FutureStructure Data
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Staffing shortages and the lasting shifts to commuter patterns has pumped the brakes on the recovery of transit ridership. Even as gas prices reach record highs across the country, ridership hasn’t seen a large uptick.
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Each winning city will receive an individualized Readiness Workshop and host of tech tools to help further its efforts toward becoming a smart city.
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Two projects in Georgia and New York are exploring new technologies which embed power generation, computing and more into paving, opening up this right-of-way space to accommodate solar panels and smart city sensors.
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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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Four citizen-driven innovation dominated projects were showcased at the a Smart Cities exhibition in Paris.
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The U.S. Department of Energy's Better Communities Alliance is aiming to get energy-related programs at the local level off the ground, faster and smarter.
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Strategists and scholars are still hotly debating how much credit Obama’s vaunted high-tech get-out-the-vote operation deserves for his victories.
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The predictive modeling tool was created by a public-private team of coders and data scientists and funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies' Innovation Team program.
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Waze will provide Greensboro, N.C., with real-time, anonymous incident and slow-down information directly from participating drivers, and the city will provide information on road closures and construction.
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Transit data has been standardized, but not for everyone.
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The map pulls together information on transit routes, stops and schedules.
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An update to a free-to-use tool from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency seeks to make it easier for local government to prepare for a changing future.
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The project is in its early stages, but it's promising big things for the future.
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Smart cities, where sensors help public workers, departments and building managers cut energy and water use, is expected to grow fast in the next decade.
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Mississippi's capital is showing that you don't have to be a Chicago or a New York to make good things happen.
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The $7 million project to replace nearly all of the 22,000 water meters in the city is set to begin in September.
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Mississippi's capital is showing that you don't have to be a Chicago or a New York to make good things happen.
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The new $500,000 software will allow the Augusta Public Transit system to keep better track of passengers and provide ridership data to continually improve the service.
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The license plate reader device checks scanned plates against the city's database of permit holders, specific to each of the 133 permit zones.
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Google’s efforts to highlight “areas of interest” reveals much about the development of Houston. It also says something about the way Google portrays urban life.
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