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Uplink from Gujarat, India. Reporting on a Connected, Smart India

July 14, 2016

Rashmi Varma
Rashmi Varma

A digital native and a core techie with a deep rooted passion to creating innovative solutions and spectacular results. Coding, Designing, Algorithms, Strategy, Business, Writing, Educating & Speaking about Next Generation Technologies are Rashmi’s broad skills. Virtualization, Software Defined Networks, IoT, Deep Learning and Virtual Reality are the verticals Rashmi works with.

In her spare time, she is either building projects with her kids, playing with her dogs, sketching, traveling to experience foods & cultures or learning a new software language or tool.
~Our wonderful and exceptional friend Rashmi is visiting India, while she is there she has agreed to check out the massive Smart Cities undertaking currently taking place. 

Uplink from Gujarat, India. Reporting on a Connected, Smart India.

Prime Minister, Narendra Modi has led several firsts in the state of Gujarat, in his previous reign as the state’s Chief Minister elect. His projects on infrastructure improvement included creating an eco-system for sustainable and green industrial utilities, public transport strategies to optimize city traffic patterns and myriad others. These projects eventually attracted an influx of both, investment into the state from companies setting up industries and a population looking for a higher quality of life.

As the incumbent leader of a burgeoning nation, Narendra Modi has now initiated the Smart City Mission with a massive funding of nearly 12B USD. The strategy to this project is unique. The Smart City Mission is targeting 100 Indian cities for development, of which 33 cities have been announced, with more to be named.

India’s Smart City Mission Logo
India’s Smart City Mission Logo

India’s Smart City Mission Logo

Reviewing the list of cities on the project, it quickly becomes clear that these are all cities with smaller populations, typically referred to as secondary cities in India. In discussing this information with Cynthia Heyn, Founder of SmartNTX, several questions emerged about how India defined the concept of “smart” and how did that definition equate to providing for basic infrastructural needs, which is a work in progress.

To know more about the Smart City Mission, I reached out to Manav Yagnik, an IIM-A alumnus and the co-founder of Decimal Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

Decimal (www.decimaltech.com) , is a pioneer in creating a platform that accelerates deployment of digital and mobility usecases for enterprises, and have been involved in their own way with the digitization of the banking enterprise workflow with “Aadhar”(see previous article published on this topic).

Mr. Yagnik made a kind introduction to Mr. Sudhanvan, President at Ispat Corp., who is leading an innovative collaboration to define ISPAT’s own and other smart city planning and development strategy.

Mr. BS Sudhanvan
Mr. BS Sudhanvan

 

Speaking with Mr. Sudhanvan made for a great discussion and was an awesome learning experience for me. Summarizing the key take-away from the discussion; India is at an intersection, where convergence of Infrastructure, Internet of Things, Data and People will create a new value proposition model for urban development. This integration, however, should be people focused, rather than technology centric.  Though data and computing has to provide real time intelligence, an emphasis on design will conform the intelligence as actionable and most importantly, acceptable by the masses.

Link to an informative excerpt of the conversation with Mr. Sudhanvan is here.

 

Uplink from Mumbai,India.

Rashmi Varma
Rashmi Varma
A digital native and a core techie with a deep rooted passion to creating innovative solutions and spectacular results. Coding, Designing, Algorithms, Strategy, Business, Writing, Educating & Speaking about Next Generation Technologies are Rashmi’s broad skills. Virtualization, Software Defined Networks, IoT, Deep Learning and Virtual Reality are the verticals Rashmi works with.
In her spare time, she is either building projects with her kids, playing with her dogs, sketching, traveling to experience foods & cultures or learning a new software language or tool.
~Our wonderful and exceptional friend Rashmi is spending the summer in India visiting her family, while she is there she has agreed to check out the massive Smart Cities undertaking currently taking place. 

 

Uplink from Mumbai,India

Reporting on the massive digital endeavor underway in one of the most populous countries in the world. Postulating at a macro level, it seems the world is a product of one term – “Connectivity”.

The earliest known form of connectivity can be found in the origin of trade, as early as, 3000B.C. Trade between countries formed a backbone of connections that were traversed to exchange goods and food, thus connecting people to cultures.

A map showing the main trade routes for goods within late medieval Europe. Courtesy: Wikipedia.org
A map showing the main trade routes for goods within late medieval Europe. Courtesy: Wikipedia.org

Following this, came the earliest roads of Persia and Babylon, that were adopted over the centuries into a geographical network, thus connecting people to places. The industrial

Revolution introduced a labyrinth of rail routes, which still continue to grow and connect people to manufacturing and distribution. First commercial air travel in the early 20th century, brought those connections to the skies.

