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Smart City

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Business Capability Lifecycle Acquisition Lifecycle Model. Build a smart city. In 1997, a London academic published a startling vision on how humans will live in the future.

Build a smart city

Professor Michael Batty, a renowned urban planner, summed it up in one phrase: “The Computable City”. By 2050, he says, there will be a “massive convergence” of computers and communications technologies, with highways and “smart buildings” connected via the internet in new kinds of vast information infrastructures. “Everything around us,” he wrote, “will be some form of computer.” Professor Michael Batty was one of the first people to recognise a new concept – that of a “smart city”. His only mistake was underestimating just how quickly such a vision would become reality.

According to a UN World Urbanization Prospects Report in 2011, 3.6 billion – over half of the world’s population – already live in cities. Such rapid urbanisation places enormous pressure on transport networks, emergency services and utilities, some of which are already stretched to capacity. Smart cities in action Agility is key. AnjLab - software development team. MSDN Magazine: Government Special Issue 2013. AEE.

Smart Home

Smart city. Urban performance currently depends not only on the city's endowment of hard infrastructure ('physical capital'), but also, and increasingly so, on the availability and quality of knowledge communication and social infrastructure ('intellectual capital and social capital').

Smart city

The latter form of capital is decisive for urban competitiveness. It is against this background that the concept of the smart city has been introduced as a strategic device to encompass modern urban production factors in a common framework and to highlight the growing importance of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), social and environmental capital in profiling the competitiveness of cities.[1] The significance of these two assets - social and environmental capital - itself goes a long way to distinguish smart cities from their more technology-laden counterparts, drawing a clear line between them and what goes under the name of either digital or intelligent cities. Definition[edit] Policy context[edit] Dubai Smart Government Launches Several New Apps During Gitex. The new launches form part of the new Smart City initiative announced by Dubai’s ruler Sheikh Mohammed.

Dubai Smart Government Launches Several New Apps During Gitex

By Aarti Nagraj October 20, 2013 Dubai Smart Government (DSG) is planning to launch several new smartphone applications during the Gitex Technology Week 2013, starting from Sunday, October 20, in Dubai. Dubai government targets Smart City transformation. The government of Dubai is to engage in its largest ever public-private partnership initiative as it seeks to become a Smart City.

Dubai government targets Smart City transformation

Guy Daniels reports. The Prime Minister of Dubai, His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, has announced the launch of a new project aimed at transforming Dubai into a smart city built around open access to high-speed public wireless internet and near field communication. “As a smart city, government departments will be inter-connected to provide faster services and information to all citizens and guests,” Sheikh Mohammed announced last week. “We strive to create a new smart concept in running cities. Through experience, we have learned that there is no one-model-fits-all for development. At his stage, details are somewhat vague. City design: Transforming tomorrow. Imagine life for the citizen of the smart city: you awake in your sustainably built home, and take your morning shower in recycled industrial waste water, cost-efficiently heated overnight.

City design: Transforming tomorrow

Eating breakfast, you scan the flat screen, fed by maximum bandwidth internet, where the special, easy click local neighbourhood menu allows you to compare your daily energy use with other houses in the area, confirm your webcam appointment with your doctor, top up the balance of your all-purpose travelcard, order your groceries and leave messages for your child's teacher. You can even watch television on it. Outside, your electric car is waiting. On the edge of the central congestion zone, you park in a charging area and, paying with your travelcard, get into a three-wheeled utility vehicle which, via a network of special lanes and sensor-controlled pedestrianised areas, delivers you to another parking dock at your workplace. Using information. Mohammed sets up Higher Committee for Dubai Smart City. His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, has tasked Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince to oversee the implementation of the Dubai Smart City project.

Mohammed sets up Higher Committee for Dubai Smart City

He also ordered the setting up of a Higher Committee for the implementation of the Dubai Smart City project to be chaired by Mohammed bin Abdullah Al Gergawi, head of the Sheikh Mohammed Executive Office. The committee will include nine other members representing the public and private sectors. Sheikh Hamdan said that "Dubai is currently experiencing huge urban development associated with high ambitions and opportunities for future and welfare.

“The current generation of youth are lucky to be at the centre of such a transformation and development to efficiently and actively contribute to the process of building a better future. " The Dubai Crown Prince stressed Sheikh Mohammed’s keenness on empowering emiratis, especially the youth. mDubai MyID. Shaikh Mohammad announces Smart City project to transform Dubai. Dubai: His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, has announced a project to transform Dubai into a “Smart City”, linking the emirate’s government services and the public through the use of smart devices accessed freely using high-speed wireless internet connections.

Shaikh Mohammad announces Smart City project to transform Dubai

Shaikh Mohammad said the new integrated high-tech approach aims to use the latest advances in technology to create a model for providing government services that are easily accessible, quick and efficient using smart devices. Smart City’s main aim is to provide better connections and increase cooperation between the emirate and its residents. It promotes the use of government facilities using the largest possible number of smart applications. “As a smart city, government departments will be inter-connected to provide faster services and information to all citizens and guests.