Alphabet's Sidewalk Labs offers new platform for Smart City Challenge winner
During a conference call, Sidewalk CEO Dan Doctoroff tried to relate it to concrete examples, since that might not make a whole bunch of sense. In essence, Flow will be a platform that ingests a wealth of data from a variety of sources -- sensors, cameras, third-party apps or even a city's own data -- and uses analytics to let cities map assets against demands. Sidewalk claims all the data will be anonymized.
Flow could theoretically let cities watch parking situations unfold in real time. It could uncover sources of congestion or discover how underserved parts of a city could receive better transportation options without, again, adding to congestion.
Sidewalk will also distribute on-street kiosks as part of Flow. These kiosks, destined for underserved neighborhoods (sensing a trend here?), will offer free Wi-Fi and transit information for folks that might not have a smartphone or a serious data plan. The goal is to help them make more informed decisions about transportation. Oh, and the sensors I mentioned earlier will be included in these kiosks, as well.
All seven Smart City Challenge finalists -- Austin, Columbus, Denver, Kansas City, Pittsburgh, Portland and San Francisco -- will help Sidewalk develop Flow. Whichever city wins the challenge will receive Flow's entire system for free. The winner will be announced in June.
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