FutureStructure News
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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.
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SponsoredThe passwordless future provides us a new hope to secure our systems.
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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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The company's new electric car has the same safety-oriented automated driving features as previous Tesla models, but is far cheaper.
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Although the subsidy is less than $10 a month, it could make a difference for nearly half of the homes with incomes less than $25,000 a year that currently lack high-speed Internet.
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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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Recent streetcar stumbles in Atlanta and Houston may offer lessons for cities.
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The state’s secretary of transportation, Stephanie Pollack, is a liberal in a conservative administration and an advocate in an administrative post. But she’s making it work.
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When the Michigan city began to pump drinking water from the Flint River, its water treatment plant wasn't capable of adding corrosion control treatment primarily due to financial restraints.
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The city may build an aerial gondola to shuttle people into and out of its oldest neighborhood.
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Riding the subway is a sign of a good life — according to pop culture, anyway.
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Emerging technology could mean many things for mobility. The U.S. Secretary of Transportation wants to make sure that technology serves to bring people together rather than push them apart.
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The mayor of Newark, N.J., is asking for help for what he claims is a infrastructure challenge stretching beyond his city's borders.
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Nearly 2,000 municipalities have entered public-private partnerships for all or part of their water supply systems.
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Long-term drought and water shortages in many parts of the U.S. are spurring interest in ways to reuse graywater -- the water that drains from sources such as showers, bathtubs and washing machines.
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Underutilized spaces present the chance to reconnect neighborhoods, offer new transportation options and encourage physical activity.
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The desalination plant would be built on 30 acres of district-owned property near San Juan Creek, about 2,500 feet from the beach north of Pacific Coast Highway.
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Thanks to a partnership between the tech giant and the Federal Railroad Administration, an alert from a smartphone will be one more reminder of the places where trains and cars should avoid meeting.
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The flood maps determine a property’s relationship to the established base-flood elevation of that area.
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The city has put in the first two of its planned network of 25 kiosks meant to help connect people to what's going on around them.
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The money will go toward low- or no-emission buses for public agencies.
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