Slides from PhD Marita Holst, OrganiCity/Botnia LL/CDT and PhD Anna Ståhlbröst, Botnia LL/Information Systems. Presented af CSC 2016 City panel: From European cross-border initiatives to local impact.
Slides from Prof Dr Pieter Ballon, Director Living Labs, iMinds and Professor, Vrije Universities, Brussels. Presented at CSC 2016, session 1: OASC 101 – getting hands-on with API, data models
This document discusses how cities can use open innovation and crowdsourcing to address challenges and foster innovation. It notes that cities face budget cuts and stagnation while citizens expect more transparency and innovation. Open innovation approaches like open data, crowdsourcing, challenges and crowdfunding can help tackle urban issues and shorten innovation timelines. Examples from Amsterdam show how an open innovation team used EU projects and platforms to crowdsource ideas and policy. Key lessons are to engage leadership, use incentives, be active on social media and comment/reward contributions. The future of open innovation policy involves demonstrating impact, linking with digital agendas, and sharing learning across a network of civic innovators.
Presentation done at the London Summit of the Leaders the 16th April 2014.
http://www.summitofleaders.co.uk/en/speakers-london-summit-of-leaders-11-12-april-2014
This document discusses FutureEverything's work on human-centered design and public engagement for smart cities. It outlines their activities in CityVerve, a large-scale UK smart city project, including: 1) Training on human-centered design methods to involve users in technology development; 2) Community forums and workshops to give citizens a voice in defining goals and issues; 3) Creative workshops and user testing to understand user needs and validate solutions; and 4) Art commissions that stimulate dialogue around technology and inform development. The overall aim is to introduce public participation, creativity, and human factors into smart city development.
Slides from PhD Marita Holst, OrganiCity/Botnia LL/CDT and PhD Anna Ståhlbröst, Botnia LL/Information Systems. Presented af CSC 2016 City panel: From European cross-border initiatives to local impact.
Slides from Prof Dr Pieter Ballon, Director Living Labs, iMinds and Professor, Vrije Universities, Brussels. Presented at CSC 2016, session 1: OASC 101 – getting hands-on with API, data models
This document discusses how cities can use open innovation and crowdsourcing to address challenges and foster innovation. It notes that cities face budget cuts and stagnation while citizens expect more transparency and innovation. Open innovation approaches like open data, crowdsourcing, challenges and crowdfunding can help tackle urban issues and shorten innovation timelines. Examples from Amsterdam show how an open innovation team used EU projects and platforms to crowdsource ideas and policy. Key lessons are to engage leadership, use incentives, be active on social media and comment/reward contributions. The future of open innovation policy involves demonstrating impact, linking with digital agendas, and sharing learning across a network of civic innovators.
Presentation done at the London Summit of the Leaders the 16th April 2014.
http://www.summitofleaders.co.uk/en/speakers-london-summit-of-leaders-11-12-april-2014
This document discusses FutureEverything's work on human-centered design and public engagement for smart cities. It outlines their activities in CityVerve, a large-scale UK smart city project, including: 1) Training on human-centered design methods to involve users in technology development; 2) Community forums and workshops to give citizens a voice in defining goals and issues; 3) Creative workshops and user testing to understand user needs and validate solutions; and 4) Art commissions that stimulate dialogue around technology and inform development. The overall aim is to introduce public participation, creativity, and human factors into smart city development.
This document introduces WeLive, a new concept for public administration based on citizen co-created mobile urban services. WeLive aims to transform current e-government approaches into a collaborative solution using web, technology, information, and mobility. It proposes an open ecosystem of tools to promote co-innovation and co-creation of personalized public services through public-private partnerships. WeLive will undergo two-phase pilots in four cities/regions across Europe to test exploitable public service applications and other assets.
Mark Bradshaw, Zastepca Burmistrza Bristolu, "Czy jestem smart w planowaniu p...Smart Metropolia
Bristol faces challenges of a growing population, inequality, and environmental issues but seeks to become a leading green and digital city through its smart city initiatives. The smart city program focuses on smart energy, transport, and data projects including smart metering, traffic control, and open data portals. The goal is to use innovative technology solutions to reduce the city's carbon emissions through greater efficiency, sustainability, and citizen engagement.
This document discusses several topics related to innovation in development policy and projects, including:
1. Whether policy making comes from the top-down or bottom-up; rethinking UNDP project design based on a global innovation meeting.
2. Emerging trends in development like new players, distributed intelligence, lower data collection costs, and rapid prototyping.
3. Applying lessons from Web 2.0 to citizen-driven energy innovations using gaming, feedback loops, and social interaction.
4. A "no-silos" approach to project planning involving research, outreach, social media, idea filtering, prototyping, and graduation.
FVH Open Up The city: 6 Smart Spaces V Final Pekka Koponenforumvirium
http://events.forumvirium.fi/openupthecity/
Forum Virium Helsinki
Fourth Annual Seminar of Forum Virium Helsinki, Thursday 11th March 2010.
