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Writing "Smart City" applications is hard. Often, the software and tooling environment is proprietary and the resulting applications fail to inter-operate with applications developed elsewhere. It can also be expensive due to a lack of in-house knowledge, skills and tools for such software. Having an open source Software Development Kit (SDK) that provides libraries, tools and common APIs could be valuable in addressing this problem. The goal would be to make it easier, cheaper and faster to develop, deploy and sustain Smart City applications worldwide.  
The GCTC Transportation SuperCluster report to NIST and US Ignite will include a section on the topic of CityWeb, a Smart City Open Data Portal and Solution Resource. The first draft of this report is due to NIST and US Ignite by the end of April 2017.  All the chapters in the eventual report will be written via a combination of key volunteers and general crowdsourcing across the Supercluster participants.  The CityWeb chapter will be written here in the wiki. 
 
'''The CityWeb chapter:  [[CityWeb]]'''
 
Note that the outline for the entire GCTC Transportation SuperCluster report to NIST and US Ignite is:
 
#Executive Summary
#First and Last Mile Solutions
#Sensors
#Freight
#Transportation Hubs
#Transportation Analytics
#Policies and Procedures
#CityWeb
#References
#Credits
 
Each of the 7 substantive sections (#2-#8 above) is being initially written a cross-function group from the SuperCluster.
 
Below this line is the original wiki entry describing the breakout session at the GCTC workshop held in February 2017 in Portland as well as containing links to the talks presented in the breakout session.
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Writing "Smart City" applications is hard. Often, the software and tooling environment is proprietary and the resulting applications fail to interoperate with applications developed elsewhere. It can also be expensive due to a lack of in-house knowledge, skills and tools for such software. Having an open source Software Development Kit (SDK) that provides libraries, tools and common APIs could be valuable in addressing this problem. The goal would be to make it easier, cheaper and faster to develop, deploy and sustain Smart City applications worldwide.  




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Our workshop-style open meeting will discuss next steps with those interested in this effort. If you are interested in attending the workshop (will which occur on the morning of February 2, 9:45 am, location TBD) please indicate interest on the Google Form survey. If you are interested enough in the topic to help organize please send email to daniel.frye@urban.systems.
We have sent out a brief set of questions regarding interest to all the identified attendees of the Workshop Session. If you are at all interested in participating in the conversation (or even just following what might occur) and haven't received any email from us, please don't hesitate to send Dan a note at daniel.frye@urban.systems. The slides from the workshop have been uploaded and linked to in the Agenda table below.
 
 
Our current planned agenda looks like
 


Current proposed speakers/discussion leaders:


'''Martin Burns - NIST''' - 20 minutes
{| class="wikitable" style="color:darkblue;background-color:#DEDEB9;" cellpadding="10"
|+ Workshop Agenda, 9:45AM Thursday, C-121
|-
|NIST
|Martin Burns
|[[media:GCTCSuperClusterSmartCitySDK_MartyBurns20170202.pptx|Smart City SDK and PPI (pptx)]]
|-
|FIWARE
|Jose Gonzalez
|[[media:FIWARE_GCTCSuperCluster-Transportation_SmartCitySDK.pdf|Fiware (pdf)]]
|-
|urban.systems
|Nivedita Singhvi
|[[media:opencitysdk-gctc-jan31a.pdf|An Open Source Smart City SDK Proposal (pdf)]]
|-
|}


'''Jose Gonzalez - FIWARE''' - 20 minutes - Since 2011, FIWARE has stood as an independent community whose mission is to build open and sustainable software platform standards that will ease the development of new Smart Applications. The potential of FIWARE for the growth and sustainable development of Smart Cities is already a reality backed by more than 100 cities around the world.


'''Speaker TBD''' - One of the Reverse Pitch Speakers from Day 1 may be asked to expound on development issues in this slot
'''Martin Burns - NIST''' - Martin discusses a NIST program to help with the proliferation of standards.


'''Nivedita Singhvi - urban.systems''' - 20 minutes - City SDK Proposal: This talk will present our initial thoughts on what a City SDK open source project might look like,  what would be its benefits and scope,  and the obstacles, concerns it would need to overcome
'''Jose Gonzalez - FIWARE''' - Since 2011, FIWARE has stood as an independent community whose mission is to build open and sustainable software platform standards that will ease the development of new Smart Applications. The potential of FIWARE for the growth and sustainable development of Smart Cities is already a reality backed by more than 100 cities around the world.


