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Smart Cities Improving Lives With Data Usage

By
Apac CIOOutlook | Wednesday, May 04, 2022
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Smart cities are using accurate data and becoming tech-savvy. On data usage, they are improving the lives of people and the infrastructure of the cities.
FREMONT, CA: As the name implies, smart cities are tech-savvy and rely on data to make all choices and improve people's lives. People often assume smart cities are called so due to their facilities, buildings, and transportation. But the actual maxim behind the formation of smart cities is that they are dependent on ‘data’ and it’s their fuel power. Depending on the data means they have knowledge of technology and utilize it to make city goals whether for infrastructure, sustainability, public health & safety, and so on.
For planning city goals in different sectors smart cities are inclined towards some data trends. The following are those:
Creating Healthcare Environs
The pandemic has shown a crisis for medical service assurance. Therefore, places like Chicago are focusing on prevention programs for sickness and injuries. They can do this as they are gathering information related to program delivery methods and health outcomes. These data programs have procedures for privacy and concerns, data accuracy, and security framework.
Utilising IoT devices for collecting data
IoT devices are very popular nowadays as they have made people's lives easier. This way, it becomes smarter and the gathering of information becomes efficient. IoT data devices prove helpful in controlling cities, be it by improvising traffic patterns, reducing crime, or making things sustainable. This data program has high capacity storage which can measure and integrate structured or unstructured data.
Upgrading the Sustainability Level
Data can be used to sustain the life and health of citizens. Cities are already utilising data to achieve sustainability goals. Sensor data on traffic stress, transit demand, and traffic patterns are studied by municipal administrators in Mountain View, California, to come up with proposals for boosting walkability and public transport alternatives. Data is being used in Miami to help drive resiliency planning, record coastline changes, and identify energy use patterns.