What makes a smart city so smart, anyway? A smart city is a city that uses information and communication technologies to:
How? By collecting, analyzing, and synthesizing data about how we move, live, and behave in our surroundings, urban planners and other professionals can optimize the world we live in. Over the last few decades, technology has been instrumental in this process, and more recently, AI has been applied to gather insights and apply new solutions even more rapidly.
For example, AI is being used to:
Decrease our carbon footprint, such as identifying high energy consumption and suggest ways to reduce energy use2
Part of the problem — and the solution — lies in choosing the right source for power. Consider all the cameras, sensors, trackers, and other electronic devices, including personal devices such as mobile phones, that are collecting and sending data all the time, all over the world. Most of them are either hardwired, need to be regularly connected to or near a plugged-in charger, or rely on batteries.
These traditional energy sources are enormous obstacles to rapid growth of smart cities. They take a whole lot of planning and people and environmental resources to execute, and continued on-the-ground maintenance to keep them reliably running.
But there is an alternative: Real Wireless Power. Real Wireless Power is power over air, at a distance, without the need for charging, wires, or batteries. It can be used in motion and from out of sight. Plus it can automatically and reliably keep electronics and sensors powered up even in the remotest of locations, like on top of towers, inside the bowels of equipment and factories, deep in a forest or desert, or inside a moving train. If WiFi is available, it’s more than likely that wireless power can be, too.
Are there other obstacles of smart city infrastructure expansion? Absolutely. But reliably and continuously getting power to the technology that is collecting and sending data for AI to leverage is likely top of the list.
Before we dive into the myriad of benefits, let’s jump to the other part of what makes a smart city smart: connecting and empowering its citizens. Can wireless power over air help there, too? You betcha.
We’ve covered how Real Wireless Power will help improve the efficiency of urban operations and services. But what about connecting and empowering the people?
This may happen as a natural default to transitioning communities to wireless power.
People are already more and more comfortable providing explicit permission for organizations to collect (often anonymous) data from their smartphones8 in order to provide a more valuable experience. As one example, mobile phones are one source of traffic and transportation time estimates that are provided to the public.
Downtime (or devices not connected due to lack of power) of personal devices collectively results in millions of minutes of lost data. That’s data that cannot be fed into the AI, and insights that get missed. From a citizen’s perspective, a low or no power phone means no alerts that can impact their transportation, safety, and security, such as severe weather, emergency evacuations, tripped fire and security systems, and Amber/Ebony/Silver alerts.
As consumer mobile phones switch from plugging in to charge up to being always on via wireless power over air, data will become even more consistent and reliable.
Why bother introducing wireless power to smart city planning? Once you understand the benefits, it could be considered unethical to society and our planet not to consider it.
We could name many other benefits, and at this point, you’re probably thinking of some, too. Just note that optimizing infrastructure and enabling rapid smart city growth is only one facet of how Real Wireless Power will impact smart city development.
Other elements that make a smart city can include smart smart economy, governance, living, environment, and mobility, among others. AI plus Real Wireless Power is clearly a symbiotic force for smart city innovation across all of these areas.
Have questions about creating a Real Wireless Power infrastructure for your environment? We’re here to help.
1 https://www.techtarget.com/iotagenda/definition/smart-city
2 https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/16/13/5210
3 https://www.businessinsider.com/ai-model-predicts-crime-us-nine-times-out-of-ten-2022-7
4 https://www.wired.com/story/plainfield-geolitica-crime-predictions/
5https://www.lta.gov.sg/content/ltagov/en/getting_around/driving_in_singapore/intelligent_transport_systems.html
6 https://arxiv.org/pdf/1807.01628.pdf
7 https://www.smartcitiesworld.net/air-quality/air-quality/barcelona-reduces-air-pollution-by-more-than-30-per-cent-8500