'''Open Discussion - panel format''' - 25 minutes
'''Nivedita Singhvi - urban.systems''' - A Smart City Open Source SDK Proposal: This talk will present our initial thoughts on what a City SDK open source project might look like,  what would be its benefits and scope,  and the obstacles, concerns it would need to overcome.


Also of interest, would be hearing from any Smart City application developers that might like to present or host a poster on issues they have in building modern Smart City applications.
Also of interest would be hearing from any Smart City application developers that might like to present or host a poster on issues they have in building modern Smart City applications.




Feel free to add early ideas and thoughts about this idea here as well.
Feel free to add early ideas and thoughts about this idea here as well.

Latest revision as of 02:12, May 6, 2017

The GCTC Transportation SuperCluster report to NIST and US Ignite will include a section on the topic of CityWeb, a Smart City Open Data Portal and Solution Resource. The first draft of this report is due to NIST and US Ignite by the end of April 2017. All the chapters in the eventual report will be written via a combination of key volunteers and general crowdsourcing across the Supercluster participants. The CityWeb chapter will be written here in the wiki.

The CityWeb chapter: CityWeb

Note that the outline for the entire GCTC Transportation SuperCluster report to NIST and US Ignite is:

  1. Executive Summary
  2. First and Last Mile Solutions
  3. Sensors
  4. Freight
  5. Transportation Hubs
  6. Transportation Analytics
  7. Policies and Procedures
  8. CityWeb
  9. References
  10. Credits

Each of the 7 substantive sections (#2-#8 above) is being initially written a cross-function group from the SuperCluster.

Below this line is the original wiki entry describing the breakout session at the GCTC workshop held in February 2017 in Portland as well as containing links to the talks presented in the breakout session.



Writing "Smart City" applications is hard. Often, the software and tooling environment is proprietary and the resulting applications fail to interoperate with applications developed elsewhere. It can also be expensive due to a lack of in-house knowledge, skills and tools for such software. Having an open source Software Development Kit (SDK) that provides libraries, tools and common APIs could be valuable in addressing this problem. The goal would be to make it easier, cheaper and faster to develop, deploy and sustain Smart City applications worldwide.


This is a workshop to discuss the creation of an open source development community and project to build an environment of SDKs and tools towards such a goal.


This aligns with the Federal initiative for a "City Web", which encourages the adoption of common and proven approaches to the Smart City mission. It is hoped that cities and stakeholders coordinate existing activities to share data models, software tools etc. The Federal NITRD program and CITII would be greatly accelerated in that goal by a thriving open source community of developers and users sharing best practices and resources.


We have sent out a brief set of questions regarding interest to all the identified attendees of the Workshop Session. If you are at all interested in participating in the conversation (or even just following what might occur) and haven't received any email from us, please don't hesitate to send Dan a note at daniel.frye@urban.systems. The slides from the workshop have been uploaded and linked to in the Agenda table below.


Workshop Agenda, 9:45AM Thursday, C-121
NIST Martin Burns Smart City SDK and PPI (pptx)
FIWARE Jose Gonzalez Fiware (pdf)
urban.systems Nivedita Singhvi An Open Source Smart City SDK Proposal (pdf)


Martin Burns - NIST - Martin discusses a NIST program to help with the proliferation of standards.

Jose Gonzalez - FIWARE - Since 2011, FIWARE has stood as an independent community whose mission is to build open and sustainable software platform standards that will ease the development of new Smart Applications. The potential of FIWARE for the growth and sustainable development of Smart Cities is already a reality backed by more than 100 cities around the world.

Nivedita Singhvi - urban.systems - A Smart City Open Source SDK Proposal: This talk will present our initial thoughts on what a City SDK open source project might look like, what would be its benefits and scope, and the obstacles, concerns it would need to overcome.

Also of interest would be hearing from any Smart City application developers that might like to present or host a poster on issues they have in building modern Smart City applications.


Feel free to add early ideas and thoughts about this idea here as well.