The Smart Cities Project brought together local governments and academics over three years to develop and demonstrate new municipal e-services in the North Sea Region, funded partly by the European Union. It established partnerships between mainstream organizations and created several publications and online portals documenting the project results, including establishing baselines for e-services and an innovation network across the region.
A technical lecture on Information and Technology as enabler for Smart City at Institute of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers (IETE), Vadodara, Center
Talk presented at TILT, Tilburg University, Netherlands, 14th March 2019. Relates to the book: Cardullo, P., di Feliciantonio, C. and Kitchin, R. (eds) (2019, June, in press) The Right to the Smart City. Emerald.
Cities around the world are pursuing a smart cities agenda in which digital technologies are used to manage cities. In general, these initiatives are promoted and rolled-out by governments and corporations and enact various forms of top-down, technocratic governance and reproduce neoliberal governmentality. Despite calls for the smart city agenda to be more citizen-centric and bottom-up in nature, how this translates into policy and initiatives is still weakly articulated and practiced. Indeed, there is little meaningful engagement by key stakeholders with respect to rights, citizenship, social justice, commoning, civic participation, co-creation, ethics, and how the smart city might be productively reimagined and remade. This talk advocates for the Right to the Smart City and considers how to produce a genuinely humanizing smart urbanism, both with respect to setting out a normative vision for smart cities rooted in ideas of fairness, equity, care, democracy and the public good, and enacting this vision through citizen-centric tactics.
A technical lecture on Information and Technology as enabler for Smart City at Institute of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers (IETE), Vadodara, Center
Talk presented at TILT, Tilburg University, Netherlands, 14th March 2019. Relates to the book: Cardullo, P., di Feliciantonio, C. and Kitchin, R. (eds) (2019, June, in press) The Right to the Smart City. Emerald.
Cities around the world are pursuing a smart cities agenda in which digital technologies are used to manage cities. In general, these initiatives are promoted and rolled-out by governments and corporations and enact various forms of top-down, technocratic governance and reproduce neoliberal governmentality. Despite calls for the smart city agenda to be more citizen-centric and bottom-up in nature, how this translates into policy and initiatives is still weakly articulated and practiced. Indeed, there is little meaningful engagement by key stakeholders with respect to rights, citizenship, social justice, commoning, civic participation, co-creation, ethics, and how the smart city might be productively reimagined and remade. This talk advocates for the Right to the Smart City and considers how to produce a genuinely humanizing smart urbanism, both with respect to setting out a normative vision for smart cities rooted in ideas of fairness, equity, care, democracy and the public good, and enacting this vision through citizen-centric tactics.
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)
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
Elizabeth Kellar, president and CEO of the Center for State and Local Government and deputy executive director for ICMA, spoke on the topic of smart cities during the 2016 Global City Teams Challenge Tech Jam. These were the slides that accompanied her speech.
I developed this presentation as a member of the Union Square Redevelopment Civic Advisory Committee (CAC) and its Transportation and Infrastructure subcommittee. The presentation was made to fellow CAC members, members of the public, Somerville City Government staff, US2 (the Master Developer) staff, and other group representatives including Union Square Main Streets, Union Square Neighbors, and the Union United Coalition on 7-14-15. The purpose of the talk is to present underlying concepts, benefits, and options related to smart city infrastructure in the context of Union Square Somerville. My intent was to spark discussion and further consideration including the idea of making Union Square an urban innovation lab (to attract employers, improve civic life, and support public and private services and benefits) for the entire city and beyond.
Presentation installed at the Invisible Cities Graduate Symposium and Expo, held in Kitchener, Ontario on October 26th, 2013 through the University of Waterloo's Critical Media Lab. This presentation summarizes my research on smart city technology and the idea of using big data to better understand cities.
Smart City and Smart Government : Strategy, Model, and Cases of KoreaJong-Sung Hwang
Presentation file by Jong-Sung Hwang on Smart City and Smart Government. It was revised from an original presentation at FTTH New Zealand conference in May 2013. It explains different approaches to Smart City and the relationship between Smart City and Smart Government.
