CitySDK - service development kit - presentation. EU project run by Forum-Virium in Helsinki giving cities the open data tools to help developers create new products and services. www.citysdk.eu
3. SDK for Pan-European
City
•Service development toolkit for the cities:
– Open and interoperable digital service interfaces
– Processes, guidelines and usability standards.
•“App Store” for the City
Cross-city transfer of
Smart City Applications
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4. CitySDK Ecosystem
Public delivery
Infrastructures; urban App Stores
displays
Engaged SME Developers’ new Services
exploiting the City SDK ecosystem, or open source pilot apps
Project Pilots
Demonstrators, open source CitySDK components
CitySDK Ecosystem
Unified Open City Interfaces through Pilots
as CitySDK components
Cities’ prior platforms, services, interfaces, open data
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5. Why CitySDK?
1. Developing new services and scaling them to wider audiences becomes easier:
More efficient use of innovation capacity
More opportunities for developers
Better services faster
2. Helping to manage the constant technological change
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6. CitySDK Developers
• Created and developed with and for the developers
• Lightweight, modular, no new platforms
• On-going process, not top down and outdated
For
• Cities’ in-house service developers
• Commercial service developers
• SMEs
• Large corporations
• 3rd sector & hacktivists
• Research organisations
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8. Public delivery
Infrastructures; urban App Stores
displays
Engaged SME Developers’ new Services
exploiting the City SDK ecosystem, or open source pilot apps
CitySDK Pilots
CitySDK Ecosystem
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Unified Open City Interfaces through Pilots
as CitySDK components
Cities’ prior platforms, services, interfaces, open data
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9. Smart Participation
• Bringing the City's issue reporting and feedback channels closer to the residents
• Providing cities with more accurate feedback and avoiding unnecessary feedback
• Making development of issue reporting and feedback channels easier
• Inspired by Open311 and FixMyStreet
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10. Smart Participation – Lead Pilot in Helsinki
When you spot an issue; fallen street sign
Do:
1.Report the issue via:
a. Sanoma Publishers’ web portal Omakaupunki.fi
b. SMS
c. E-mail
Direct issue reporting to the right department within the city
Don’t
spend time looking through the City's official portal to find the official form for
reporting such an issue.
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11. Smart Mobility – Lead Pilot in Amsterdam
Intelligent social traveling
People as information agents
The Personal Travel Assistant makes you a social traveler and helps you
•To make your experience help others
•To bring structure in your traveling chaos
•To connect with fellow travellers
•To make your experience enhance public service
Aggregating of messages adapted to your journey to
separate the relevant from the irrelevant information
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Lauri Vanhala: Helsinki Public Transport Visualized: www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGllzWt0acU
12. Smart Tourism – Lead Pilot in Lisbon
Personal Travel guide – real time information for tourists and travellers
•Unifying access to location- and time-based tourism-related data, and subsequent service
generation.
•Utilizing innovative, user-centric/Internet of Things technologies e.g.:
– Augmented Reality
– NFC/RFID
– Public Urban Displays, and
– Geo-location
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13. CitySDK Factsheet
Co-funding: CIP ICT-PSP
Total budget: 6,8 MEUR Smart Participation:
EU-contribution: 3,4 MEUR Hanna Niemi-Hugaerts, Forum Virium hanna.niemi-hugaerts@forumvirium.fi
Partners: 23 from 9 countries Jaakko Rajaniemi, City of Helsinki jaakko.rajaniemi@hel.fi
Duration: 01/2012-06/2014
Coordinator: Forum Virium Helsinki Smart Mobility:
Marja Mattila Job Spierings, Waag Society job@waag.org
+358 40 7440067
marja.mattila@forumvirium.fi Smart Tourism:
Nuno Xavier, Lisbon Municipality nuno.xavier@cm-lisboa.pt
Comms: Manchester City Council
Adrian Slatcher
A.Slatcher@manchesterdda.com
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