Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:
Sensors distributed across the city will allow the collection of real-time data to improve services, says the council.
Using Internet of Things (IoT) sensors distributed around the city to provide data in real-time data, Hull City Council says it will be able to better control street lighting, refuse collection, parking and traffic congestion, with the goal of providing better services at a reduced cost.
The council is working with a local telecoms service provider, Connexin, which built on Cisco's Kinetic for Cities platform - a subscription-based software that lets city operators view and manage data from multiple sensors, and from a single panel.
Furqan Alamgir, founder of Connexin, told ZDNet: "We found that cities struggled to digitalise because they had lots of siloed systems. For example, they might have an LED management system and a traffic management system, but the two wouldn't link to each other.
"So, building on Cisco's platform, we built a central OS that normalises all the data into one language, so that all the sensors can speak to one another seamlessly."
The platform, called CityOS, pulls together and aggregates information from a range of different IoT sensors, before passing it on to city operators. This means the data is easier to visualise, and can then be used to better manage resources.
Councillor Daren Hale said: "The system pulls together information that currently sits within separate council computer systems that enable city-wide management of the city's public assets in real time."
(Score: 2) by Thexalon on Tuesday October 15 2019, @05:59PM (1 child)
An actually smart city is one that engages in a constant effort to reduce corruption in their government, including regular changeover of politicians and political parties as necessary to make that happen. Dumb cities don't do that, and it costs them big-time.
If you're talking about all this IoT stuff: I could imagine a scenario where these sensors and such reduce the need for humans going around town looking for problems. I'm not sure it would help that much: For example, your best source of information on refuse pickup would be some sort of reporting mechanism for the people who are doing the pickup to pass back info like "this neighborhood right here consistently has a lot of trash, and we should adjust for that". But maybe they know something I don't.
The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday October 16 2019, @01:09AM