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Title: | MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW |
Keywords: | MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW There are many ways for cities to be "smart" Plugs across America Yeah,it's all your fault The author of Weapons of Math Destruction details how society has "weaponized" the idea of shame, Marseille vs. the surveillance state Cameras for policing cities are on the rise across France. Not everyone is welcoming them. The future of urban housing is more efficient refrigerators Adapting old, energy-inefficient buildings is less sexy but far greener than many high-tech solutions The next New Utopia A new vision for Toronto aims to get right what Sidewalk Labs got so wrong Why didn't the toad cross the road? Wildlife crossings-the best-studied form of animal infrastructure-aim to reverse the damage done by roads. Do they? The battle for India's street corner Local shops are a mainstay of city life in India. Tech firms are coming for them. Utopia unresolved Smart city technology was meant to connect, protect, and enhance the lives of citizens. What happened? What does your city smell like? Sounds and smells are as vital to cities as the sights. Innovators Under 35 Our list of 35 rising young innovators is not just about what a group of talented peo ple have accomplished-it's about the future direction of technology. Cities. Still in crisis. Reading about the challenges our cities faced half a century ago feels frustratingly familiar . |
Issue Date: | Jul-2022 |
Series/Report no.: | VOLUME-125;Number-4 |
URI: | http://172.16.0.4:8085/heritage/handle/123456789/6740 |
Appears in Collections: | Alerting of New Journals (ECE) |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW-CSE-ECE-IT-July-2022.pdf | 1.81 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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