It’s the age of getting smart or smarter. Technology has been seeping into every sphere of our lives in the past few years. After our phones and televisions have gotten smarter, it’s time to envisage our cities to become smarter. Big Data and the Internet of Things (IoT) have a significant role to play in making our lives simpler by inter-connecting our scattered digital footprints to create an efficient and cohesive habitable unit for us. While the idea of a smart city has been floating around for some time now, its successful implementation needs to counter and conquer many roadblocks.
Read the full blog here: http://suyati.com/the-role-of-big-data-in-smart-cities/
Reach us at: achoudhury@suyati.com
Smart city platform for 21st century service deliveryTristan Wiggill
A presentation by Jaco Cromhout (Head: Specialised Solution Sales) at the Transport Forum SIG 2 June 2016 hosted by George Municipality. The theme for the event was: "Smart City" and the topic of the presentation was: "Smart City Platform for 21st Century Service Delivery"
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)
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
Elizabeth Kellar, president and CEO of the Center for State and Local Government and deputy executive director for ICMA, spoke on the topic of smart cities during the 2016 Global City Teams Challenge Tech Jam. These were the slides that accompanied her speech.
I developed this presentation as a member of the Union Square Redevelopment Civic Advisory Committee (CAC) and its Transportation and Infrastructure subcommittee. The presentation was made to fellow CAC members, members of the public, Somerville City Government staff, US2 (the Master Developer) staff, and other group representatives including Union Square Main Streets, Union Square Neighbors, and the Union United Coalition on 7-14-15. The purpose of the talk is to present underlying concepts, benefits, and options related to smart city infrastructure in the context of Union Square Somerville. My intent was to spark discussion and further consideration including the idea of making Union Square an urban innovation lab (to attract employers, improve civic life, and support public and private services and benefits) for the entire city and beyond.
Presentation installed at the Invisible Cities Graduate Symposium and Expo, held in Kitchener, Ontario on October 26th, 2013 through the University of Waterloo's Critical Media Lab. This presentation summarizes my research on smart city technology and the idea of using big data to better understand cities.
Smart City and Smart Government : Strategy, Model, and Cases of KoreaJong-Sung Hwang
Presentation file by Jong-Sung Hwang on Smart City and Smart Government. It was revised from an original presentation at FTTH New Zealand conference in May 2013. It explains different approaches to Smart City and the relationship between Smart City and Smart Government.
It’s the age of getting smart or smarter. Technology has been seeping into every sphere of our lives in the past few years. After our phones and televisions have gotten smarter, it’s time to envisage our cities to become smarter. Big Data and the Internet of Things (IoT) have a significant role to play in making our lives simpler by inter-connecting our scattered digital footprints to create an efficient and cohesive habitable unit for us. While the idea of a smart city has been floating around for some time now, its successful implementation needs to counter and conquer many roadblocks.
Read the full blog here: http://suyati.com/the-role-of-big-data-in-smart-cities/
Reach us at: achoudhury@suyati.com
Smart city platform for 21st century service deliveryTristan Wiggill
A presentation by Jaco Cromhout (Head: Specialised Solution Sales) at the Transport Forum SIG 2 June 2016 hosted by George Municipality. The theme for the event was: "Smart City" and the topic of the presentation was: "Smart City Platform for 21st Century Service Delivery"
Describing about digital payment in Indonesia and encourage all player how to execute digital payment and consumer how to use digital payment - by Heru Sutadi
This presentation from Form Virium Helsinki discusses and advocates harnessing the innovative capacities of entire communities to bring forth optimal city management. The focus is on overcoming the traditional challenges between public sector organizations and citizens.
CITY MEDIA is an independent foundation based in Lausanne (Switzerland). Its aim is to facilitate information access on towns, cities and regions of the world. It promotes and offers local representatives tools for expanding their official communication and getting involved in global development by simplifying information access and knowledge sharing. Their latest project is called [City].vi, a network of 68,000 video sites, each specific to a city.
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.