The internet was the birthplace of people connecting to machines (servers) and social network applications, eventually connected people to other individuals. We are now on the impending cusp of connecting all mundane things (IoT) to the internet, ultimately creating a connection to everything (IoE). Even despite this double exponential growth in connectivity over the past fifty centuries, a country like India, that contributes 20% of the world’s population, has immense opportunities to provide basic, essential connectivity, in terms of both physical and digital infrastructures. This is being achieved every day in India, through ambitious technological and political policies, aiding the creation of building blocks, such as the U.S. social security number equivalent called “Aadhaar”(foundation). In fact, Aadhaar raises the bar on individual identification with IRIS detection technologies and creating a uniform, collaborative, technical platform for connecting various disparate central, state and independent government agencies and their programs. The core idea is to keep it minimalistic,

Provide an agile system that spurs innovation, create a central database of 1.2 billion Indian residents and provide secure, authorized interfaces to the repository. The potential of having such a system in bringing access, to connect billions up to advanced civic opportunities, such as Wi-Fi, are the first steps to faster self–‐service online marketplaces, smart applications, information and education, creating smart villages, smart cities and a smarter connected society.

North Texas and Highway Transportation Innovation

 

Thomas J. Bamonte
Thomas J. Bamonte  is leader in Transportation Technology and the future of Transportation.

The North Texas region has a robust highway transportation system that will face real challenges from rapid population and employment growth over the next few decades. Is North Texas positioned to take advantage of emerging transportation technologies to address these challenges? Guest author Tom Bamonte identifies ten assets the region can utilize to advance from the status quo to an improved highway transportation system. Read his article here.

 

Keep on Learning the Key Message for Technology Professionals

 

continuous learning

 

In a recent article Randall Stephenson (CEO of AT&T) told the New York Times “There is a need to retool yourself, and you should not expect to stop,” he said in a recent interview at AT&T’s Dallas headquarters. People who do not spend five to 10 hours a week in online learning, he added, “will obsolete themselves with the technology.” (see article here).

Technology is changing at a rate to make anyone’s head spin.  The need to remain relevant in a changing world is nothing new,    but the need to retool is becoming more important than ever.  Competition is fierce, new artificial intelligence and machine learning is rendering the need for many human workers obsolete.   AT&T’s clear message to its employees is to keep learning.

Luckily, there are many avenues online that make learning inexpensive and easy online from your computer.  I recently took two courses one Technicity from Coursera (taught by University of Ohio professors) and one from Future Learn out of the UK.  The information in both those courses is current and presented in different ways to suit all learning styles.  With accessibility to information becoming more ubiquitous one is really only limited by desire to learn.

City of Arlington is Using a New Tool to Manage City Assets

In this video The Arlington Parks & Recreation Asset System Administrator, Scott DeGrant, shows us how they use Cartegraph OMS to optimize their workflow and return better data.  , Parks and Recreation is beginning to use Cartegraph to look at trends, improvements, and processes, as well as to plan ahead for the next weather-related emergency that may occur.  Costs that were before difficult to estimate are easier to keep track of, and the department can use that information to ask for budget adjustments if need be, he said.   Read the article here

Dallas Getting Ready to Get Smart

The Dallas Morning News published an article on the ongoing Smart Cities initiative in the West End.  The article reported on Michael Zeto (head of AT&T Smart Cities Unit).  Also interviewed for the article was Geoffery Orsak,Executive Director of the  Texas Research Alliance.  This ongoing news coverage give more information on the Dallas Innovation Alliance (the public/private partnershp announced a couple of months ago who aims to turn the West End into a living lab.

Read the article here

Dallas Slected to Participate in Envision America Smart City Program

As reported in the Dallas Business Journal by Tech Writer  Danielle Abril Dallas has been selected to participate in the Envision America Smart City Program

The White House announced the nationwide program in September. Dallas will be one of 10 cities participating.
BIZJOURNALS.COM

 

AT&T LEADS THE INDUSTRY IN THE INTERNET OF THINGS CONNECTING THE CONNECTED: MORE THAN 136 NEW IOT AGREEMENTS SIGNED IN 2015

 

 

According to a June 2015 News Release AT&T “the AT&T network had nearly 22 million IoT connected devices worldwide as of March 31, 2015. More than 945,000 smart devices connected during the first quarter of this year. That’s 70 percent more than the same quarter a year ago. Of those devices, 684,000 were connected cars. AT&T is leading the industry, working with eight of the top automakers.  Read the entire release here