This document discusses applications of smart cities. It begins by defining smart cities as cities that collect and analyze real-world urban data through software, servers, networks, and devices. It then outlines several key application areas of smart cities, including smart economy, smart governance, smart mobility, smart environment, smart living, and smart people. Each application area is discussed in 1-2 paragraphs. The document also covers challenges of implementing internet of things technologies in smart cities and concludes that smart cities can improve quality of life through technologies while also facing challenges due to many stakeholders and social aspects.
Insights Success has compiled a list of “The 10 Most Promising Smart City Solution Providers, 2021”, which are reshaping the world with their cutting-edge solutions.
Internet of things adoption is expanding at phenomenal phase. The concept of IOT is to embed sensors and transceivers into different devices which can then transmits data to each other and to cloud through Internet, building analytics to comprehend this data and use this understanding to find solution for everyday issues. New domains for IOT are being explored and one such is to use IOT in urbanization of cities. In the context has evolved the term Smart Cities. There are already cities like Amsterdam, Barcelona, Stockholm, New York which has implemented several aspects of Smart Cities and nations like Singapore and India are moving in that direction. It is expected by 2025 there will be 26 global smart cities. So what is a smart city
Suniel Kumar- Smart Cities and Water ManagementWithTheBest
Water Resource management is critical for smart cities implementation. Smart water; resource management involves design & implementation of systems that will monitor & control the storage, flow and distribution in a efficient manner.
Various aspects of electronics - embedded systems - wireless technologies - protocols are key for designing the end nodes:
- Right type of sensors: flow - pressure - level.
- Microcontroller platforms - features - processing.
- Wireless technologies - GPRS/GSM - Zigbee - BLE - WiFi.
In this presentation, we will be touching upon on the technology options; design criteria for smart water; resource management.
The concepts can be extended for further applications in supply chain, asset tracking, energy management.
Suniel Kumar
government of India has launched "Smart Cities Mission" on 25th June 2015.
This is a presentation explaining the guidelines and procedure for this mission.
Insights Success has compiled a list of “The 10 Most Promising Smart City Solution Providers, 2021”, which are reshaping the world with their cutting-edge solutions.
Internet of things adoption is expanding at phenomenal phase. The concept of IOT is to embed sensors and transceivers into different devices which can then transmits data to each other and to cloud through Internet, building analytics to comprehend this data and use this understanding to find solution for everyday issues. New domains for IOT are being explored and one such is to use IOT in urbanization of cities. In the context has evolved the term Smart Cities. There are already cities like Amsterdam, Barcelona, Stockholm, New York which has implemented several aspects of Smart Cities and nations like Singapore and India are moving in that direction. It is expected by 2025 there will be 26 global smart cities. So what is a smart city
Suniel Kumar- Smart Cities and Water ManagementWithTheBest
Water Resource management is critical for smart cities implementation. Smart water; resource management involves design & implementation of systems that will monitor & control the storage, flow and distribution in a efficient manner.
Various aspects of electronics - embedded systems - wireless technologies - protocols are key for designing the end nodes:
- Right type of sensors: flow - pressure - level.
- Microcontroller platforms - features - processing.
- Wireless technologies - GPRS/GSM - Zigbee - BLE - WiFi.
In this presentation, we will be touching upon on the technology options; design criteria for smart water; resource management.
The concepts can be extended for further applications in supply chain, asset tracking, energy management.
Suniel Kumar
government of India has launched "Smart Cities Mission" on 25th June 2015.
This is a presentation explaining the guidelines and procedure for this mission.
This publication presents a compilation of extended abstracts of VTT’s recent research on smart cities. The global challenge is to reduce environmental impact and carbon footprint. At the same time societal development needs to be addressed and people well-being must be in focus. Pressure is growing to reduce our environmental impact and there is a parallel compelling need for business to stay globally competitive. Investment and expenditure needs for improving energy efficiency, modernizing infrastructure and creating high quality living environments are enormous. Smart sustainability as a dominating driver of technology development can also be seen in the R&D portfolio of VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland. A clear focus of our research for smart cities is sustainable city development, holistic energy systems, eco-efficient and intelligent buildings and districts as well as smart transport systems. In addition we focus on services, ICT and material technologies for improving smart city functions.
Presentation from ZTE at recent techUK event on local digital connectivity.
http://www.techuk.org/insights/meeting-notes/item/11522-enabling-the-digital-place-integrated-approach-to-provide-digital-connectivity
Smart cities global experiences and lessons for india at ASCI Hyderabad 25 ...Prakash Kumar
How Information and Communication technology is being used by cities in developed countries and what lessons can be drawn for cities in emerging countries.
A Quintessential smart city infrastructure framework for all stakeholdersJonathan L. Tan, M.B.A.