Rob Kitchin Smart Cities 08th March 2016 (Smart Dublin)Mainard Gallagher
Rob Kitchin is a Professor and ERC Advanced Investigator in the National Institute of Regional and Spatial Analysis at Maynooth University, for which he was director between 2002 and 2013. He is one of Ireland's leading social scientists and was the 2013 recipient of the Royal Irish Academy's Gold Medal for the Social Sciences and received the Association of American Geographers ‘Meridian Book Award’ for the outstanding book in the discipline in 2011.
About URBAN INNO
A significantly better linkage of actors within urban innovation ecosystems (public authorities, research organizations, industry as well as end-users respectively customers and citizens) is needed for a better use of innovation potentials. Public and private sectors recognize that there is especially a significant gap in the field of participation in innovation processes from people as citizens and as users and customers. Many smart solutions, technologies and services are not used widely because of the lack of knowledge and motivation or acceptance of end-users.
URBAN INNO focuses on maximizing innovation potentials of urban ecosystems through:
- Better linking actors in innovation systems by establishing and interlinking quadruple helix clusters and networks in the partner regions; and
- Developing and implementing new participatory methods and tools to engage end-users in innovation processes with the objective to have educated and motivated users.
URBAN INNO will be implemented in small-medium sized urban ecosystems in central Europe with strong replication potential due to the big number of similar-sized cities in the EU. Quadruple-helix networks will be established and regional/urban innovation action plans developed (setup of demo centres and testbeds for industry). In parallel, new participatory methods and tools will be developed and tested in pilot projects. Participative urban environments will substantially improve their innovation performance with the established innovation environment. A transnational cooperation strategy and platform will provide all interested regions the best available participatory tools and qualified facilitators and best practice will enable transfer and exchange of urban innovation models and practices throughout central Europe.
Our project is funded by the Interreg CENTRAL EUROPE Programme that encourages cooperation on shared challenges in central Europe. With 246 million Euro of funding from the European Regional Development Fund, the programme supports institutions to work together beyond borders to improve cities and regions in Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia.
A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation - I4CS2019Dirk Ahlers
A Smart City Ecosystem enabling Open Innovation. Dirk Ahlers, Leendert Wienhofen, Sobah Abbas Petersen, Mohsen Anvaari. 19th International Conference on Innovations for Community Services (I4CS 2019). Paper presentation, 20190625. Part of the +CityxChange project
Smart Cities - Smart(er) cities with geolocative technologiesSmart Cities Project
This guide is for managers at Local Authorities and city management, seeking new ways to deliver local services, and/or to give citizens a greater opportunity to interact with services, from reporting problems to finding the most appropriate information.
The Edinburgh and its surrounding area are well served by an efficient bus network. The City of Edinburgh Council (CEC) have worked with
the locally owned bus company (Lothian Buses) and a system supplier (INEO Systrans) to deliver real-time information to meet passengers’ needs, initially through bus-stop displays and then a website. This case study described how it was later extended to smartphone users through a cooperative and flexible approach with two individuals who had developed Apps for iPhone and Android phones.
This service is currently being upgraded in the light of experience over the first three years’ operation to include a better user interface, with more consideration for accessibility issues, better capacity and a more efficient and controlled route for accessing the data through smar tphones.
This is one of two case studies showing the different approaches taken by the City of Edinburgh Council (CEC) in developing content and services aimed at users of smartphones and other mobile devices. The second case study describes the approach taken by the Library and Information Services department of the City of Edinburgh Council to work with commercial App developers to reach the users of mobile devices as part of a wide-ranging social media and digital communication strategy.
Smart Cities Brief No.19
Smart Cities - Your library - supporting mobile users in edinburghSmart Cities Project
The Library and Information Services department of the City of Edinburgh Council has been extending its service provision for citizens and engaging with the wider community. This case study shows how
it has made innovative use of services and applications (Apps) for mobile devices. It makes it clear that support for mobile devices is
best seen in the context of a wide-ranging social media and digital communication strategy. This case study covers the relationship with the digital communications service providers and the suppliers of the library management suite. It also considers other content and services available to mobile devices including as eBooks and audio content.