The seminar theme was Open up the City - Open data, design, interfaces and innovation
Speakers Presentations
We are providing these presentations as a courtesy to seminar visitors. Please contact the speakers themselves for permissions to use the material.
Marc De Colvenaer - Vlaams Proeftuinplatformimec.archive
Fifthplay is a Belgian company focused on innovation and developing an internet-based service platform. Their goal is to improve quality of life through their "smart home" and "smart buildings" technologies. Specifically, their platform aims to help people live at home longer through health monitoring, live more energy efficiently, and have more efficient communication. Their technology aggregates services from partners through an internet-based e-core platform. They have a pilot project in Sint-Niklaas, Belgium testing their platform with 75 households and 25 local merchants. The platform is meant to allow real-life testing of new services and products through communities of users.
The document summarizes a meeting of the KSF Forum in Bordeaux from October 15-17, 2014 about using Internet of Things (IoT) technology to humanize and sensitize European cities. The meeting included presentations from city representatives and technology companies on defining a "sensitive city" where technology empowers citizens rather than just optimizing systems, and a panel discussion on enabling citizens through standards, connectivity, and public-private partnerships.
Presentation delivered Raj Mack, Head of Digital Birmingham, to a delegation of senior officials from the Government of Madhya Pradesh, India on 24 September 2015 in Birmingham.
Presentation given by Miguel Airas Antunes, Deloitte, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Mikael Börjeson - Future internet for Smarter Cities and User-centric Open I...FIA2010
The document discusses the concepts of smart cities and user-centric open innovation using living labs. It defines a smart city as one that uses information and communication technologies to efficiently address challenges related to development and resources through integrated solutions that satisfy citizen desires. Living labs are described as systems that facilitate efficient user involvement in co-creative need-finding and designing desirable products, services, and solutions to address development and resource issues. Examples provided include crowd desire prediction, smart traffic management, and smart energy management. The document concludes by noting opportunities for synergy between open user-centric innovation, smart cities, and experimental facilities.
Bable on Smart City Munich Meetup: How cities are leveraging innovative partn...Comsysto Reply GmbH
BABLE is a platform that provides tools and services to facilitate urban transformation and the implementation of smart city solutions; it connects cities and companies through standardized, vendor-neutral solution bundles and operates an online platform with use cases, products, and services. BABLE offers guidance for smart city implementation through direct exchange, structured information, and supporting services to help cities plan, procure, implement, and connect digital solutions.
Smart City technologies promise to transform urban government and infrastructure using 21st century digital tools. Despite their promise, Cities have been slow to adopt Smart City solutions.
This document provides the agenda for the Connected Smart Cities Conference 2016, which will take place in Brussels and feature discussions on smart city policy, business strategies, data and services, and standards. The agenda includes opening and closing plenaries, four parallel sessions on technology platforms, large-scale IoT pilots, living labs and open innovation, and common standards. It also briefly describes the Open & Agile Smart Cities initiative and conference organizers.
Smart Cities, Smart Citizens and the case for the CitySDKFrank Kresin
Presentation at Information Access in Smart Cities workshop in Amsterdam, 13/04/2014 - on how smart citizens should be the focus in smart cities, and what CitySDK does to make it possible. The presentation starts with some design rules for smarter cities, then introduces Waag Society, and quickly moves on to the Amsterdam Case for Open Data. Then the shortcomings of this approach are described, after which it introduces the City Service Development Kit - a set of bottom up, harmonized API's for software development that scales across cities and countries. Some examples are presented, and it gets back to the central thesis: design smart cities with the people, not for or against them.
1) The document outlines Seoul's initiatives to become a smart city through digital innovation and citizen engagement.
2) Key strategies include developing strong ICT infrastructure, open government, public-private partnerships, adopting technologies like IoT, big data and cloud computing, and sharing solutions globally.
3) Examples provided include the Open Data Plaza, an IoT pilot project, using transportation data to design improved late-night bus routes, and the Gaepo Digital Innovation Park which supports startups and conducts research.
London's population has grown to 8.6 million people, the highest since 1939, requiring significant investment in infrastructure such as housing, schools, and transport. The London Datastore makes city data available to support businesses and engages the public about smart cities. The Infrastructure Mapping Application coordinates infrastructure planning and investment decisions. The Tech Londoners program partners entrepreneurs with Londoners to solve city issues using technology, such as helping people manage chronic conditions. City Hall also works with Spacehive to crowdfund and support local ideas that give residents more input into the city's development.
Digital Innovations for Sustainable and Inclusive Development Soren Gigler
This presentation lays out a human-centered approach to the digital transformation. It analyses the conditions under which digital technologies can lead to enhancing the economic and human well-being of local and rural communities. The second section of the presentation provide 7 concrete case studies on how blockchain innovations can directly benefit citizens and poor communities in developing countries.
