Transformation catalysts: smart cities and open data

 Cities are dynamic and changing environments, capable of changing and adapting to the surrounding conditions. From the point of view of urban planning, the evolution of a city takes place around predictable aspects such as population growth, climatic conditions and sources of resources. 

But natural disasters and extraordinary events, such as the Covid-19 pandemic, which has altered dynamics across the planet, show how much the ability to respond quickly to sudden changes is needed. More than smart cities, current needs point to the development of adaptable cities, with a high capacity for mutation to accommodate new processes, dynamics, routines and populations. 

This skill must be thought of not as a problem to be solved in the future, but as a direction to be adopted now, accelerated and improved by investments in innovation.

MCITP Database Administrator job role involves designing and developing logical data models, create physical databases and create data services by using Transact-SQL.

We are already experiencing a population explosion in large urban centers. According to the World Economic Forum, 68% of the world population will live in cities in 2050. Today, that percentage is 54%. 

This will drive even more changes in essential services and the government must think about tools to ensure that urban environments are safe, inclusive, agile, human, sustainable, creative, participatory and, above all, resilient. 

The population growth trend is alarming, but it can be a catalyst for transformation and an opportunity to develop creative solutions to problems inherent in life in society if new technologies, such as Big Data and the Internet of Things (IoT), are applied wide and accessible to the population.

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