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Think Future Today #2: Moving relationships on/offline

Technology made much of face to face communication redundant. We learn, work, date and communicate with our family and friends more online than offline. A recent survey shows that 65% of American millennials don't feel comfortable engaging with someone face-to-face, and 80% prefer conversing digitally. At the same time, artificially intelligent bots are becoming better and better at modelling human conversation and relationships. While humans are limited in the attention and kindness that they can expand on another person, artificial bots can channel virtually unlimited resources into building relationships. And it can go really far. In Japan, 30% of single women and 15% of single men aged between 20 and 29 admitted to having fallen in love with a meme or character in a game. The new trend to date an application is on a rise there. In this meetup, we will talk about the future of changing nature of human connection in the digital world. Is there a future for the real human interaction? Our THINK FUTURE TODAY series are born from many conversations we have when talking about the development of skills of the future. Every time we hear different questions, concerns, ethical dilemmas and challenges the advancement of technology and AI brings. We decided to create a space to talk about it with each other. Not expert focussed, but reflection and dialogue driven. In the end, we want to THINK TODAY what FUTURE we want to be part of tomorrow. This meetup is free of charge, but we have a limited capacity, so please register ONLY if you are SURE you will be joining. We will use English for the introduction, but you will be able to speak both English or Dutch during the discussions. [http://bit.ly/tft2018](http://bit.ly/tft2018)

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Think Future Today #1: Avoiding human-robot collision

What do we need to consider today to be able to trust technology to take over so many roles and responsibilities in our lives and avoid deadly collision with our creations? In this meetup, we are going to discuss different aspects we need to consider today to be able to trust technology to take over so many roles and responsibilities in our lives and avoid deadly collision with our creations. Our THINK FUTURE TODAY series are born from many conversations we have when talking about the development of skills of the future. Each and every time we hear different questions, concerns, ethical dilemma’s and challenges the advancement of technology and AI brings. Together with A Lab and Visual Notes, we decided to create a space to talk about it with each other. Not expert focussed, but reflection and dialogue driven. In the end, we want to THINK TODAY what FUTURE we want to be part of tomorrow. This meetup is free of charge, but we have a limited capacity, so please register ONLY if you are SURE you will be joining. We will use English for the introduction, but you will be able to speak both English or Dutch during the discussions. [http://bit.ly/tft2018](http://bit.ly/tft2018)

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AMS Science for the City #11 Today’s challenges of Amsterdam

The students of the master Metropolitan Analysis, Design and Engineering (MSc MADE) work on defining and understanding the metropolitan challenges that Amsterdam is facing today. Based on their knowledge clips, they share their first observations on the challenges of the city of Amsterdam within themes such as extremely rising housing and property prices, climate change, population growth, increasing tourist activity and how these challenges are interlinked. During this program we take their observations one step further and engage in discussions on the possible solutions.

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Why Amsterdam Businesses Need a Smart Handyman App Today

Amsterdam is one of Europe’s most active service markets, with thousands of residents and businesses relying on fast, reliable repair and...

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Maker spaces for kids in public library opens today!

Great initiative by our partners Waag Society, University of Applied Sciences and city of Amsterdam!

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WeMakeThe.City event recap: Designing Change: Participatory Urban Design Today