Smart City Infrastructure Framework provides guidance to open government data and infrastructure essentials for ICT \ Telecom, Energy \ Renewable Energy, Water \ Waste Water, Transportation, Education, Health and Government Services systems
I. Smart City Drivers
Smart City Definition
Smart City Elements
II. Smart City Infrastructure Frameworks
III. Technology Ecosystem
Stakeholders
ICT Essentials
OGD
ICT for Building Automation
Smart Water
Smart Energy
Smart Transportation
Smart Education
Smart Healthcare
Smart City Services
IV. Smart City Applications
V. Smart City Systems Infrastructure
Top SC Vendors
Smart cities are the wave of the future. IoT is also the wave of the future. Together, smart cities that incorporate and take advantage of IoT technology will be at the leading edge of new urban environments.
Smart Cities and Measurable Cities - a technological perspectiveSpeck&Tech
Speaker: ROBERTO MINERVA
Internet of Things is promising to be a set of technologies able to have a high impact on how people live, produce, modify and interact with the environment.
Such a transformation is driven by increasing technologies capabilities of sensors/actuators, communications, general purpose hardware, availability of software and programmability of devices.
The integration of so different technologies is a problem in itself and IoT is also trying to solve cogent issues of specific problem domains, such as e-health, transportation, manufacturing, and so on.
Smart cities stand on their own because the smartness requires integration of different technologies, processes and different administrative domains creating the needs to see the city as a large complex system. In addition to technological and problem domain specific challenges, there exist further challenges that fall in business, social and regulation realms. They can greatly impact the deployment and the success of IoT deployment within smart cities.
The speech aims is to provide a view on some major technologies challenges of IoT and to cover a few critical business and social issues that could hamper the large deployment of IoT systems within smart cities by providing some examples related to the creation of a future city that leverages its cultural heritage and specific needs as Venice.
Smart City il est passe, thanks to IoT it's time for Adaptive CitySebastian Jakubiak
How transform city into smart or even more friendly adaptive city ? Thanks to IoT/AoT, AI, machine learning, sensors and open data everyone can benefit from waste or protect natural environment. Business case for recycled glass included.
Smart city India , What is a Smart City?
Government Of India (GOI) Smart City Mission
Strategies for Smart Cities Success
SMART Solutions & A Unified Command & Control Center
The Smart City Services Platform (SCSP)
From 2020 to 2025, the annual growth rate of the global smart city market is 14.8%, reaching US$820.7 billion.
This is the result of a market survey conducted recently by market analysts.
The most interesting aspect of the report did not appear in the data, and the data hardly explained anything. Instead, we should see this in the logic of the ecosystem in which they are located. An ecosystem involving not only public administration and local authorities, but also citizens, utility companies, and technology suppliers (hardware and software) gives us a rough idea of what we expect in the next five years.
Let us understand the results of the research in more detail.
This publication presents a compilation of extended abstracts of VTT’s recent research on smart cities. The global challenge is to reduce environmental impact and carbon footprint. At the same time societal development needs to be addressed and people well-being must be in focus. Pressure is growing to reduce our environmental impact and there is a parallel compelling need for business to stay globally competitive. Investment and expenditure needs for improving energy efficiency, modernizing infrastructure and creating high quality living environments are enormous. Smart sustainability as a dominating driver of technology development can also be seen in the R&D portfolio of VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland. A clear focus of our research for smart cities is sustainable city development, holistic energy systems, eco-efficient and intelligent buildings and districts as well as smart transport systems. In addition we focus on services, ICT and material technologies for improving smart city functions.
Presentation from ZTE at recent techUK event on local digital connectivity.
http://www.techuk.org/insights/meeting-notes/item/11522-enabling-the-digital-place-integrated-approach-to-provide-digital-connectivity
Smart cities global experiences and lessons for india at ASCI Hyderabad 25 ...Prakash Kumar
How Information and Communication technology is being used by cities in developed countries and what lessons can be drawn for cities in emerging countries.
A Quintessential smart city infrastructure framework for all stakeholdersJonathan L. Tan, M.B.A.
Smart City Infrastructure Framework provides guidance to open government data and infrastructure essentials for ICT \ Telecom, Energy \ Renewable Energy, Water \ Waste Water, Transportation, Education, Health and Government Services systems
I. Smart City Drivers
Smart City Definition
Smart City Elements
II. Smart City Infrastructure Frameworks
III. Technology Ecosystem
Stakeholders
ICT Essentials
OGD
ICT for Building Automation
Smart Water
Smart Energy
Smart Transportation
Smart Education
Smart Healthcare
Smart City Services
IV. Smart City Applications
V. Smart City Systems Infrastructure
Top SC Vendors
Smart cities are the wave of the future. IoT is also the wave of the future. Together, smart cities that incorporate and take advantage of IoT technology will be at the leading edge of new urban environments.