This document discusses open data initiatives in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants understand the importance of open data, many are unsure how to use it or what their role is in delivering open data. It then outlines reasons to promote open data, including economic gains and accountability. It discusses challenges faced by local governments, including legacy ICT focus and lack of understanding of open data. The document highlights open data catalyst projects in Amsterdam, including Code for Europe and Open Cities. It notes Amsterdam's strong open data ecosystem partners and the evolution of open data programs there from 2010 to today. It provides examples of best practices and observations about stimulating local open data programs.
The document discusses the City Service Development Kit (CitySDK), an open source platform that collects, annotates, links, and distributes city data as linked open data. The CitySDK aims to facilitate sharing best practices across cities by providing common service interfaces and guidelines. It describes several use cases where the CitySDK has helped make city data more accessible and interoperable for developers, researchers, citizens and other stakeholders. Examples of applications that have been built using CitySDK data and APIs are also mentioned.
This document discusses open data strategies in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants recognize the importance of open data, many do not understand specific government open data initiatives or their own role in delivering open data. It also discusses challenges that local governments face with open data, including legacy IT systems and a lack of understanding around open data. The document then outlines some strategies that have helped stimulate open data programs in Amsterdam, including EU projects that created civic apps, hackathons, and toolkits. It notes positive effects these projects have had, like increasing awareness, setting the local open data agenda, and introducing concepts like "commons" and open source tools. Overall, the document advocates for external financing and networking for open data agents and producing user
This document summarizes the history and services of Crowdpolicy, a company that develops digital systems for civic engagement. It notes that Crowdpolicy was founded in 2012 and has since developed methodologies and platforms to engage citizens in organizational operations through civictech, fintech, open innovation and crowdengagement solutions. The document outlines Crowdpolicy's role in various Greek crowdfunding laws and initiatives from 2010 to 2017. It also lists services Crowdpolicy provides, including open data/government consulting, civic apps, and smart city apps.
The Atos Worldgrid ecarga solution integrates the needs of all stakeholders involved in the electric vehicle value chain. It combines a complete and open set of services that are ready to roll now with the flexibility to embrace technological innovation and future market needs. The solution provides a future-proof architecture for managing electric vehicle charging points through its modular, service-oriented design and support for open standards and protocols. Atos Worldgrid has deep expertise in the energy sector and experience implementing electric vehicle charging solutions.
The document discusses the vision and mission statements of St. Francis Institute of Technology which focus on developing students into innovative leaders, competent engineers, and scholars who enhance knowledge through research. It also provides information on the governing council, academic advisory council, and screening committee which oversee the institute.
This document introduces WeLive, a new concept for public administration based on citizen co-created mobile urban services. WeLive aims to transform current e-government approaches into a collaborative solution using web, technology, information, and mobility. It proposes an open ecosystem of tools to promote co-innovation and co-creation of personalized public services through public-private partnerships. WeLive will undergo two-phase pilots in four cities/regions across Europe to test exploitable public service applications and other assets.
Mark Bradshaw, Zastepca Burmistrza Bristolu, "Czy jestem smart w planowaniu p...Smart Metropolia
Bristol faces challenges of a growing population, inequality, and environmental issues but seeks to become a leading green and digital city through its smart city initiatives. The smart city program focuses on smart energy, transport, and data projects including smart metering, traffic control, and open data portals. The goal is to use innovative technology solutions to reduce the city's carbon emissions through greater efficiency, sustainability, and citizen engagement.
This document discusses several topics related to innovation in development policy and projects, including:
1. Whether policy making comes from the top-down or bottom-up; rethinking UNDP project design based on a global innovation meeting.
2. Emerging trends in development like new players, distributed intelligence, lower data collection costs, and rapid prototyping.
3. Applying lessons from Web 2.0 to citizen-driven energy innovations using gaming, feedback loops, and social interaction.
4. A "no-silos" approach to project planning involving research, outreach, social media, idea filtering, prototyping, and graduation.
FVH Open Up The city: 6 Smart Spaces V Final Pekka Koponenforumvirium
http://events.forumvirium.fi/openupthecity/
Forum Virium Helsinki
Fourth Annual Seminar of Forum Virium Helsinki, Thursday 11th March 2010.
The seminar theme was Open up the City - Open data, design, interfaces and innovation
Speakers Presentations
We are providing these presentations as a courtesy to seminar visitors. Please contact the speakers themselves for permissions to use the material.
Marc De Colvenaer - Vlaams Proeftuinplatformimec.archive
Fifthplay is a Belgian company focused on innovation and developing an internet-based service platform. Their goal is to improve quality of life through their "smart home" and "smart buildings" technologies. Specifically, their platform aims to help people live at home longer through health monitoring, live more energy efficiently, and have more efficient communication. Their technology aggregates services from partners through an internet-based e-core platform. They have a pilot project in Sint-Niklaas, Belgium testing their platform with 75 households and 25 local merchants. The platform is meant to allow real-life testing of new services and products through communities of users.
The document summarizes a meeting of the KSF Forum in Bordeaux from October 15-17, 2014 about using Internet of Things (IoT) technology to humanize and sensitize European cities. The meeting included presentations from city representatives and technology companies on defining a "sensitive city" where technology empowers citizens rather than just optimizing systems, and a panel discussion on enabling citizens through standards, connectivity, and public-private partnerships.