Often urban planning decisions are made by a select few. Some planning processes, such as public meetings or online comment petitions can prove difficult to get participation from everyone who will be impacted, especially those who feel as if there is no way for their voice to be heard, the poor, the disenfranchised, the fearful. One of the events during the WeMakeThe.City festival discussed the need for more diverse participation and inclusive communication of the needs of citizens within urban planning. A look back by special reporter Derrek Clarke. **The Designing Change conference started off with professor of the University of Miami School of Architecture Eric Firley. He recently published a book on his research into the changing nature of urban design over the past forty years. The book, Designing Change, takes a deep dive into the practice of urban design as experienced through 12 leading practitioners from across three continents. Firley’s research aim is to foster cross cultural conversation and knowledge sharing of the different aspects of urban design. The WeMakethe.City 2019 talk to promote Professor Firley’s book did just that by fostering a lively back and forth discussion between the professor, his three urban design guests and the audience of citizens, architects and urbanists.** One thing everyone agreed on is that we need more diverse participation and inclusive communication of the needs of citizens within urban planning. As Regula Luscher, the Head of the Planning and Building Department of Berlin stated: “Participation is about being able to reach target groups. This is very difficult to do and will impact the use of technology in urban development.” Often urban planning decisions are made by a select few. Some planning processes, such as public meetings or online comment petitions can prove difficult to get participation from everyone who will be impacted, especially those who feel as if there is no way for their voice to be heard, the poor, the disenfranchised, the fearful. It isn’t to say, that achieving greater participation and hearing the concerns of impacted citizens is impossible. Amsterdam has proved to be a fertile experiment ground for participatory urban planning. ![](https://api.amsterdamsmartcity.com/img/update/content-images/amsterdamsmartcity.com-1414199a420f8777c81927ef3f37f23b6be467a7.jpg?w=615&fit=contain&s=23e7d1abc29b4b5f7f56082fa70864ab) Both Tom Schaap, Senior Urbanist for the City of Amsterdam and Paola Vigano, Head of the Laboratory of Urbanism at the Technical University of Lausanne referenced Amsterdam as a classic model of what can be achieved through active community participation. As Tom explained, “Amsterdam is a great example to the EU and to the world with its development into a bike centred city. It didn’t happen overnight but involved lots of participation. It changed street by street and neighbourhood by neighbourhood”. **A Question Of Technology And The Smart City** Current technologies, mainly smartphones and low-cost sensors may hold the keys to more inclusive participation in urban development projects. Sensors can be used to track traffic patterns and public use of space while smartphone apps can be used to communicate with disenfranchised citizens to enable them to participate in the planning process. However, the use of these technologies pose many questions around personal privacy and what secondary uses the collected data will be subjected to. Use of these solutions may drive citizen communication and participation in the process lower, or worse; mire the whole process in endless arguments. The Canadian city of Toronto is experiencing just this as it slowly tries to progress through the planning of Google's Sidewalk Labs’ waterfront development. Progress on this proposed smart city development has slowed because of discussions about the ownership and use of the data that will be at the core of the development’s smart city operations. This is not to say that technology is bad and can’t serve a purpose when it comes to increasing participation in urban development, it can. To be useful, technology has to balance participation enablement with protecting the personal freedoms of the community as a whole. ![](https://api.amsterdamsmartcity.com/img/update/content-images/amsterdamsmartcity.com-c99d69180388e4626c31b4d8cbef9bca8b5f6560.jpg?w=615&fit=contain&s=9cefe965df22f907a13f5762fe426454) **Urban Planning Is The Chance To Dream At The Scale Of The City** A personal freedom cherished by all is the freedom of mobility. Whether a smart city or not, no urban development project can be discussed without addressing the topic of getting from one place to another. As Regula states, “In every participation project traffic is always the question. How to move the people is always a central idea.” History bears witness to this through the grand boulevards of Baron Hausmann in 1800s Paris or the many public works projects of Robert Moses in mid-20th Century New York City. Throughout history, traffic management and the need for better infrastructure to deal with congestion has been a central component of many urban development strategies. This focus on transportation continues today in cities such as present-day Amsterdam where communities are pushing for less use of personal vehicles and greater use of cycling, pedestrian ways and potential mobility-as-a-service options. Urbanist Paola Vigano proposes another solution to increasing urban density and transportation congestion. She asks: “Why have we forgotten about living across the land and continue to focus on the urban area? Why continue to densify the city, which pushes out the people who already live there?”. Paola believes we should not neglect satellite cities. These should be developed as diverse places to live, play and work with high-speed connections to larger urban centers. Paola proposes this experiment to resolve urban congestion while also addressing the plight of rural areas suffering from population drain. **Moving Forward Through Experimentation** “If we can’t do experiments, then we can’t make the future” states Regula Luscher as she aptly sums up the combined views of the panellists and the audience in attendance at this talk. In the end, we must experiment to resolve urban development challenges. Whether the topic is how to address the challenge of community participation, immigration, migration, transportation or crisis such as climate change – the answer is always “we have to experiment and try out different solutions”. **What works in one city may not directly translate into a successful initiative in another city. We have to listen to communities, get their participation and collectively experiment until we have working solutions.** Photos and text: Derrek Clarke

News

The Dutch and Smart Cities: Shaping the Future by Challenging Today

From the 13th till the 15th of November, the Smart City Expo World Congress in Barcelona kicks off! A Dutch delegation of companies, knowledge institutes and governments, including Amsterdam Smart City, visits the event as part of a Smart City mission. There will be more than 200 participants from the Netherlands. On Monday November 12th the business event ‘The Dutch & Smart Cities” will take place. During this business event workshops, deep-dives and roundtable discussions will take place that focus on societal challenges and technological concepts in cities. Over 200 Dutch leaders, influencers, directors and mayors are looking forward to meet you in person to start a dialogue. We will prepare workshops about mobility, resilience, circular economy, safety & security, data and healthy urban living. Would you like to exchange knowledge with more than 200 smart city professionals coming from Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht, Eindhoven and ‘s Hertogenbosch? Then we are looking for you! Please find more information about the international business event ‘The Dutch and Smart Cities: Shaping the Future by Challenging Today’ here and register via the link in the document (it's free! :)) We hope to meet you there! [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1D6YlUqcKBKVuMrX5JCU9ZIbIo6bu2NIj/view?usp=sharing](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1D6YlUqcKBKVuMrX5JCU9ZIbIo6bu2NIj/view?usp=sharing) Location: Avinguda de la Torre Blanca 57 E-08172, Sant Cugat del Vallès Want to see who are the Dutch innovators? Check the videos via this link: [https://amsterdamsmartcity.com/posts?tags=smart-city-expo-2018](https://amsterdamsmartcity.com/posts?tags=smart-city-expo-2018)

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Book Your Consultation at the Best Eye Hospital in Sonipat Today

For advanced and trusted eye care, visit the **[best eye hospital in Sonipat](https://www.fimssonipat.com/speciality/ophthalmology-eye-ca...

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Your Career Upgrade Starts Here | Join Uraan IT Training Institute in Multan Today!

**Ready to Rule the Digital World?** Stop scrolling & start learning the skills that actually pay! At [Uraan IT Training Institut...

Experience

Living with nature

Today an article in the NRC about nature in the city. Last week, I published a new e-book (in Dutch) about this topic. Interested? Download it for free.

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