Great news!  The Smart+Connected Communities Institute won the Stevie American Business Award for New Services of the Year.

 

"The following products and services, departments, teams, and  individuals have been recognized in The 2011 American Business Awards.

People's Choice Stevie Awards for Favorite New ProductsIn  addition to peer-review judging, every new product or service nominated  in The American Business Awards was automatically included in voting  for the People's Choice Stevie Awards for Favorite New Products.  More  than 140,000 votes were cast by the general public from May 12 through  June 3, and the winners were honored at the ABA awards banquet in New  York on June 20.  Congratulations to the 2011 People's Choice Stevie  Awards for Favorite New Products winners.

Check out the winners. "

 

 

 

New Product or Service of the Year - Services
STEVIE AWARD WINNER:
Cisco, San Jose, CA: Cisco Smart+Connected Communities Institute

 

FINALISTS:
American Express Business Travel, New York, NY: American Express Business Travel's mobileXtend
Assurant Solutions, Atlanta, GA: Assurant Solutions e-Gift Card
HR 360, Inc., Stamford, CT: HR 360, Inc.'s Web Site
ILoveVelvet, New York, NY: ILoveVelvet’s The Velvet Suite
PetRays Veterinary Telemedicine Consultants, The Woodlands, TX: PetRays Image Vault
PHH Arval, Sparks, MD: PHH Arval's Center for Transportation Safety
Volt Consulting Group, New York, NY: Volt Consulting Group Amplify™ Methodology

737 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: s+cc, award, smart+connected_communities_institute, stevie_american_business_award

The Smart+Connected Communities Institute launched a year ago to the public to foster new thinking and collaborate about the needs of sustainable urban development.

 

Together with our members and partners we have made some great accomplishments.

 

 

 

Looking Forward...

 

Recently, I launched a survey to engage the members on content needs, collaboration styles for this audience and how we can drive this community to the next level.  We will continue to enhance the content and site usability as well as work on the collaboration. The survey is providing great insight to the collaboration experience and styles of this diverse audience.

 

Through the survey and conversations with the community members, there seems to be three hot content topics- city examples, financing models and policy.  In response, we are in the process of creating a global city E-book that will capture city examples and implementation details.

 

Help me help you. Please contact me directly with your ideas, jillkeefer@smartconnectedcommunities.org or comment directly to this blog post.

 

If you haven't noticed, there are some great resources in the community. We have a diverse audience segment who can be resources for your upcoming projects. If you have a question, let me know, and I will help connect you to the right people in the community.  Here are some highlights of what is to come but stay connected for details.

 

  • Adding Partners
  • Creation of Special Interest Groups- community members and partners
  • Providing Education and Training courses
  • Creation of the City/ICT E-Book
  • Providing Live Streaming of Major Events

 

Cheers to another good year!

796 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: collaboration, content, smart+connected_communities_institute, usability

As the world's supply of IPv4 addresses runs out, there is a need to transition to a new version of Internet Protocol technology: IPv6.  As an industry-wide “test drive” of this new technology, World IPv6 Day started today. Major technology organizations- AT&T, Cisco, Facebook, Google, Yahoo and more - will offer content over IPv6 for a 24-hour testing period.

 

Now that IP technology supports the Internet of Things, smart-phones, tablets, sensors on bridges and roadways, security cameras, IP phones and all other Internet-connected devices need an IP address.  IPv6 provides the additional addresses for this next phase of the Internet, which shifts the world from an Internet of People and Places to an Internet of Things.

 

As people go about their daily lives, they create data that can be captured by wireless sensor networks connected to the Internet.  This provides an interesting opportunity for smart connected cities as they use these sensors to collect real-time data on transportation, public safety and security, buildings and energy consumption, environmental policy and waste management.

 

Many projects are underway using sensors to collect data. Cisco's Planetary Skin provides real-time information about the planet, which allows a proactive response to climate change and natural disasters. Other possibilities include placement of sensors across infrastructure, such as bridges and tunnels, allowing city planners to monitor infrastructure usage and stay abreast of developing problems. Four companies recently came together to enable a solution showcasing how sensors can work specifically with city parking, a large challenge for urban dwellers and city managers and planners.

 

Smart Parking Solution Project Summary

 

While many firms are just starting to explore IPv4/IPv6 dual stacking, Pachube, Worldsensing, Cisco and AT& T are testing and implementing future technologies using IPv6.  The four firms collaborated on a pilot project using the IPv6 protocol to connect sensors that report the availability of parking spaces to citizens and city management officials in a major European city. Sensors from Worldsensing send the data to a Pachube platform, and AT&T provides redundant IPv6 Internet services to both companies. Cisco is providing networking equipment to enable this showcase.

 

Providing access to sensor information in public environments is quickly becoming the foundation for creating urban landscapes that adapt in real time to the needs of the users. The example of using sensor data for parking applications demonstrates how citizens can use this information to make better decisions in real time.

