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Use small-scale, evolving technology for smart city plan: Expert
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SME Times News Bureau | 04 Jan, 2016
Instead of adopting large-scale
technologies from big corporate players, India's smart city plan should
incorporate "appropriate technologies" that are smaller in scale and
can evolve with new innovations at minimum cost, says an Indian-origin
US-based sustainability expert.
"Going for appropriate
technologies and not the large scale solutions... opting for smaller
technologies and enabling technology.
"This means creating an
information infrastructure, data infrastructure on which a lot of
small-scale firms and individuals can develop their own applications,"
Subhrajit Guhathakurta, director of the Center for Geographic
Information Systems at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the US,
said here.
"And by institutionalising that infrastructure, you
have different solutions coming in from different places that you may
not even know of."
Guhathakurta, a professor of city and regional
planning as well as an expert in geospatial technologies, was speaking
at the international symposium on "Livable habitat and sustainable
infrastructure: A key to smart city growth".
Highlighting some
"cautionary tales" in the smart city concept seen across the globe,
Guhathakurta vouched for technologies that evolve.
"You buy some big technology from a big corporate player, you are locked in to that technology because it is expensive to shift.
"They
should evolve with new innovations at minimum cost," he said, adding
that India's smart city plan was "mostly about good planning and a very
small component is about technology".
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