Infrastructure
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National Grid is expected to install the devices for 121,000 customers in the city. They will enable people to track energy usage via a portal, and will immediately alert the utility to power outages.
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A new report from the Urban Institute outlines how many of the projects developed as part of the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, including technology work, have been slow to finish and deploy.
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Data center development, the subject of much public-sector conversation and policy, is predicted to expand, driven by the growth of AI. It's also expected to come at a cost and bring a selective benefit.
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The PUC had to change the rules after the state’s Independent Regulatory Review Commission claimed it lacked the legal authority to impose the limit and did not establish a compelling need for it.
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While there are major law enforcement benefits to automatic license plate readers, a lack of safeguards has brought major negative consequences that need to be addressed as this technology continues to spread.
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The telecommunications giant is one of many tech firms to offer its services to the winner of the competition.
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In a study done by the Hawaii Solar Energy Association, the island's solar grid-supply program is nearing the state’s cap, and the self-supply program is not yet an attractive option due to expensive batteries.
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Measure AA, which was approved by Californians June 7, ranks as the largest environmental measure ever approved in the Bay Area.
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A series of Southern California conferences will deal with management of municipal water networks, the supply of water to farmers, and water management for industry.
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Meet the people working to apply the principles of sustainability to poverty.
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Sacramento’s water utility still has a two-days-a-week restriction, but officials are considering changing the order.
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The robotic device will be tooling around in the city’s largest sewer pipes, collecting data that someday soon will help locate cracks and wear before they cause a major pipeline collapse.
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Missouri is driving the push to make state highway maps more accurate and easier to update.
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Many praise the internet as a democratizing force. But with online spaces replacing physical public squares as places for debate, what do we risk losing?
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Environmental officials are asking the federal government to force air pollution reductions from a coal-fired power plant in Pennsylvania.
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One of the first uses of Texas A&M University Transportation Institute’s new RELLIS campus will be a partnership with companies to test, design and develop more efficient intersections.
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The dream is for luxury buses with few stops and with electronic transponders to switch traffic signals in their favor as they fly down the road.
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Researchers are creating tools that synthesize and collect data so that planners can improve the quality of urban life.
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The wave sensors and cameras will be used to detect rip currents and to provide input into near real-time surf zone modeling of the currents to give warning of when they are the strongest so lake goers don't get stranded in the water.
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Can we predict where in the world will be water-stressed? Using a more fine-tuned model, researchers find there is no global water crisis, just local ones.
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According to some, the FAA could introduce laws limiting the height and speed at which drones can travel.
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