This is one of two case studies showing the different approaches taken by the City of Edinburgh Council (CEC) in developing content and services aimed at users of smartphones and other mobile devices. A complementary case study describes the approach taken by Edinburgh’s Transport department which started by working with the locally owned bus company and a system supplier to deliver information to meet passengers’ needs, initially through bus stop displays and then through a website. This was extended to smartphone users through a cooperative and flexible approach to working with two individuals who had chosen to develop Apps for iPhone and Android phones.
Citizens and businesses have many different ways of contacting municipalities for services, and many municipalities allow customers to use email as a contact channel. However many municipalities often find that they have difficulties in managing the email channel, with customers contacting a range of official and unofficial email addresses, and have difficulties in measuring how successful/efficient/appropriate email is for service delivery and as a point of customer contact.
This report illustrates how the municipality of Groningen has transformed its email handling methods and processes in the context of a wider multi-channel strategy to deliver better and more effective services to its citizens.
This report provides an overview of best practices in the use and handling of email by municipalities, shares lessons from Groningen’s experience in transforming email handling through a case study, and gives an insight into the complexities and uses of the email channel. A glossary and links to further reading and resources are also included.
Smart Cities- Impact of web accessibility on e-service designSmart Cities Project
This report gives some background information about web accessibility
– an approach to designing web sites, e-applications and services so
that they work well for people with disabilities. It covers information about what accessibility means, what regulations there are in the different North Sea Region countries; suggests how to set up an accessibility project and provides guidelines and links to other resources.
This report discusses methods and approaches municipalities and governments can use for evaluating e-services, both prior to their design and implementation and to assess their success following deployment. It presents a new evaluation model for e-services that is developed from models currently used in government and the research community.
GIS systems enable the electronic management of spatial data and facilitate its visualisation; they are specialised forms of information systems that are conceived solely for use with spatial data. Their purpose is the collection, modelling, storage, manipulation, analysis, retrieval and presentation of geodata. During the Smart Cities Project we examined the geobased services that were being used by the project’s six municipal partners. This guide provides a detailed review of the systems that are being used by two of these partners – the City of Edinburgh Council in Scotland, and Kristiansand Kommune in Norway – who had the most advanced geobased infrastructures in the Smart Cities partnership.
ICTarchitecture - supporting service delivery in Smart CitiesSmart Cities Project
Smart Cities has produced two publications about I-architecture and its role in the development and support of e-services. This publication is written for municipal business managers, and managers and employees of ICT departments in local government. It complements the second, more technical
and theoretical architecture publication which discusses various ICT architecture concepts and the
value that an ICT architecture brings to an organisation.
Creating Smarter Cities - Lessons from the Smart Cites ProjectSmart Cities Project
Cities must be dedicated to meeting their demands and needs, and continuously improving the services they deliver. The smartest cities and towns in Europe are discovering how to use technology and redesign internal operational procedures to deliver more efficient and effective services to their customers.
Some municipalities may have to reengineer their business processes, some may choose to centralise their customer service activities. Sometimes they may have to think more strategically about the channels they use for customer interactions. Perhaps the city needs a strict structure, or architecture, for its information and communication systems.
Perhaps they may decide to collect, combine and analyse data about their customers to
reveal new insights into their needs and behaviours.
Whatever changes a municipality must make, customer-centricity – the true essence of
‘smart’ – comes down to people. Technology is a means to an end, but a clever new e-service
will all but fail if people don’t like it or won’t use it.
In this booklet we give you our whistle-stop tour of our main findings and conclusions. You
may already be an expert with many ideas and experience in this field. Or you may find our
ideas new, exciting and thought provoking. Wherever your municipality finds itself on the path
to customer-centricity we hope that this publication will inspire you on your journey and point
you to places – people and publications – where you can find out more.
Kortrijk beschikt met E-decision over een performant systeem voor beleidsvoorbereiding en notulering. De stad Kortrijk wenst de software verder te laten groeien en zoekt hiervoor samenwerking met andere steden en gemeenten.
Doorgedreven samenwerking in IT-aankopen leidt tot kostenbesparing en efficiëntie. Een 25-tal besturen sloten aan bij de raamcontracten van Kortrijk en Brugge. Tijd voor een terugblik en kijkje in de toekomst.
