Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Google Technology

Google's Toronto City Built 'From the Internet Up' (bbc.com) 45

On Toronto's Eastern waterfront, a new digital city is being built by Sidewalk Labs -- a firm owned by Google's parent Alphabet. It hopes the project will become a model for 21st-Century urbanism. From a report: But the deal has been controversial, representing one of biggest ever tie-ups between a city and a large corporation. And that, coupled with the fact that the corporation in question is one of the largest tech firms in the world, is causing some unease. Sidewalk Labs promises to transform the disused waterfront area into a bustling mini metropolis, one built "from the internet up," although there is no timetable for when the city will actually be built. Dan Doctoroff, the company's head and former deputy mayor of New York, told the BBC the project was "about creating healthier, safer, more convenient and more fun lives. We want this to be a model for what urban life can be in the 21st Century," he said. The area will have plenty of sensors collecting data -- from traffic, noise and air quality -- and monitoring the performance of the electric grid and waste collection.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google's Toronto City Built 'From the Internet Up'

Comments Filter:
  • by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Sunday May 27, 2018 @02:08PM (#56684098)
    I'm guessing the real goal here is Panopticon:Toronto, where all activities are monitored and monetized.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Mashiki ( 184564 )

      The real goal is to rebuild the waterfront, where this is taking place because no developer wanted to deal with the absolute bureaucratic nightmare known as Toronto to do it. Then didn't want anything to do with the bureaucratic nightmare from the province of Ontario and the insane environmental regulations and impact studies. This has been going on since the mid-90's, and the previous Toronto governments drove away investment, and the current Liberal Party policies ensured that nobody wanted to do anythi

      • It actually got worse under the leadership of the Liberal Party(under Dalton McGuinty), several groups were looking at pooling together and rebuilding it back in 2000. The 2003 election changed that, especially with the anti-industry and anti-development platforms pushed by the party.

        Well of COURSE things went south under Mayor McGinty - anyone who’s read Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Valley of Fear would’ve seen that coming.

      • I read with some amusement, and some sadness, about something called the Debt Retirement Charge. There is a government run utility called Ontario Hydro that supplies the vast majority of electricity for the province of Ontario. It has Niagara Falls, one of the largest free energy sources on the planet, to supply the juice to power their generators. Yet somehow Ontario Hydro managed to run up a debt of 38.1 billion dollars. All of it via corruption, mismanagement and stupidity. The taxpayers of Ontario then

        • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

          Well Toronto isn't "too american" and really hasn't even been the case. What it was back years ago was a very arrogant version of elite canpol(think ottawa on steroids), wrapped around the arrogance of multiculturalism. It's only gotten worse without a doubt. But it's sure got the smug, arrogant, and fuck you attitude going for it.

          The electricity rates are multiple fuckups on top of multiple fuckups. Another good one is that Ontario is paid by the US $0.03kWh when there is demand for electricity, and wh

    • At least they picked the right city to build it in. Toronto is half way there already.

  • Was it built "from the internet up with open-standard technologies"? Otherwise, no freaking thanks!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Last work conference we had at the Harbourfront Hotel in TO I stepped out for a smoke and nearly stepped in human feces on the sidewalk. Not in India or SE Asia, but Toronto.

    Yeah the Internet will magically get rid of all the meth and crack and whores and bums! FOR SURE!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The homeless bums shitting on your sidewalk used to be coders before you fucking outsourced their jobs to india. You deserve to step in shit, asshole.

  • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Sunday May 27, 2018 @02:29PM (#56684208)
    Google couldn't even handle creating a basic ISP. There's no way they're going to follow through on this.
  • As the complexity of a system increases, so does the need for its design to be driven by the process of evolution via variation and selection.

    This implies that the area should be open to the activities of a free market, where competition among producers will yield variations, and choice among consumers will yield selective forces.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It is an old industrial area made on reclaimed land (landfill), right on the waterfront. Due to little/no restrictions on what that landfill was in the early days, and its old industrial heritage, it is land that is pretty badly polluted. Being on landfill, I'm guessing that foundations for highrise buildings would be difficult/expensive.

    Personally, I'd like to see it becoming industrial again. A big reason I left Toronto was that I liked working with my hands, but there is not really any industry left in T

    • by Yaztromo ( 655250 ) on Monday May 28, 2018 @02:25AM (#56686954) Homepage Journal

      Being on landfill, I'm guessing that foundations for highrise buildings would be difficult/expensive.

      Everything south of Front street is landfill [blogto.com]. When Front Street was laid down in 1796 (!), it was right along the shoreline of Lake Ontario.

      As such, the CN Tower, Skydome (yeah, I still refuse to call it the "Rogers Centre"), the Air Canada Centre, Lakeshore Blvd, the Gardiner Expressway, The Metro Toronto Convention Centre, Union Station, and all those condos on Queens Quay are built on landfill.

      (Interesting note -- the Harbour Commission building used to be right on the lakeshore. It's now about half a kilometre inland).

      Yaz

  • Why do they not understand the difference between the past and the future? Here is yet another story whose headline declares something has happened, yet the summary makes clear that the thing in question has not yet occurred. This project hasn’t even started yet.

    Were people not paying attention in fourth grade English?

    • by Desler ( 1608317 )

      Except in this case built is an adjective:

      built
      adjective
      Definition of built for English Language Learners
      —used to say that someone or something has the right qualities for or to do something
      : made, formed, or shaped in a specified way

      https://www.merriam-webster.co... [merriam-webster.com]

      Grammar nazi fail.

      • No, when used in that manner the word is generally paired with “for” or “to do” - e.g. “built for speed”.

        Not to mention that the headline in question doesn’t actually work in the context you provide - what is the supposed “for” or “to do” word or phrase being modified?

  • ... when google's current tech is viewed as the 1984 Big Brother that it really is. Will they continue to be happy to be a part of this experiment?
  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Sunday May 27, 2018 @03:35PM (#56684540)
    Unlike US, Canada has some privacy laws. People object to this development because it will be 24/7 monitored area of the city that would spy on everyone in the vicinity, not just the people that signed up to live there.
  • nothankyou.jpg

E = MC ** 2 +- 3db

Working...