Presentation delivered Raj Mack, Head of Digital Birmingham, to a delegation of senior officials from the Government of Madhya Pradesh, India on 24 September 2015 in Birmingham.
Presentation given by Miguel Airas Antunes, Deloitte, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Mikael Börjeson - Future internet for Smarter Cities and User-centric Open I...FIA2010
The document discusses the concepts of smart cities and user-centric open innovation using living labs. It defines a smart city as one that uses information and communication technologies to efficiently address challenges related to development and resources through integrated solutions that satisfy citizen desires. Living labs are described as systems that facilitate efficient user involvement in co-creative need-finding and designing desirable products, services, and solutions to address development and resource issues. Examples provided include crowd desire prediction, smart traffic management, and smart energy management. The document concludes by noting opportunities for synergy between open user-centric innovation, smart cities, and experimental facilities.
Bable on Smart City Munich Meetup: How cities are leveraging innovative partn...Comsysto Reply GmbH
BABLE is a platform that provides tools and services to facilitate urban transformation and the implementation of smart city solutions; it connects cities and companies through standardized, vendor-neutral solution bundles and operates an online platform with use cases, products, and services. BABLE offers guidance for smart city implementation through direct exchange, structured information, and supporting services to help cities plan, procure, implement, and connect digital solutions.
Smart City technologies promise to transform urban government and infrastructure using 21st century digital tools. Despite their promise, Cities have been slow to adopt Smart City solutions.
This document provides the agenda for the Connected Smart Cities Conference 2016, which will take place in Brussels and feature discussions on smart city policy, business strategies, data and services, and standards. The agenda includes opening and closing plenaries, four parallel sessions on technology platforms, large-scale IoT pilots, living labs and open innovation, and common standards. It also briefly describes the Open & Agile Smart Cities initiative and conference organizers.
Smart Cities, Smart Citizens and the case for the CitySDKFrank Kresin
Presentation at Information Access in Smart Cities workshop in Amsterdam, 13/04/2014 - on how smart citizens should be the focus in smart cities, and what CitySDK does to make it possible. The presentation starts with some design rules for smarter cities, then introduces Waag Society, and quickly moves on to the Amsterdam Case for Open Data. Then the shortcomings of this approach are described, after which it introduces the City Service Development Kit - a set of bottom up, harmonized API's for software development that scales across cities and countries. Some examples are presented, and it gets back to the central thesis: design smart cities with the people, not for or against them.
1) The document outlines Seoul's initiatives to become a smart city through digital innovation and citizen engagement.
2) Key strategies include developing strong ICT infrastructure, open government, public-private partnerships, adopting technologies like IoT, big data and cloud computing, and sharing solutions globally.
3) Examples provided include the Open Data Plaza, an IoT pilot project, using transportation data to design improved late-night bus routes, and the Gaepo Digital Innovation Park which supports startups and conducts research.
London's population has grown to 8.6 million people, the highest since 1939, requiring significant investment in infrastructure such as housing, schools, and transport. The London Datastore makes city data available to support businesses and engages the public about smart cities. The Infrastructure Mapping Application coordinates infrastructure planning and investment decisions. The Tech Londoners program partners entrepreneurs with Londoners to solve city issues using technology, such as helping people manage chronic conditions. City Hall also works with Spacehive to crowdfund and support local ideas that give residents more input into the city's development.
Digital Innovations for Sustainable and Inclusive Development Soren Gigler
This presentation lays out a human-centered approach to the digital transformation. It analyses the conditions under which digital technologies can lead to enhancing the economic and human well-being of local and rural communities. The second section of the presentation provide 7 concrete case studies on how blockchain innovations can directly benefit citizens and poor communities in developing countries.
This document discusses open data initiatives in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants understand the importance of open data, many are unsure how to use it or what their role is in delivering open data. It then outlines reasons to promote open data, including economic gains and accountability. It discusses challenges faced by local governments, including legacy ICT focus and lack of understanding of open data. The document highlights open data catalyst projects in Amsterdam, including Code for Europe and Open Cities. It notes Amsterdam's strong open data ecosystem partners and the evolution of open data programs there from 2010 to today. It provides examples of best practices and observations about stimulating local open data programs.
The document discusses the City Service Development Kit (CitySDK), an open source platform that collects, annotates, links, and distributes city data as linked open data. The CitySDK aims to facilitate sharing best practices across cities by providing common service interfaces and guidelines. It describes several use cases where the CitySDK has helped make city data more accessible and interoperable for developers, researchers, citizens and other stakeholders. Examples of applications that have been built using CitySDK data and APIs are also mentioned.
