SMART CITIES THE LONG HISTORY OF THEIR FUTURE
PC Pro|August 2024
Nicole Kobie traces the roots of smart cities back to Victorian London, before taking us on a journey to the concept's present and future
Nicole Kobie
SMART CITIES THE LONG HISTORY OF THEIR FUTURE

It’s Victorian London, and cholera is creeping through the streets of Soho. Famously, Dr John Snow deduced that the disease wasn’t spread via bad smells in the air as believed but through water – in particular, a single water pump.

He figured that out with data and a map. The good doctor simply plotted the deaths of infected people within the district and had the good sense to notice that they lived near the same water pump on Broad Street. As the story goes, he ended the outbreak by removing the pump’s handle. And so data analytics within cities was born.

A few years later, in 1868, the world’s first traffic light was installed, at Bridge Street near Parliament Square in London. This was before cars, but a thousand pedestrians were being killed each year on the city’s roads thanks to carriages. The signal wasn’t smart: the six-metre-high light was manually operated, with gas-powered lights. And the traffic light lasted less than a year, taken out by a sub-pavement gas pipe explosion.

Despite such explosive origins, the idea eventually spread around the world. Automated traffic lights were introduced in California in 1920, with signals that used timers. By 1928, the use of automated signals let New York slash its traffic police from 6,000 officers to 500. But it also meant pedestrians and drivers had to obey the directions of machines rather than humans to smooth urban life.

Automation required road data and traffic technology to be combined, which allowed the development of so-called “green waves”: holding all the signals going in one direction for a set of cars so they could just roll on through without stopping. This staggered system doubled commuting speeds along Sixteenth Street in Washington, DC, in 1926.

Esta historia es de la edición August 2024 de PC Pro.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

Esta historia es de la edición August 2024 de PC Pro.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE PC PROVer todo
Key things to look for when buying a mini PC
PC Pro

Key things to look for when buying a mini PC

Buying a mini PC isn't like buying a laptop or a fully fledged desktop PC, but a pitfall-laden experience that sits somewhere in between

time-read
4 minutos  |
December 2024
BRANDS YOU CAN TRUST
PC Pro

BRANDS YOU CAN TRUST

Whenever you buy something in the coming year, why not draw on the experience of thousands of discerning buyers?

time-read
5 minutos  |
December 2024
5 things we learned from Lenovo Tech World'24
PC Pro

5 things we learned from Lenovo Tech World'24

In a landmark event where the CEOs of AMD, Intel and Nvidia all took to the stage, the theme of \"smarter AI for all\" was never far away, writes Tim Danton

time-read
5 minutos  |
December 2024
The Darktrace leading to government
PC Pro

The Darktrace leading to government

British security firm Darktrace has been mired in controversy. Now its former CEO is a government minister. Rois Ni Thuama and Barry Collins investigate

time-read
9 minutos  |
December 2024
Microsoft is doing more harm to Arm than good, argues Jon Honeyball
PC Pro

Microsoft is doing more harm to Arm than good, argues Jon Honeyball

You know that sinking feeling you get when something is not quite right? That nagging doubt that it shouldn't be like this? It was like that when I read that Qualcomm has cancelled its Snapdragon X developer kit, a desktop Mac mini-like box designed for developers to create and test apps for Windows on Arm (WoA).

time-read
3 minutos  |
December 2024
How do we know how smart AI really is?
PC Pro

How do we know how smart AI really is?

Maths questions. Silly word puzzles. Counting the letter \"r\" in a sentence. Nicole Kobie reveals how we're trying to work out exactly how intelligent AI is

time-read
7 minutos  |
December 2024
Missed call Whatever happened to the Acorn Communicator?
PC Pro

Missed call Whatever happened to the Acorn Communicator?

When Acorn launched its 16-bit Communicator computer with a built-in modem, it struggled to get potential buyers to listen, as David Crookes explains

time-read
9 minutos  |
December 2024
STEVE CASSIDY-"Getting workers to do simple jobs in the 16th century was not much different from the 21st"
PC Pro

STEVE CASSIDY-"Getting workers to do simple jobs in the 16th century was not much different from the 21st"

Why 16th century \"networking\" legislation still has an impact, and why the term AI is confusing to punters as well as a waste of natural resources

time-read
8 minutos  |
December 2024
JON HONEYBALL -"The more I have to do with UK telcos, the more broken their systems seem to be"
PC Pro

JON HONEYBALL -"The more I have to do with UK telcos, the more broken their systems seem to be"

After being tempted by the iPhone 16 Pro Max - for professional reasons, honest - and the Watch 2 Ultra, Jon discovers not everything is perfect in Apple's new generation

time-read
10 minutos  |
December 2024
Apple iPhone 16 Pro
PC Pro

Apple iPhone 16 Pro

A bigger display, borrowed 5x tetraprism zoom from the Max and no price hike make this the best iPhone

time-read
7 minutos  |
December 2024