While plans to develop “smart cities” are gathering pace across the world, we know little about the ways in which the discourses of datafication, smartness, and big data play out in material contexts of urban development, including utility and resource management. In this paper, we explore this intersection in the case of Bangalore’s water supply, where IBM in alliance with the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (BWSSB) is implementing a water-flow sensor network and geographic database system under the label of “big data for water supply.” We illustrate how the BWSSBIBM approach narrows down the complex field of water provision to a question of water in- and out-flow measurements and the monitoring of BWSSB ground personnel. In theo...
Copyright © 2013 Indian Institute of ScienceUrban population growth together with other pressures, s...
Hybrid water systems (HWSs) are emerging as an alternative decentralised and cost-effective approach...
Smartphones, smart watches, smart cars, and smart grids - everything is smart nowadays, even water. ...
AbstractWater systems are becoming increasingly complex and instrumented and require a rich set of f...
As projections highlight that half of the global population will be living in regions facing severe ...
The planning of cities and the planning of their water supplies are intertwined. This paper explores...
Managing water in urban areas is an ever increasingly complex challenge. Technology enables sustaina...
AbstractThe rapid growth of population and industrialization has paved way for the use of technologi...
The focus of this thesis is the innovative process by which citizens in Bangalore, India have become...
AbstractThe Internet, invention of the century, has completely revolutionized the world and brought ...
In Lima, residents are fundamental co-creators of the urban water infrastructure, taking up various ...
The planning of cities and their water supplies are intertwined. This paper explores the potential r...
This book chapter describes the evolutionary journey of cities with relevance to hydroinformatics: a...
Redevelopments of Lima’s water infrastructure aim to reduce inequalities in water consumption, conne...
This article critiques decontextualized notions of smart urbanism by examining the variegated and sp...
Copyright © 2013 Indian Institute of ScienceUrban population growth together with other pressures, s...
Hybrid water systems (HWSs) are emerging as an alternative decentralised and cost-effective approach...
Smartphones, smart watches, smart cars, and smart grids - everything is smart nowadays, even water. ...
AbstractWater systems are becoming increasingly complex and instrumented and require a rich set of f...
As projections highlight that half of the global population will be living in regions facing severe ...
The planning of cities and the planning of their water supplies are intertwined. This paper explores...
Managing water in urban areas is an ever increasingly complex challenge. Technology enables sustaina...
AbstractThe rapid growth of population and industrialization has paved way for the use of technologi...
The focus of this thesis is the innovative process by which citizens in Bangalore, India have become...
AbstractThe Internet, invention of the century, has completely revolutionized the world and brought ...
In Lima, residents are fundamental co-creators of the urban water infrastructure, taking up various ...
The planning of cities and their water supplies are intertwined. This paper explores the potential r...
This book chapter describes the evolutionary journey of cities with relevance to hydroinformatics: a...
Redevelopments of Lima’s water infrastructure aim to reduce inequalities in water consumption, conne...
This article critiques decontextualized notions of smart urbanism by examining the variegated and sp...
Copyright © 2013 Indian Institute of ScienceUrban population growth together with other pressures, s...
Hybrid water systems (HWSs) are emerging as an alternative decentralised and cost-effective approach...
Smartphones, smart watches, smart cars, and smart grids - everything is smart nowadays, even water. ...