This document discusses open data strategies in Amsterdam. It notes that while civil servants recognize the importance of open data, many do not understand specific government open data initiatives or their own role in delivering open data. It also discusses challenges that local governments face with open data, including legacy IT systems and a lack of understanding around open data. The document then outlines some strategies that have helped stimulate open data programs in Amsterdam, including EU projects that created civic apps, hackathons, and toolkits. It notes positive effects these projects have had, like increasing awareness, setting the local open data agenda, and introducing concepts like "commons" and open source tools. Overall, the document advocates for external financing and networking for open data agents and producing user
This document summarizes the history and services of Crowdpolicy, a company that develops digital systems for civic engagement. It notes that Crowdpolicy was founded in 2012 and has since developed methodologies and platforms to engage citizens in organizational operations through civictech, fintech, open innovation and crowdengagement solutions. The document outlines Crowdpolicy's role in various Greek crowdfunding laws and initiatives from 2010 to 2017. It also lists services Crowdpolicy provides, including open data/government consulting, civic apps, and smart city apps.
The Atos Worldgrid ecarga solution integrates the needs of all stakeholders involved in the electric vehicle value chain. It combines a complete and open set of services that are ready to roll now with the flexibility to embrace technological innovation and future market needs. The solution provides a future-proof architecture for managing electric vehicle charging points through its modular, service-oriented design and support for open standards and protocols. Atos Worldgrid has deep expertise in the energy sector and experience implementing electric vehicle charging solutions.
The document discusses the vision and mission statements of St. Francis Institute of Technology which focus on developing students into innovative leaders, competent engineers, and scholars who enhance knowledge through research. It also provides information on the governing council, academic advisory council, and screening committee which oversee the institute.
Paul Shenton is an experienced IT professional with over 45 years of experience supporting mainframes, desktop PCs, and backup software like Symantec NetBackup. He has skills in hardware and software support, customer communication, and team leadership. He is punctual, honest, reliable, and hard working. He holds GCSE-level qualifications and was trained as a security officer from 1978-1982. He is currently available for both part-time and full-time IT work.
How Spark Enables the Internet of Things: Efficient Integration of Multiple ...sparktc
IBM researchers in Haifa, together with partners from the COSMOS EU-funded project, are using Spark to analyze the new wave of IoT data and solve problems in a way that is generic, integrated, and practical.
The document summarizes highlights from the 2016 Austin OpenStack Summit. It notes the summit had over 7,500 attendees, more than when it first started with just 75. It discusses various announcements and presentations including the launch of a certification effort, many IoT and telco applications, and major companies using OpenStack in production. Traction in the ISV space and a focus on user experience, manageability and scalability in the newest release were also mentioned.
The document discusses HP's involvement in network function virtualization (NFV) and their plans for Mobile World Congress 2015 in Barcelona. It outlines HP's OpenNFV program to support NFV transformation through an open reference architecture, NFV labs, and a partner program. It describes HP's numerous NFV partners and contributions to standards bodies like ETSI. It also provides details on HP's NFV demonstration plans for MWC2015, including showcasing virtualized mobile core network functions with partners.
Ubiwhere has just launched Volume 1 of the Annual Report 2016, an explanatory document of those that were the main achievements of the previous year, in particular events attendance, the development of projects and solutions, corporate social responsibility, quality policy and also the creation of strategic partnerships and spin-offs. The Annual Report now presented by the technologic company also presents one of its main triumphs of 2016 - the creation of new offices in the city center of Aveiro.
FIWARE for Smart Industry panel discussion, by Ulrich Ahle, CEO of the FIWARE Foundation.
Conference track. 1st FIWARE Summit, Málagada, Dec. 13-15, 2016.
Data Pioneers - Roland Haeve (Atos Nederland) - Big data in organisatiesMultiscope
This document discusses big data and its growth. It notes that in 2000, 2 exabytes of new data were produced, while in 2011 1.8 zettabytes of new data were produced. By 2020, data production is expected to grow 40 times to 35 zettabytes. The traditional 3-4 V's of big data (volume, velocity, variety, veracity) are expanding to 5-7 V's with the addition of viscosity, virality, and value. Examples of big data use cases include sensor data from CERN and jet engines, social media data from Twitter, and transactional data from Walmart. Atos provides big data analytics solutions and has implemented projects for smart metering,
This document discusses building an effective IoT system on OpenStack. It describes key IoT use cases and requirements, such as high data volume, velocity, and variety. The proposed architecture uses OpenStack services like Nova, Neutron, Swift, and Ceilometer to provide scalable infrastructure, networking, storage, and monitoring for IoT workloads. The document outlines how OpenStack can support broker integration, device management, flexible data stores, external connectivity, and data federation to realize a full-featured IoT platform. Future work involves proof-of-concept testing of the integrated architecture.
This document discusses smart city development in Beijing, China. It provides background on China's overall business environment and factors driving Beijing to become a smart city, including challenges like pollution, water scarcity, and traffic congestion. Beijing is working to develop a technology cluster around smart cities and has several smart city initiatives underway, including the Smart Haidian Project, which aims to create a sustainable city through technologies like smart transport and energy solutions. Private companies are also involved in smart city projects in Beijing. The document concludes with policy recommendations to support further smart city development.
