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The city modernized 14 lots and garages it owns with new touchless parking payment technology — eliminating gates, queuing and other features of traditional urban parking. Response so far is positive.
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The six-month project, aimed at advancing options for electrified delivery, offered new understanding of digital curb management, its opportunities — and whether parked vehicles are permitted users.
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A proposal before the Wake County school board would involve the county, sheriff’s office and a vendor in putting cameras in school zones and on bus stop-arms, potentially discouraging speeders while raising revenue.
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Cameras, sensors, data and "censors" will abound.
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Twenty-two cities have been selected to participate in the second Smart Cities Collaborative, organized by Transportation for America, with the focus on mobility.
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As cities grow smarter and more connected, what implications does that have for cybersecurity?
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Four cities and the state of Virginia were named as 2018 Smart Cities Readiness Challenge Grant winners.
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The city joins eight other jurisdictions vying for five grants that will support better livability, workability and sustainability.
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Global City Teams Challenge participants will focus on smart city solutions to common urban issues, with a strong eye toward developing comprehensive security systems to safeguard those projects.
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Five North American cities will be selected as Challenge Grant recipients by the Smart Cities Council, making them eligible for mentoring, products and services.
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The Smart and Secure Cities and Communities Challenge will focus on "designed-in cybersecurity" for smart city systems, ultimately providing more secure and resilient protection of citizen privacy.
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Even though Denver and Austin came up just short in the federal technology competition, both are moving forward with their ideas.
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Although the city didn’t win the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Smart City Challenge, CIO Scott Cardenas says Denver is committed to moving ahead with its plan.
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It's likely that other cities will gain a lot from the experiences of the winner of the Smart City Challenge.
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Systems connected: Transportation, energy, economic development, health care, inter-city collaboration
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The Ohio capital beat out 77 other cities, including techie San Francisco, with its plans to use technology to solve transportation problems.
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Columbus, Ohio, has won the Smart City Challenge, but the other cities who made it to the final round will get some help implementing their plans too.
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The city will get more than $100 million in government and private-sector money to implement high-tech, futuristic transportation ideas.
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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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Businesses in central Ohio would pitch in another $90 million if the city won the Smart City Challenge.
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U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx spoke to a crowd saying he doesn't know if the Midwestern city will win the grant, but lauded the progress it's already made.
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