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Intelligent Lighting makes for Smarter and Safer Cities

It’s hard to believe that the first recorded organized method of public lighting was deployed in 1417 by the Mayor of London, Sir Henry Barton. Residents were ordered to hang a lantern outside of their homes at nightfall. Even then, urban lighting was installed as a public safety measure, allowing residents to leverage illumination to avoid being attacked or mugged. Baltimore was the first city in the United States to install actual street lamps, fueled with coal gas. Up until 2006, most street lighting was done using traditional incandescent methods with great cost to municipalities, and with near-zero automation. Oslo, Norway was the first city in the world to deploy intelligent lighting controls as a means to reduce energy costs, thereby realizing 50% decrease in energy usage and cost.

Yet, here we are, in the 2020 timeframe, where Generation 2 of smart lamps (which is much of what we have seen over the past 5 years) moves us towards cost savings rather than extensibility, interoperability, rapid adaptation, and automated sense-making in highly dynamic urban environments. The big technology vendors continue to force us into single-vendor solutions, yet shrink at even the most minute savings, and rarely deliver broader outcomes specific to reduction in crime, efficiencies in population direction, nor interfaces that enables stream analytics that make these investments smarter.

Smart cities, smart venues, and now smart buildings, are serving as the growth engines for Blueforce and the capabilities our stack enables today. It used to be said that choosing Axon, Genetec, IBM, or other large technology manufacturers ensured job security. On the contrary, the big boys tend to view interoperability as monolithic and something akin to “it works as long as you are using my technology”, where data communications interfaces are closed, and physical interfaces for sensors are proprietary and only work with said vendor’s parts. The more successful smart cities have learned quickly that infrastructure which supports rapid adaptation and loosely coupled interfaces (data and/or physical) deliver future-proof and rapidly adaptable baselines to meet new and changing needs “smart” environments require to deliver successful outcomes. Our experience with municipal and commercial consumers of smart city/venue/building technology has taught us that investments should consider the following:

Wi-Fiber is by far one of the best smart city “smart lighting” providers we have seen to date. Their smart lighting platform moves well beyond the mere dimming and brightening of the lamp, where the “save money” outcome is the sole driver. Rather, Wi-Fiber provides an extensible and interoperable platform that is modular by design,, and enables the deployment and redeployment of sensors and services based on where the lamp is deployed. Have a chemical plant in the city limits? No problem, deploy a chemical sensor head as one of the 12 or more “sockets” supported in a single W-Fiber lamp head.

Smart lamps are only one of the emerging class of “smart” infrastructure products coming to market today. Smart “poles” and smart digital displays are proving to be effective platforms for IoT sensors and loosely coupled AI enabled services. Blueforce provides a wide range of unique value propositions across several of these smart city platforms today, by leveraging our patented edge-based IoT sensor fusion and cueing services. These include:

Blueforce will be making additional product announcements in 2021 that take “smart” cities, buildings, and venues to the next level. If you would like additional information, please contact us.

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