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Sonntag, 27.10.2024
Transforming Government since 2001

Tiredness from digital transformation is a real possibility, particularly if it remains a lofty goal rather than a set of specific initiatives that employees can take to improve their own work lives.

Any transformation is a difficult and time-consuming endeavor, and digital transformation is no exception. The process can be overwhelming for both the architects and the recipients of digital transformation initiatives, particularly when communication is ambiguous, objectives are misinterpreted, and end goals are not defined.

Weiterlesen: US: Key Strategies to Combat Digital Transformation Fatigue

The recent uptick of natural disasters in the Pacific Northwest is pushing researchers at Portland State University’s Digital City Testbed Center (DCTC) to explore ways to raise the public’s awareness about environmental threats. However, between communities that are distrustful of urban digital technologies and startups’ innovations that never gain traction, many tech-based solutions for increasing awareness of local and global problems are never deployed.

“The analogy that we've been drawing is with the COVID-19 vaccine,” DCTC Director Jonathan Fink said. “You have this miraculous technology, but it's not able to realize its potential because so many people have concerns about it and are reluctant to use it,” he said. “There's a similar issue in terms of climate change, particularly in cities where there are technologies that can help mitigate some of the effects.”

Weiterlesen: US: Oregon: Portland: Campus testbeds pilot smart city solutions to climate threats

Cities are changing the way they do business.

Governments in recent years have been pushing forward on digital transformation and service delivery modernization. It’s a vital part of broader smart city initiatives to better leverage data and technology to enhance the quality of life for urban residents.

Whether it’s regarding traffic and mobility, health and environmental wellness, crime and physical safety, or even economic development, smart city technologies are transforming the urban landscape as well as the government experience for constituents.

Weiterlesen: US: Enhancing Government Services While Strengthening Small Businesses

Following the 'first wave' of the smart cities movement, local leaders describe how they have largely shifted from a tech-first to a resident-first approach.

Hindsight is 20/20. When asked how the smart cities movement has changed in the past five years, many city leaders describe how an early exuberance for the potential of new smart city technologies may have distracted them from their primary concern: the residents, their perspectives and their needs.

Weiterlesen: US: Smart city evolution: How cities have stepped back from a 'tech arms race'

Smart City Water Inc., a drainage asset management software and service company for the municipal industry has developed and launched a new approach to identify drainage system vulnerabilities that can cause significant damage to homes and businesses. Their latest finding implements a new method to understand how the overland flow and sewer systems interact and predicts how the sewers become overloaded due to excess surface water entering the underground pipes in ways not previously accounted for. This new approach adds powerful tools to the Visual OTTHYMO (VO) hydraulic and hydrologic modelling platform.

Weiterlesen: US: Smart City Water Develops a New Approach to Reduce Urban Flooding

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