Presentation for a group of employees of Centric, a large software consultancy company. It provides an illustration of how IoT is currently being developed in farming, agri-logistics and food consumption. It also addresses the technical and organizational challenges that have to be overcome to make IoT application in agri-food a success. Open platforms and software development and above all appropriate business models are key issues that have to be addressed. The new EU-project "Internet of Food and Farm 2020" will address these issues by fostering a collaborative IoT ecosystem to upscale the use of IoT in agri-food.
FiWARE: transforming smart cities into engines of growthJuanjo Hierro
FIWARE paves the way to innovation and helps to materialize a vision about Smart Cities that goes beyond just carrying out a more efficient management of city services: a vision where cities will transform into ICT enablers, supporting creation of innovative applications that will impact economic growth and well-being. This presentation elaborates on the vision of Smart Cities based on FIWARE and how the FIWARE ecosystem may help to develop standard data models for smart cities based on a "driven by implementation" approach. The adoption of some of the FIWARE NGSI standard is actually one of the principles adopted in the Open and Agile Smart Cities (OASC) initiative.
FIWARE: an open standard platform for smart citiesJuanjo Hierro
This presentation gives you an overview about how FIWARE can be used to materialize the concept of Smart Cities. FIWARE is not only focused in enabling a more efficient management of city services but it goes a step beyond as to help the transformation of cities into ICT platforms enabling the creation of innovative smart applications which ultimately will lead to local economy growth and the well-being of citizens.
Workers as Revolutionaries - Reflections on the Digital Agenda and Workforce ...Camden
A short presentation on digital strategy, revolutionary changes happening in the workforce and reflections on how to CIO's and IT organisations can rise to the challenge
This document summarizes Connexin's smart city platform and services. It discusses Connexin's approach of taking a horizontal view across city services to improve outcomes, reduce costs, and drive economic growth. The platform provides infrastructure, sensors, data integration, and insights to help cities better measure, monitor, and manage assets. It emphasizes collaboration across public, private, and education sectors to address challenges through an iterative process that engages citizens. Connexin aims to help cities operate as a single connected entity rather than isolated silos.
For Companies who want to build agile networks, the Digital Team Platform delivers Digital Leadership Capabilities which enables dynamic value creation trough the collective intelligence of cross-boundary interactions and cooperation.
Management Consulting Toolkit with Great Powerpoint PresentationsAurelien Domont, MBA
Go to www.slidebooks.com to Download and Reuse Now a Management Consulting Toolkit with Great Powerpoint Presentations | Created By ex-McKinsey & Deloitte Consultants.
Too often, banks calculate the value of software solutions on their time to market. The quicker the solution goes live, the better the ROI. But what banks keep missing, is the value of their time-to-decision. In many situations, the dreadful and highly political decision-making processes during the Request for Information (RFI) phase, takes longer than actually implementing the software. Therefore, time-to-market goes both ways.
Loop City Key Conclusions – Team TechTowntechplace
Medium sized cities can grow digital jobs through the smart city agenda in three main ways:
1) By driving demand for innovative smart city solutions and providing test beds for companies to trial new technologies in a real-world setting.
2) By facilitating collaboration between different stakeholders through multi-stakeholder planning and providing spaces for startups and corporations to innovate together.
3) By collecting and sharing open data, supporting digital education, and working with startups to develop new e-government services to serve as examples and disrupt traditional services.
IAB - 2012 année du développement de la pub sur mobileDenis Verloes
The document summarizes key trends in digital advertising in 2012, including the rise of mobile and video. Mobile growth was driven by increasing smartphone and tablet usage. Video growth was fueled by shifts to online viewing on mobile devices. Social media also grew in influence, with major acquisitions expanding its role across advertising and marketing. Real-time bidding continued to gain adoption as a buying method for digital ads.
Digital Transformation Strategy & Framework | By ex-McKinseyAurelien Domont, MBA
Go to www.slidebooks.com to Download and Reuse Now a Digital Transformation Strategy & Framework in Powerpoint | Created By ex-McKinsey & Deloitte Strategy Consultants.
The Digital Journey - A Local Government PerspectiveSocitm
This document discusses the digital journey for a local authority CIO. It outlines several technology disruptions like digital, big data, and the internet of things that are impacting local authorities. The CIO's role is shifting from tightly managing the ICT service to facilitating data sharing and being a community digital leader. Some principles for the CIO include standardizing systems, using open APIs and cloud architecture, and ensuring initiatives are customer-driven. The document cautions that the baseline for local government digital systems has yet to be established and suppliers do not fully recognize the implications of open-by-default approaches.
This document discusses digital transformation strategies for businesses. It covers several topics:
1. It outlines BCG's four-phase approach to digital transformation: education, clarification, acceleration, and scaling up projects. This helps companies integrate new technologies and prepare for future innovations.
2. It also discusses an IBM study that found customer experience should be the central focus of digital transformation, not just products or processes. Data and cognitive processes can be used to better understand customers and adapt interactions accordingly.