De steden Kortrijk, Brugge, Gent en Mechelen namen het voortouw om een beeldbank te maken.120 besturen schreven in op het initiatief. De beeldbank zal foto en bewegend beeld ontsluiten voor technische diensten, culturele diensten, archieven...
Kortrijk biedt lokale informatie aan via interactieve schermen of via I-points. Het I-points project brengt informatie op een intelligente en innovatieve manier via het aggregeren van informatie uit diverse bronnen. De software kan ook bruikbaar gemaakt worden op de websites van de streek.
Via MijnGemeente en de contactendatabank werken de gemeenten in de regio Kortrijk aan een glazen dossier voor elke burger. Gelokaliseerde dienstverlening en op maat aanbieden van diensten en informatie op basis van het profiel van de burger is slechts mogelijk door een goed draaiende contactendatabank en midware.
How Smart are you? A self assessment framework for Digital Cities.Smart Cities Project
In the smart Cities project, Memori wrote a framework paper describing the 'Smart Digital City' in 10 characteristics. Based on this framework paper a self assesmment tool was developed, allowing the Smart cities project partners to evaluate their developments in the digitization of their services. in this presentation Eric Goubin will introduce the framework for smart digital cities, and Elke Van Soom will present the self assessment tool and its first results.
Europe wants to go local. We’re waiting for them in the Citadel. Smart Cities Project
The Flemish Government and a host of European local government partner organisations worked together by identifying the top things that national and EU decision makers can do to better support local eGovernment. The ‘Malmo Vision’ was still hardly translated down to the on-the-ground, local level. The Citadel Statement addressed this short-coming by better understanding why local communities are finding it challenging to implement eGovernment in an innovative, cost-effective and efficient manner. In the short period the Statement got a strong support from the main organizations of municipalities. A number of concrete projects were launched in the spirit of the Statement. And we can also notice a stronger commitment from the EU itself to support Local Egovernment. But there’s still a lot to do.
a Scottish perspective on the challenges faced by the public sector and reform proposed to meet these challenges. In particular the presentation will assess if collaboration, shared services, new ways of working and technology can support better outcomes for customers and citizens.
The systematic improvement of public services of national, regional and local governments is now 10 to 15 years underway. Alex Lambregts participated in this process for 8 years and would like to share some personal reflections with the audience regarding the do's and the don’ts. He hopes this will encourage the attendees to comment and to share their reflections on the development of public services in their own countries; not to criticize but to learn and inspire.
Remote sensing and monitoring are changing the mining industry for the better. These are providing innovative solutions to long-standing challenges. Those related to exploration, extraction, and overall environmental management by mining technology companies Odisha. These technologies make use of satellite imaging, aerial photography and sensors to collect data that might be inaccessible or from hazardous locations. With the use of this technology, mining operations are becoming increasingly efficient. Let us gain more insight into the key aspects associated with remote sensing and monitoring when it comes to mining.
Enterprise Excellence is Inclusive Excellence.pdfKaiNexus
Enterprise excellence and inclusive excellence are closely linked, and real-world challenges have shown that both are essential to the success of any organization. To achieve enterprise excellence, organizations must focus on improving their operations and processes while creating an inclusive environment that engages everyone. In this interactive session, the facilitator will highlight commonly established business practices and how they limit our ability to engage everyone every day. More importantly, though, participants will likely gain increased awareness of what we can do differently to maximize enterprise excellence through deliberate inclusion.
What is Enterprise Excellence?
Enterprise Excellence is a holistic approach that's aimed at achieving world-class performance across all aspects of the organization.
What might I learn?
A way to engage all in creating Inclusive Excellence. Lessons from the US military and their parallels to the story of Harry Potter. How belt systems and CI teams can destroy inclusive practices. How leadership language invites people to the party. There are three things leaders can do to engage everyone every day: maximizing psychological safety to create environments where folks learn, contribute, and challenge the status quo.
Who might benefit? Anyone and everyone leading folks from the shop floor to top floor.