Smart Cities and Measurable Cities - a technological perspectiveSpeck&Tech
Speaker: ROBERTO MINERVA
Internet of Things is promising to be a set of technologies able to have a high impact on how people live, produce, modify and interact with the environment.
Such a transformation is driven by increasing technologies capabilities of sensors/actuators, communications, general purpose hardware, availability of software and programmability of devices.
The integration of so different technologies is a problem in itself and IoT is also trying to solve cogent issues of specific problem domains, such as e-health, transportation, manufacturing, and so on.
Smart cities stand on their own because the smartness requires integration of different technologies, processes and different administrative domains creating the needs to see the city as a large complex system. In addition to technological and problem domain specific challenges, there exist further challenges that fall in business, social and regulation realms. They can greatly impact the deployment and the success of IoT deployment within smart cities.
The speech aims is to provide a view on some major technologies challenges of IoT and to cover a few critical business and social issues that could hamper the large deployment of IoT systems within smart cities by providing some examples related to the creation of a future city that leverages its cultural heritage and specific needs as Venice.
Smart City il est passe, thanks to IoT it's time for Adaptive CitySebastian Jakubiak
How transform city into smart or even more friendly adaptive city ? Thanks to IoT/AoT, AI, machine learning, sensors and open data everyone can benefit from waste or protect natural environment. Business case for recycled glass included.
Smart city India , What is a Smart City?
Government Of India (GOI) Smart City Mission
Strategies for Smart Cities Success
SMART Solutions & A Unified Command & Control Center
The Smart City Services Platform (SCSP)
From 2020 to 2025, the annual growth rate of the global smart city market is 14.8%, reaching US$820.7 billion.
This is the result of a market survey conducted recently by market analysts.
The most interesting aspect of the report did not appear in the data, and the data hardly explained anything. Instead, we should see this in the logic of the ecosystem in which they are located. An ecosystem involving not only public administration and local authorities, but also citizens, utility companies, and technology suppliers (hardware and software) gives us a rough idea of what we expect in the next five years.
Let us understand the results of the research in more detail.
Smart cities: Understanding policies, standards, applications and case studies IJECEIAES
This paper presents the integration of required basic facilities of living such as healthcare, education, and infrastructure for building the smart cities. The administrations of smart cities should have the smart governance, safety measures with cultural and social stimulus. Four building blocks of smart cities, i.e., people and environment, smart utilities, smart technology and smart administration are described in the present paper. The aim of this paper is to give a clearer perspective of the key decisions with spatial reference that may assume a key part in the plan of a smart city technique. Application of various technologies, for examples big data, artificial intelligence, machine learning, internet of things (IoT), cloud computing, block chain technology to the smart cities are discussed in this paper. Various challenges of smart cities such as information technology (IT) infrastructure, cost, privacy, security, efficiency, fossil fuel dependency and congested commutes with proposed solutions are also presented in this paper.
Since the development of advanced metering and digital technology, Smart City has been equipped based on things IOT in different electronic devices, and therefore smarter than before. The purpose of this paper is to carry out the concept of smart cities and their motivation and application of a comprehensive review. In addition, the survey describes the intelligent networking technology and smart cities and major components of urban functions. This also explains the major challenges and experiences around the world. Mukesh Kumawat | Mr. Durgesh Kumar | Dr. Garima Mathur ""IOT Based Smart Cities"" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-3 | Issue-3 , April 2019, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd23246.pdf
Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/engineering/electronics-and-communication-engineering/23246/iot-based-smart-cities/mukesh-kumawat
The white paper discusses the history, risks, advantages and disadvantages of Smart Cities with a focus on its economic benefits, cost of implementation and challenges. It includes a case study of Smart City development in Dubai.
Content:
– Executive Summary
– What is a Smart City?
– History
– Advantages
– Disadvantages
– Challenges and Keys to Successful Implementation
– Risks
– Economic Benefits
– Cost of Implementation
– Building Blocks
– Expert Opinion
– Case Study
– Future
– Conclusion
Analyzing Role of Big Data and IoT in Smart CitiesIJAEMSJORNAL
Big data and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies have evolved and expanded tremendously and hence play a major role in building feasible initiatives for smart city development. IoT and big data form a perfect blend in bringing an interesting and novel challenge to attain futuristic smart cities. These new challenges mainly focus on business and technology related issues that help smart cities to formulate their principles, vision, & requirements of smart city applications. In this paper, the role of big data and IoT technologies with respect to smart cities is analyzed. The benefits that smart cities will have from big data and IoT are also discussed. Various challenges faced by smart cities in general related to big data and IoT have also been described here. Moreover, the future statistics of IoT and big data with respect to smart cities is also deliberated.