3. IBM's pillars for supporting digital transformation are also summarized: design thinking, platforms, academies, and factories to experiment, innovate and industrialize digital changes.
The document discusses the challenges cities face with rapid urbanization and overburdened infrastructure. It introduces the 360 Smart City Framework developed by Deloitte to help cities define goals and priorities through a discovery process before implementing smart city solutions. The framework addresses domains like transportation, environment, health, and public safety. The document also describes CitySynergy, a platform developed by Deloitte to integrate siloed city systems and data to improve decision-making and services through a centralized command center. Case studies show how the framework and platform have helped cities like Cascais improve functions like mobility, waste management, and service request resolution.
Plataformas colaborativas: ¿Cómo gestionar tus comunicaciones y proyectos con...IBM Digital Sales Colombia
Las nuevas plataformas “Enfocadas en Personas” ponen en su centro a sus empleados, integrando comunicaciones, conexiones a contenidos y proyectos con un enfoque laboral. Contar con un flujo de actividad personalizado permite a los empleados mantenerse al tanto de sus requerimientos, actualizaciones y notificaciones.
Empodera tu equipo a través de colaboración y redes sociales empresariales con IBM Connections y sus aplicaciones: XCC y Projexec.
Building a Digital Organization
Digitalization Trends & Opportunities
The Digital Electric Company of the Future
Questions
•
What kinds of cities do we want to live in tomorrow?
•
What if assumptions behind the projections about urbanization are wrong, and the current trend of urbanization is reversed by 2030 or 2050?
•
What if the global south achieved the same level of prosperity, wealth, and standard of living as the global north?
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This document provides an agenda and summaries from presentations at an event on smarter towns and cities. The agenda includes presentations on civic crowdfunding, wireless infrastructure in the City of London to enable smart cities applications, and digital engagement tools. Key points from the presentations include that civic crowdfunding has raised over £7 million for 342 community projects, the City of London's wireless concession will deliver a gigabit WiFi network and 400 small cells by 2019, and digital engagement platforms can effectively gather public input on development projects. The document concludes with information on upcoming events in the Smarter Cities series.
social media strategy - Business & IP Centre.pptxSimone Castello
A talk delivered to entrepreneurs as part of a grant programme. Find out more here: https://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/residents/libraries-leisure-culture/business-intellectual-property-centre-cambridgeshire
Company executives in every industry need to be involved in their company's digital transformation. It is imperative that the focus be on improved business outcomes - not just technology implementations.
This is not something to be delegated to IT. Instead c-level execs need to think through how their organization needs to be organized and incented to ensure teams work together to create new value and value delivery systems through these digital transformations.
Beyone Games: Using Mobile Payments to Jump-Start Customer EngagementCentric Consulting
Gaming developers have figured how to use in-app purchases to engage users and make money. Can business apps follow the same model to #ConquerAppFatigue?
In Beyond Games: Using Mobile Payments to Jump-Start Customer Engagement, hear Centric Consulting’s Digital and Mobile Practice Leader Jason Miller explain how mobile payments are emerging as a creative way to reach app-fatigued customers across industries.
You’ll learn:
• Five steps to get started with mobile payments, including how to sell it to your CEO
• Examples of how companies are using mobile payments for business apps
• Three things you can do today to decide if mobile payments are right for you
How a new national approach to IT procurement will help to drive innovation , interoperability and data sharing across the public sectors. Success would significantly boost public sector efforts to deliver channel shift, early intervention and workplace transformation.
After this lecture participants will:
understand the basics of project management and know the role of project manager,
understand principles of Project Cycle Management (PCM),
know how to use Logical Framework Approach (LFA) and key terms and definitions for proposals and reports,
understand key elements of project monitoring and evaluation (M&E) and its cycle within the project or program, and
learn about and use Active Implementation Frameworks (AIF).
Interoperable digital solutions and transformation of cities and communitiesOpen & Agile Smart Cities
The document discusses standards for smart cities and digital transformation. It addresses the current status and trends in standards, potential governance models for smart city standards, and the role of standards in enabling sustainable digital transformation of cities. It emphasizes that while standardization will take time due to the many organizations involved, cities can help drive priorities by focusing on interoperability and reusing standards.
What Cities and Communities Need - Mechanisms that take us from fragmented pi...Open & Agile Smart Cities
Presentation given by Martin Brynskov, OASC / Aarhus University, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium
The document discusses Japan's "Super City" initiative to promote smart cities. It provides background on Tak Nagumo, Executive Director of the Smart City Institute Japan, which aims to conduct research and training to advance smart cities. It then outlines Japan's "Society 5.0" vision for using technologies like AI, IoT and robotics to address social challenges. The "Super City" initiative seeks to create model smart cities by implementing multiple digital solutions across areas like healthcare, logistics, education and more.