Dr. William Harvey is a seasoned Operations Leader with extensive experience in chemical processing, manufacturing, and operations management. At Michelman, he currently oversees multiple sites, leading teams in strategic planning and coaching/practicing continuous improvement. William is set to start his eighth year of teaching at the University of Cincinnati where he teaches marketing, finance, and management. William holds various certifications in change management, quality, leadership, operational excellence, team building, and DiSC, among others.
Unveiling the Secrets How Does Generative AI Work.pdfSam H
At its core, generative artificial intelligence relies on the concept of generative models, which serve as engines that churn out entirely new data resembling their training data. It is like a sculptor who has studied so many forms found in nature and then uses this knowledge to create sculptures from his imagination that have never been seen before anywhere else. If taken to cyberspace, gans work almost the same way.
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What is the TDS Return Filing Due Date for FY 2024-25.pdfseoforlegalpillers
It is crucial for the taxpayers to understand about the TDS Return Filing Due Date, so that they can fulfill your TDS obligations efficiently. Taxpayers can avoid penalties by sticking to the deadlines and by accurate filing of TDS. Timely filing of TDS will make sure about the availability of tax credits. You can also seek the professional guidance of experts like Legal Pillers for timely filing of the TDS Return.
Discover the innovative and creative projects that highlight my journey throu...dylandmeas
Discover the innovative and creative projects that highlight my journey through Full Sail University. Below, you’ll find a collection of my work showcasing my skills and expertise in digital marketing, event planning, and media production.
RMD24 | Debunking the non-endemic revenue myth Marvin Vacquier Droop | First ...BBPMedia1
Marvin neemt je in deze presentatie mee in de voordelen van non-endemic advertising op retail media netwerken. Hij brengt ook de uitdagingen in beeld die de markt op dit moment heeft op het gebied van retail media voor niet-leveranciers.
Retail media wordt gezien als het nieuwe advertising-medium en ook mediabureaus richten massaal retail media-afdelingen op. Merken die niet in de betreffende winkel liggen staan ook nog niet in de rij om op de retail media netwerken te adverteren. Marvin belicht de uitdagingen die er zijn om echt aansluiting te vinden op die markt van non-endemic advertising.
Putting the SPARK into Virtual Training.pptxCynthia Clay
This 60-minute webinar, sponsored by Adobe, was delivered for the Training Mag Network. It explored the five elements of SPARK: Storytelling, Purpose, Action, Relationships, and Kudos. Knowing how to tell a well-structured story is key to building long-term memory. Stating a clear purpose that doesn't take away from the discovery learning process is critical. Ensuring that people move from theory to practical application is imperative. Creating strong social learning is the key to commitment and engagement. Validating and affirming participants' comments is the way to create a positive learning environment.
What are the main advantages of using HR recruiter services.pdfHumanResourceDimensi1
HR recruiter services offer top talents to companies according to their specific needs. They handle all recruitment tasks from job posting to onboarding and help companies concentrate on their business growth. With their expertise and years of experience, they streamline the hiring process and save time and resources for the company.
Cracking the Workplace Discipline Code Main.pptxWorkforce Group
Cultivating and maintaining discipline within teams is a critical differentiator for successful organisations.
Forward-thinking leaders and business managers understand the impact that discipline has on organisational success. A disciplined workforce operates with clarity, focus, and a shared understanding of expectations, ultimately driving better results, optimising productivity, and facilitating seamless collaboration.
Although discipline is not a one-size-fits-all approach, it can help create a work environment that encourages personal growth and accountability rather than solely relying on punitive measures.
In this deck, you will learn the significance of workplace discipline for organisational success. You’ll also learn
• Four (4) workplace discipline methods you should consider
• The best and most practical approach to implementing workplace discipline.
• Three (3) key tips to maintain a disciplined workplace.
1. Results of the Smart Cities Project
Jeroen Thibaut - Leiedal
Karlstad, 8 December 2011
2. About
• Smart Cities is partly funded by the Interreg IVB
North Sea Region Programme of the European
Union - “Smarter Cities, Smarter Services.
Creating an innovation network”
• Bringing local governments and academic
partners together, the Smart Cities project has
spent three years developing and demonstrating
a new baseline for municipal e-services in the
North Sea Region