For this smart parking solution sensors were deployed into the asphalt for a car parking detection scheme based on advanced wireless sensor networking technologies. This allows the city to offer citizens ways to significantly reduce the parking search times in congested zones and during rush hour. Citizens have access to 24-7 data about available parking spaces. In addition, it provides city management with information about parking space usage.

 

The information from the parking sensor data in this showcase is stored in Pachube’s cloud and is accessible to end users via IPv4 or IPv6. IPv4 has proven it is capable to build today’s Internet, a network with billions of endpoints. IPv6 aims to increase the number of endpoints, and therefore, increase the value of the network by several orders of magnitude.

 

To see the live data feed and sensor locations, click here.

 

 

 

AT&T Perspective

AT&T has been involved in testing and standardizing IPv6 technology for nearly a decade. The company strongly advocates IPv6 preparation for businesses, and offers a range of enterprise IPv6 services globally, including its Virtual Private Network, Managed Internet Service, and consulting services.

 

AT&T believes that moving from an environment where there is a shortage of IP addresses (IPv4) to one in which addresses are plentiful (IPv6) may spur a new class of applications that people haven’t yet conceived – and the company stands ready to support customers with such applications.

 

Sensor-based technology is a perfect example of a technology that will benefit from the transition to IPv6. Because each sensor requires an individual IP address, thousands of IP addresses would be needed for just one large-scale deployment of sensor technology – something that would be difficult given the current shortage of IPv4 addresses. But because IPv6 technology supports a virtually unlimited number of IP addresses, and thus connected devices, there is great opportunity for large-scale deployments of sensors and other connected devices.

 

For the sensor technology demo with Cisco, Pachube, and Worldsensing, AT&T provided IPv6 transport services using the AT&T global IP network, as well as expertise in configuring the IPv6 end sites.

 

Cisco Perspective:

Cisco is providing the networking equipment to enable this event. Cisco routers connect the various locations and Cisco IOS software is delivering the intelligence to keep the data flowing without interruptions. Cisco believes that the Internet of Things enables Smart Connected Communities to use resources more efficiently and enables them to provide better services for their citizens.

 

For over 25 years, Cisco has been central to the development of the Internet Protocol (IP) that has helped fuel the incredible growth in global connectivity.  Cisco has supported the IPv6 protocol since the inception of the 6Bone in 1996 and has been including IPv6 capabilities in several existing products, services and solutions. Since over 70 percent of the Internet runs on Cisco technologies, Cisco intends to help customers transition to IPv6 by actively building IPv6 across its solutions.

 

Cisco Smart+Connected Communities uses intelligent networking capabilities to weave together people, services, community assets, and information into a single pervasive solution. As the network helps to transform physical communities into connected communities, it takes advantage of real-time information, applications and services for home, work, school, hospitals, malls, stadiums and government and spurs growth, a better quality of  life and a greener society.


Community+Exchange is a back-office operations center helping with the planning and day-to-day operations and management of a community. By providing the network as a highly secure and resilient service delivery platform, cities can share information and collaborate across a community ecosystem of government agencies and private sector partners to facilitate utilities, transportation, telecommunications, safety and security, building systems, health, and government social services.

 

Pachube Perspective:

Pachube is a web-based service that connects people to devices, applications and the Internet of Things. As a web-based service built to manage the world’s real-time data, Pachube gives people the power to share, collaborate and make use of information generated from the world around them.

 

The Pachube platform is now fully IPv6 enabled with redundant IPv6 Internet services from AT&T. In addition to being IPv6 accessible, users can also have Pachube pull data from devices with IPv6 addresses and fire triggers at IPv6 URL's (for applications built around real-time response) with no changes to how they use the system or their applications. Enthusiasts, developers, and device manufacturers can now manage and share real-time sensor data globally over the Internet's next generation protocol.

“IPv6 dovetails perfectly into our vision for an open Internet of Things, as every object and sensor can now have its own identity without being abstracted in any way," said Usman Haque, CEO of Pachube. "To realize the full potential of an open system, we're ultimately going to need direct access to data sources, and we are here seeing the first steps in that direction with IPv6 support.”

 

Worldsensing Perspective:

Worldsensing’s real-world smart city applications are now fully IPv6 enabled with networking equipment from Cisco and redundant IPv6 Internet services from AT&T. Sensors deliver 24/7 real-time information about the state of a city via IPv6 and feed into Pachube’s platform where it can be shared and mashed-up with other systems.

 

Applied to parking, one of the largest concerns in urban living, Worldsensing’s solution allows the availability and location of vacant parking spaces to be signaled to the driver via a smart phone or panels along the street. Benefits can be realized not only by drivers, but by businesses and city managers as well.

 

“We are proud to feature the world’s first commercial smart city machine-to-machine application over an IPv6-enabled network,” said Ignasi Vilajosana, CEO of Worldsensing. “IPv6 for us is not only about reachability and scalability, but is also about peace of mind, since IP-enabled networks have been successfully engineered and deployed for decades now. This is an advantage for us over proprietary solutions.”

