Imagem da capa para Smart cities : big data, civic hackers, and the quest for a new utopia
Smart cities : big data, civic hackers, and the quest for a new utopia
INITIAL_TITLE_SRCH:
Smart cities : big data, civic hackers, and the quest for a new utopia
AUTHOR:
Townsend, Anthony M., 1973-
ISBN:
9780393349788
PUBLICATION_INFO:
New York : W.W. Norton & Company, 2014.
PHYSICAL_DESC:
xiv, 388 p. ; 21 cm
GENERAL_NOTE:
"With a new epilogue"--Cover.
ABSTRACT:
We live in a world defined by urbanization and digital ubiquity, where mobile broadband connections outnumber fixed ones, machines dominate a new "Internet of things," and more people live in cities than in the countryside. In Smart Cities, urbanist and technology expert Anthony Townsend takes a broad historical look at the forces that have shaped the planning and design of cities and information technologies from the rise of the great industrial cities of the nineteenth century to the present. A century ago, the telegraph and the mechanical tabulator were used to tame cities of millions. Today, cellular networks and cloud computing tie together the complex choreography of mega-regions of tens of millions of people.

Urbanization and ubiquity -- The $100 billion jackpot -- Cybernetics redux -- Cities of tomorrow -- The open-source metropolis -- Tinkering toward utopia -- Have nots -- Reinventing city hall -- A planet of civic laboratories -- Buggy, brittle, and bugged -- A new civics for a smart century.
SUBJECT:
Cities and towns -- History.
City planning -- Technological innovations.
Regional planning -- Technological innovations.
Technological innovations -- Economic aspects.
Information technology -- Economic aspects.
BIBSUMMARY:
We live in a world defined by urbanization and digital ubiquity, where mobile broadband connections outnumber fixed ones, machines dominate a new "Internet of things," and more people live in cities than in the countryside. In Smart Cities, urbanist and technology expert Anthony Townsend takes a broad historical look at the forces that have shaped the planning and design of cities and information technologies from the rise of the great industrial cities of the nineteenth century to the present. A century ago, the telegraph and the mechanical tabulator were used to tame cities of millions. Today, cellular networks and cloud computing tie together the complex choreography of mega-regions of tens of millions of people.

Urbanization and ubiquity -- The $100 billion jackpot -- Cybernetics redux -- Cities of tomorrow -- The open-source metropolis -- Tinkering toward utopia -- Have nots -- Reinventing city hall -- A planet of civic laboratories -- Buggy, brittle, and bugged -- A new civics for a smart century.