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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15 billion barrels of recoverable oil is trapped in what's known as the Monterey Shale formation, which covers 1,750 square miles, roughly from Bakersfield to Fresno.
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The project will test the viability of harnessing the power of tides to harvest electricity.
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The Association of California Water Agencies issued a suite of far-reaching recommendations for improving management of groundwater basins throughout California.
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As the Highway Trust Fund runs low on cash, states come to the rescue with innovative funding initiatives
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An elevated viaduct near Madera will likely be one of the first major pieces of tangible construction for California's proposed high-speed rail line, with work potentially starting as early as next month.
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St. Louis Park, where new apartment and condo buildings sprout like weeds, may become home to a far more unusual development: a community powered by organic waste.
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Vehicles touted as a solution to climate change carry a hairspray-sized canister loaded with a chemical that significantly contributes to warming of the earth's climate.
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The US Navy believes it has finally worked out the solution to a problem that has intrigued scientists for decades: how to take seawater and use it as fuel.
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The occasion was a Clinton Global Initiative forum on public infrastructure focused on environmental sustainability and creative financing for public construction projects.
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A planned excavation of an old Alamogordo landfill has cleared a hurdle with the New Mexico Environmental Department.
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New incinerators appeal to cities looking to get rid of garbage and produce renewable power. But local leaders find it tough to weigh sparse evidence on health threats against public opposition.
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Connected cars that make you smile will help university researchers discover real applications for the Internet of Things.
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The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Environmental Protection Agency announced a joint initiative to improve access to clean water and wastewater infrastructure for U.S. communities along the Mexico border.
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Colorado's tough, new air pollution rules for the oil and gas industry were approved only a month ago, but they're already making an impact in Texas, where lawmakers and energy companies have long-resisted tightening air standards.
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The William and Cloy Codiga Resource Recovery Center will test new technologies intended to recover clean water, energy and materials from wastewater.
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A report from the Partnership for Policy Integrity says biomass plants can release 2.5 times more pollution than a coal plant.
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Countless connected devices are on the way - though you're probably already an Internet of Things user without even realizing it.
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Despite 200 years of development, train accidents are still a cause for concern in the rail industry, but now sensor technologies are helping make things safer.