 

IPv6 is Worldsensing's lifeline as its business is built around a huge amount of sensors in the field providing real-time readings of critical data to data centres around the globe. IP is the only viable facilitator for these needs as it has long been the unique networking "language" unanimously spoken by all connected machines, and sensors - with the emergence of the Internet of Things (IoT) and machine-to-machine (M2M) - are no exception to this.  For Worldsensing, it is hence of great importance and pride to showcase a working IPv6 end-to-end networking solution, providing real-time parking availability information via IPv6-enabled sensors, core networking technologies of ATT and Cisco, and service platform of Pachube. Implementing IPv6 onto low power embedded sensor nodes has been challenging, mainly because the IPv6 header is already larger than the typical packet transmitted over such networks; however, latest Cisco-driven developments in the IETF, such as 6LoWPAN and ROLL, have allowed Worldsensing to enable the world's first standards-compliant IPv6 commercial parking deployment. IPv6 however means more to Worldsensing than just the basic networking capabilities: it is a great asset in guaranteeing global reachability, true scalability, reliable security and, since IP-enabled networks have been successfully engineered and deployed for decades now, the same engineering skills maintaining and troubleshooting these type of emerging networks. This is an enormous advantage over proprietary solutions!

 

About Worldsensing

Concentrating on major  markets with increasing needs to enhance their efficiency, such as construction, oil/gas and cities, Worldsensing provides 24/7 real-time information of critical points monitored by sensors in the field and connected to the Internet using robust, scalable and secure wireless connectivity. Worldsensing serves some of the largest companies in the world and has won IBM’s London SmartCamp competition in 2010 and Stockholm’s Global Labs Living award in 2011. Recently, Worldsensing was featured in Pike's prestigious market research study as one of the 17 globally leading companies in the smart city eco system.

2,394 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: cisco, networks, city, environmental, wireless, smart, sensor, parking, system, monitoring, gateway, reprogrammable, routers, embedded, pachube, worldsensing, at&t

Our next webinar, Integrated Urban Governance, will take place at 11 a.m. EST June 14. Hanns-Uve Schwedler, PhD, is the managing director of the European Academy of the Urban Environment in Berlin. He is the author of the recently published METROPOLIS manual on “Integrated Urban Governance – The way forward”.

 

Registration Details Listed Below!

Integrated Urban Governance – the way forward

Cities are confronted nowadays with new challenges that are related to globalisation and socio-spatial segregation. Traditional, sectoral approaches to meet these and other challenges have often proved to be expensive and inefficient or even were a total failure. Therefore, new forms of governance have gained importance by involving civil society (NGOs, business, the 'people') in decision making and in implementing these decisions. This integrated urban governance approach requires changes in administrative action and settings, too. Integrated Urban Governance implies going beyond mere coordination between policies, and thus encompasses joint work among sectors and disciplines. The presentation – being based on the METROPOLIS manual on Integrated Urban Governance and on case studies and practices from all over the world – argues, that integrated urban governance requires action and approaches in the following fields:

  • public participation and citizen’s involvement
  • political and organisational arrangements beyond city      boundaries
  • political and organisational arrangements within city      boundaries
  • capacity building

Core instruments for enabling new approaches and policies are presented.

 

About the Presenter

Hanns-Uve Schwedler, PhD, is a geographer by training and managing director of the European Academy of the Urban Environment in Berlin. He is honorary professor at the University of Aberdeen and has been teaching at the Free University of Berlin and the University of Kuwait. He has been a member of several EU advisory and expert groups. He is editor of more than fifty publications of the Academy. His personal publications include work on urban development questions, socio-spatial segregation, social inclusion, noise mitigation and governance. He is author of the recently published METROPOLIS manual on “Integrated Urban Governance – The way forward”.

 

REGISTRATION DETAILS

 

Topic: Smart+Connected Community Institute- Integrated Urban Governance

 

Date and Time:
June 14, 2011 11:00 am, Eastern Daylight Time (New York, GMT-04:00)
June 14, 2011 8:00 am, Pacific Daylight Time (San Francisco, GMT-07:00)
June 14, 2011 5:00 pm, Europe Summer Time (Berlin, GMT+02:00)
June 14, 2011 4:00 pm, Western European Summer Time (London, GMT+01:00)

 

Event number: 201 044 815
Event password: smart

Event address for attendees: https://ciscosales.webex.com/ciscosales/onstage/g.php?d=201044815&t=a

 

AUDIO

 

Follow the prompts to enter the Meeting Number (listed above) or Access Code followed by the # sign.

San Jose, CA: +1.408.525.6800

RTP: +1.919.392.3330
US/Canada: +1.866.432.9903

United Kingdom: +44.20.8824.0117
India: +91.80.4350.1111

Germany: +49.619.6773.9002

874 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: metropolis, smart+connected_communities_institute, webinar, integrated_urban_governance