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
-
Producers keep pumping more oil, even as prices are falling to fresh 12-year lows every day. What's driving this?
-
Although the comparatively small flood projects popping up around the San Joaquin Valley won’t cure California’s drought, farmers are hoping to recoup some of their losses.
-
Although the alcohol-based fuel provides a decent energy return, it’s less efficient than regular fuel.
-
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power wants to eliminate coal as a means of producing electricity within the next 10 to 15 years.
-
Buffalo, N.Y., is the largest city in the country that Uber does not operate in because of a statewide restriction. Aside from NYC, the ride-sharing service is not permitted to operate due to concerns over passenger safety.
-
The Dutch-style intersection could inspire others as they seek to find ways to help pedestrians, cars and cyclists who share the public spaces.
-
Along with cutting solar use credits, the state may also take away subsidies for LED lighting and other low energy use products.
-
After a pilot program testing the efficacy of tablets in construction projects, the Texas DOT is considering a proposal to outfit all inspectors with the tablet computers.
-
State regulators have reneged a historical provision allowing farmers, ranchers and utilities to not keep track of water usage rates.
-
The Aliso Canyon methane leak in California is bad, but it's only a small portion of the methane leaked from the natural gas industry's sprawling pipeline and storage infrastructure.
-
When it comes to social media, research suggests transit agencies should engage their critics.
-
In recent years, officials have spent millions of dollars in creative engineering to strengthen the highway against landslides and heavy rain coming down the coastal mountains, and high surf crashing in from the ocean. Will it be enough?
-
The ships will be powered with biofuels made out of beef fat, municipal waste, palm oil, algae or camelina, a plant in the mustard family.
-
NASA and a group of corporate and academic partners are exploring a wide range of technologies that could make aircraft of the future far more fuel-efficient, including all-electric jet engines.
-
The American Society of Civil Engineers has released a report detailing infrastructure shortcomings in the nation's capital, noting particular problems with levees, public transit and roads.
-
The likelihood that the drought won’t end this year — and that climate change might usher in a drier future — has put a lot of attention on water storage.
-
The corporate exodus to office parks that began in the 1960s is reversing.
-
SpaceX’s contest for university students and independent engineering teams includes building functional, scale-model Hyperloop pods and launching them down a 1-mile track.