FutureStructure News
-
SponsoredState and local governments are accelerating technology modernization, and embracing cloud as a vital part of those efforts. In this Q&A, Celeste O’Dea, Oracle senior managing director of strategic programs for government and education, and William Sanders, Oracle director of strategic programs for government and education, discuss the ways in which a cloud platform can provide a solid foundation for enterprise adoption.
-
SponsoredThe passwordless future provides us a new hope to secure our systems.
-
Each winning city will receive an individualized Readiness Workshop and host of tech tools to help further its efforts toward becoming a smart city.
More Stories
-
City officials want to explore "smart cities" projects as a means of improving the overall quality of life, while trying to avoid technology for technology's sake.
-
California sued the federal government over the Trump administration’s decision to postpone indefinitely a decision to dramatically increase the penalties for violating federal fuel economy standards.
-
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. is testing "smart tires" on city-to-city mobility service Tesloops' semi-autonomous electric cars.
-
Production sites haven't been decided upon yet, but the electric vehicle architecture underpinning EVs is expected to come to North America.
-
Under Trump's loose regulations, automakers and technology companies will be asked to voluntarily submit safety assessments to the U.S. Department of Transportation — if they feel like it.
-
Tech companies stress the notion that the market today is strong at the mid-size and small city levels.
-
Cities still haven't recovered from the recession, and a new report concludes that they might instead be sliding into another fiscal contraction.
-
The changes come as part of the administration of President Donald Trump’s first formal statement on autonomous vehicles.
-
Predictions for their widespread adoption and the impacts they will have vary wildly. It will be up to government to sort out the issues.
-
Lawmakers began reviewing a series of amendments to alter the structure of the governing body that oversees the California Independent System Operator, a move that may surrender California’s control over its own electricity system.
-
Built at GM’s Orion Assembly plant in Michigan, the car incorporates all of the sensors, computing power and redundant systems needed to operate completely without a driver, even though the software to do so remains under development.
-
The Ohio Transportation Research Center is in the midst of researching technology that would allow the roads to speak to vehicles, telling them when to slow down or speed up.
-
Drones are playing a transformative role in post-hurricane operations in the Houston area, and the FAA had to give clearances quickly.
-
Royal Oak, Mich.-based company Tome is drawing up a plan to make bikes (or their accessories) smarter. This would allow them to talk to and communicate with the cars and trucks that occupy the streets.
-
The technology in essence places huge structures like buildings, refineries, and bridges on rolling casters that absorb the shocks from epic earthquakes.
-
A spokesman states that an international hacking campaign targeting energy companies has not penetrated the operating systems of the corporation that runs a good portion of California’s electricity grid.
-
Taxi companies are being presented problems from outdated business models and government regulations.
-
In the pilot project, 2,000 volunteers will pay a “mock tax on the number of miles they drive on Washington state roads, rather than on the amount of gas they use.”
Most Read