Open Data Strategies of Real-time Cities

Open Data Strategies of Real-time Cities

Commitment and Pragmatism Make Moscow a 'Must' on Smart City Innovation Watch-lists

RELEASE DATE
25-Jul-2017
REGION
Europe
Research Code: 9AC0-00-3E-00-00
SKU: IT03423-EU-MR_20450
AvailableYesPDF Download
$1,500.00
In stock
SKU
IT03423-EU-MR_20450
$1,500.00
DownloadLink
ENQUIRE NOW

Description

This market insight is part of Frost & Sullivan's Real-time Cities Research Program. In recent years, it has become evident that cities see an opportunity to stimulate economic growth by opening up their substantial sources of data to digital services innovators. To become true real-time cities, they strive to do more than simply publish existing information online. Differentiation lies in the foundations they put down in terms of data strategy, governance structures, and partnerships. Historically, the city of Moscow's smart city initiatives have received only moderate recognition. However, this is changing. Having attracted significant attention over the last couple of years, the Russian capital is establishing itself as a 'must' on the watch-lists of smart city observers, thanks to ingenuity and commitment.

Table of Contents

Key Takeaways

Study Objectives

Scope—Moscow-focused Study as Part of a Wider European Program

Research Methodology

The City

Real-time City Initiatives—Starting Point

Real-time City Initiatives—Recent Achievements

Smart City Strategy

Objectives—City of Moscow

Data Strategy—Citizen-facing Open Data Publishing Channels

Data Strategy—City ‘App Store’

Data Strategy—Ownership and Publication of Data Sets

Data Strategy—Key Aspects in Big or Open Data Use

Partners and ICT Suppliers

Hard Infrastructure Availability and Funding

The Last Word

Legal Disclaimer

The Frost & Sullivan Story

Value Proposition—Future of Your Company & Career

Global Perspective

Industry Convergence

360º Research Perspective

Implementation Excellence

Our Blue Ocean Strategy

This market insight is part of Frost & Sullivan's Real-time Cities Research Program. In recent years, it has become evident that cities see an opportunity to stimulate economic growth by opening up their substantial sources of data to digital services innovators. To become true real-time cities, they strive to do more than simply publish existing information online. Differentiation lies in the foundations they put down in terms of data strategy, governance structures, and partnerships. Historically, the city of Moscow's smart city initiatives have received only moderate recognition. However, this is changing. Having attracted significant attention over the last couple of years, the Russian capital is establishing itself as a 'must' on the watch-lists of smart city observers, thanks to ingenuity and commitment.
More Information
No Index No
Podcast No
Author Martin Hoff ter Heide
Industries Information Technology
WIP Number 9AC0-00-3E-00-00
Is Prebook No