The Contribution of Technologies in the Development of Smart Cities.Techugo
Technologies are driving the development of smart cities by enabling efficient infrastructure, data-driven decision-making, IoT connectivity, renewable energy solutions, and improved services for citizens, fostering sustainability and quality of life.
Similar to IRJET- Review on Applications Areas of Smart Cities (20)
Student information management system project report ii.pdfKamal Acharya
Our project explains about the student management. This project mainly explains the various actions related to student details. This project shows some ease in adding, editing and deleting the student details. It also provides a less time consuming process for viewing, adding, editing and deleting the marks of the students.
HEAP SORT ILLUSTRATED WITH HEAPIFY, BUILD HEAP FOR DYNAMIC ARRAYS.
Heap sort is a comparison-based sorting technique based on Binary Heap data structure. It is similar to the selection sort where we first find the minimum element and place the minimum element at the beginning. Repeat the same process for the remaining elements.
Immunizing Image Classifiers Against Localized Adversary Attacksgerogepatton
This paper addresses the vulnerability of deep learning models, particularly convolutional neural networks
(CNN)s, to adversarial attacks and presents a proactive training technique designed to counter them. We
introduce a novel volumization algorithm, which transforms 2D images into 3D volumetric representations.
When combined with 3D convolution and deep curriculum learning optimization (CLO), itsignificantly improves
the immunity of models against localized universal attacks by up to 40%. We evaluate our proposed approach
using contemporary CNN architectures and the modified Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR-10
and CIFAR-100) and ImageNet Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge (ILSVRC12) datasets, showcasing
accuracy improvements over previous techniques. The results indicate that the combination of the volumetric
input and curriculum learning holds significant promise for mitigating adversarial attacks without necessitating
adversary training.
Overview of the fundamental roles in Hydropower generation and the components involved in wider Electrical Engineering.
This paper presents the design and construction of hydroelectric dams from the hydrologist’s survey of the valley before construction, all aspects and involved disciplines, fluid dynamics, structural engineering, generation and mains frequency regulation to the very transmission of power through the network in the United Kingdom.
Author: Robbie Edward Sayers
Collaborators and co editors: Charlie Sims and Connor Healey.
(C) 2024 Robbie E. Sayers
Final project report on grocery store management system..pdfKamal Acharya
In today’s fast-changing business environment, it’s extremely important to be able to respond to client needs in the most effective and timely manner. If your customers wish to see your business online and have instant access to your products or services.
Online Grocery Store is an e-commerce website, which retails various grocery products. This project allows viewing various products available enables registered users to purchase desired products instantly using Paytm, UPI payment processor (Instant Pay) and also can place order by using Cash on Delivery (Pay Later) option. This project provides an easy access to Administrators and Managers to view orders placed using Pay Later and Instant Pay options.
In order to develop an e-commerce website, a number of Technologies must be studied and understood. These include multi-tiered architecture, server and client-side scripting techniques, implementation technologies, programming language (such as PHP, HTML, CSS, JavaScript) and MySQL relational databases. This is a project with the objective to develop a basic website where a consumer is provided with a shopping cart website and also to know about the technologies used to develop such a website.
This document will discuss each of the underlying technologies to create and implement an e- commerce website.
Hierarchical Digital Twin of a Naval Power SystemKerry Sado
A hierarchical digital twin of a Naval DC power system has been developed and experimentally verified. Similar to other state-of-the-art digital twins, this technology creates a digital replica of the physical system executed in real-time or faster, which can modify hardware controls. However, its advantage stems from distributing computational efforts by utilizing a hierarchical structure composed of lower-level digital twin blocks and a higher-level system digital twin. Each digital twin block is associated with a physical subsystem of the hardware and communicates with a singular system digital twin, which creates a system-level response. By extracting information from each level of the hierarchy, power system controls of the hardware were reconfigured autonomously. This hierarchical digital twin development offers several advantages over other digital twins, particularly in the field of naval power systems. The hierarchical structure allows for greater computational efficiency and scalability while the ability to autonomously reconfigure hardware controls offers increased flexibility and responsiveness. The hierarchical decomposition and models utilized were well aligned with the physical twin, as indicated by the maximum deviations between the developed digital twin hierarchy and the hardware.
Sachpazis:Terzaghi Bearing Capacity Estimation in simple terms with Calculati...Dr.Costas Sachpazis
Terzaghi's soil bearing capacity theory, developed by Karl Terzaghi, is a fundamental principle in geotechnical engineering used to determine the bearing capacity of shallow foundations. This theory provides a method to calculate the ultimate bearing capacity of soil, which is the maximum load per unit area that the soil can support without undergoing shear failure. The Calculation HTML Code included.
Forklift Classes Overview by Intella PartsIntella Parts
Discover the different forklift classes and their specific applications. Learn how to choose the right forklift for your needs to ensure safety, efficiency, and compliance in your operations.
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