.
Self-driving cars: Self-driving cars with complete autonomy will profoundly alter the operation of smart cities. Smart cities can automate everything from food to medicine and healthcare transportation with self-driving vehicles.
Alternative modes of transport: Smart cities and forms of transportation benefit from infrastructure data. Nowadays, people use alternative modes of transportation, including electric vehicles and e-bikes, and can better understand traffic patterns, trends, and impacts through artificial intelligence using 4G, 5G, and IoT sensors. As a result, commute times are shortened, inefficient idling is reduced, and climate impact is reduced.
Internet Mesh Nets: Internet access is necessary for daily living. The entire population of a smart city must be connected. In cities like New York, mesh networks make broadband accessible to everyone. The city's structures constitute a network of interconnected router nodes and internet exchange points. These systems are highly secure and decentralized, allowing them to sustain communication if the broader internet infrastructure fails.
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