The role of UNECE and the Key Performance Indicators for Smart and Sustainabl...Open & Agile Smart Cities
Presentation given by Agata Krause, UNECE, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Monique Calisti, Martel Innovate, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Thomas Kruse, City of Utrecht, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Jaime Ventura, Porto Digital, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Nikolay Tcholtev, Fraunhofer Fokus, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
This document discusses municipality data hubs and urban data platforms. It notes that municipalities are mostly in charge of owning and operating these platforms. The platforms bring together data from various sources like citizens, companies, government, and sensors. They aim to address issues like economic growth, public health, and more. While many envision supporting functions like apps and marketplaces, most platforms currently focus on basic data sharing. Significant potential remains to be unlocked through further development.
Bordeaux - Operating Urban Data Platforms based on Minimal Interoperability M...Open & Agile Smart Cities
Presentation given by Christophe Colinet, City of Bordeaux at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
European Commission perspective on the state-of-play in terms of standards fo...Open & Agile Smart Cities
Presentation given by Svetoslav Mihaylov, European Commission, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Hakima Chaouchi, Telekom Sud Paris, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
This document discusses standards for smart cities and the current state of the industry. It notes that data integration and interoperability standards are key to address fragmentation and lower costs. It also summarizes recent market research showing the smart cities market is growing but challenges remain around data regulations, integration, and citizens' privacy concerns. Emerging needs include integrated data lakes, analytics using external data, and data marketplaces to enable data sharing and economies. Overall, data integration standards are the most important challenge to enable cross-industry use cases and analytics.
Presentation given by Sarah Medjek, MyData Global, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Irina Shklovski, IT University of Copenhagen, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium.
Presentation given by Kimmo Karhu, City of Helsinki, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium
This document discusses privacy management for smart cities. It begins with an outline and background on the speaker. It then discusses privacy from a policy maker viewpoint and challenges with ecosystems like smart cities that involve multiple stakeholders and technologies. An example is given of cooperative intelligent transport systems. Governance challenges with new technologies like AI are also discussed. Finally, the document provides an overview of current standardization work on privacy, including ISO/IEC 27570 which provides privacy guidelines for smart cities ecosystems.
Presentation given by Jose A. Ondiviela, Microsoft, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium
From Reactive to Proactive City Driving trust through transparency and fair u...Open & Agile Smart Cities
Presentation given by Mikko Rusama, City of Helsinki, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium
Presentation given by Katja Bego, NESTA, at Open & Agile Smart Cities' annual Connected Smart Cities & Communities Conference 2020 on 23 January in Brussels, Belgium
Google Calendar is a versatile tool that allows users to manage their schedules and events effectively. With Google Calendar, you can create and organize calendars, set reminders for important events, and share your calendars with others. It also provides features like creating events, inviting attendees, and accessing your calendar from mobile devices. Additionally, Google Calendar allows you to embed calendars in websites or platforms like SlideShare, making it easier for others to view and interact with your schedules.
Building a Raspberry Pi Robot with Dot NET 8, Blazor and SignalR - Slides Onl...Peter Gallagher
In this session delivered at Leeds IoT, I talk about how you can control a 3D printed Robot Arm with a Raspberry Pi, .NET 8, Blazor and SignalR.
I also show how you can use a Unity app on an Meta Quest 3 to control the arm VR too.
You can find the GitHub repo and workshop instructions here;
https://bit.ly/dotnetrobotgithub
Implementing a Smart City through a stepwise approach
1. Implementing a Smart City through a
stepwise approach
Mikael Grannas
Mayor
Sipoo / Sibbo
20.1.2016
2. Innovation triangle in public sector
Citi-
zen
Service
Economy Technology
Works
Works, but ”vendor trap” and wrong
management structure
Doesn´t work
2
3. Five biggest challenges in becoming a
Smart City
• Culture
• Leadership
• Knowledge
• Processes
• Partners
3
4. Stepwise development path
Level of ambition
Time
Target
Service
Technology
New
target
1. Target ”lives” with time
2. The target is reached through several small lean steps
”Big Leap” takes too long, is
too expensive, and is based
on the old target
4
5. Example path: Homecare for elderly (v2)
Level of ambition
Time
Service
Technology
Indepen-
dent at
home
- Doubling client
time
- 2 years longer
at home 2020
Reporting out
of the office
Improving
voluntary work
Cooperation
with
companies
Activation
Mobile reporting
Voluntary work
portal
Activity
armbands
Work split,
donations
Increased
security
Care with
better impact
Easier living
Improving
social life
GPS
armband,
home sensors
Management
system
Social media
and interaction
tools
Robotics
5
6. Change path for a new management (v1)
Level of ambition
Time
Step in the development path
Value-based
result-
oriented
leadership
Better results through
service-mindedness,
transparency and
inventiveness
Change willingness
identified
Metrics identified and
measurable
Mgmt tools in use
Rewarding system
Communication
concept
Cross-dept info flows
identified and mapped
Mgmt impact
identified
Personnel special skills
identified and in use
Citizens involved in development
on a wide scale
Common office for
mgmt board
Projects visibleCommon goals
Leadership
promise
New mgmt board work
methodology
6
2015 2016 20182017