NY and SF Mayors Announce Joint Tech Summits
First time accepted submitter Clarklteveno writes "New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his San Francisco counterpart, Ed Lee, said at a news conference Friday that they are sponsoring a pair of technology summits over the next year. The mayors said the 'digital cities' summits — one in New York in September and another in San Francisco early next year — will seek to find ways to use technology to solve problems the cities face. The mayors made the announcement after touring the office of San Francisco-based mobile payment company Square with co-founder Jack Dorsey, who also helped found Twitter. Bloomberg pointed to power outages and dangerous winds and flooding from Hurricane Sandy as examples of issues the summits would seek to address."
Define "problems".
NY and SF Mayors Announce Joint Tech Summits
What's wrong with just rolling them the old-fashioned way?
Just remember what happened when New York decided to use technology to solve a little payroll challenge...
Hiring SAIC to do something was bad enough, letting the project get so out of hand that the cost increased by a factor of ten, half a billion dollars of which was recovered by the feds as being directly tainted by fraud...
The rest of the participants should probably just tell mean jokes about the Bloomberg terminal's embarrassing little spying-on-customers-who-really-don't-like-that problem until he goes away.
Bloomberg will probably push facial recognition software for self serving soda fountains to prevent people from getting 2 small sodas instead of 1 large one.
Have gnu, will travel.
in lots of places outsourced stuff ends up costing more then it would by having it in house and it does not help when non tech PHB and MBA are calling the shots or pick the lowest bidder.
main()
{
printf("To solve the major problems the cities face:\n");
printf("================\n");
printf("Yokels, stop electing idiots.\n");
}
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
Empirically, most tech-startup founders seem to disagree with you...
10 PRINT CHR$(205.5+RND(1)); : GOTO 10
Empirically, most tech-startup founders seem to disagree with you...
I've always been a trifle puzzled by the 'Everyday Low Prices!' theory of "business friendliness"... There are industries where cost is king(many of them not very good neighbors), and access to cheap, docile, labor and a regulatory environment flexible enough to let you keep your externalities externalized are the overriding factors; but the continued existence of high cost, high status, markets suggests that human capital and network effects count for a lot(especially if you can structure the company so that the real money is mysteriously being earned in Nevada or Ireland or wherever).