Analytics
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In Singapore’s IT department, innovation comes not only from in-house technical expertise, but through pushing those skills out to the rest of the enterprise and supporting innovation nationally.
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Ranchbot’s sensors use satellite technology to monitor tank levels, trends and operation, enabling customers to check water data on their phones or computers in real time.
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A new partnership is endowing state transportation departments in Ohio and Pennsylvania with multiple data points through which to better understand traffic on their roadways and corridors.
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Independent air monitors have detected a plume of cancer-causing benzene near homes and businesses outside a Valero Energy oil refinery in east Houston.
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A new data map shows which neighborhoods in San Francisco are the most impacted by pollution.
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From using data to drive efficiency in code enforcement to crowdsourcing the mapping of properties, cities across the country are making significant strides in the battle against blight.
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The Colorado Department of Transportation will use a self-driving Autonomous Impact Protection Vehicle (AIPV), as a barrier to protect highway workers.
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Akron, Ohio, will join colleagues from big cities to accept funding to develop a strategic plan for safely and effectively implementing the Internet of Things.
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The data will help the Transportation Authority plan the best ways to maintain and expand infrastructure.
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City leaders want drivers to report problems with a mobile app.
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A San Diego company introduced a tech platform that allows users to meld biometrics into the traditional user name/password process.
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Universities can perform the research and development, and cities can act as the testing places to determine the results.
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Thinking of going solar? Prices are approaching the cost of grid electricity, but only in some places — so far.
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Researchers have proposed drawing a parallel between the expected influx of UAS and birds flying in airspace in order to estimate how often collisions could happen.
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The satellite will map the hills and valleys of the ocean surface from orbit, 800 miles above the earth.
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The site was intended to provide information about streets and city boundaries, but the idea has grown to encompass several new layers of data.