China Daily

Software redefines modern cities

Expert says mega trend influences urban planning, transport, administra­tion, Song Mengxing reports.

- Contact the writer at songmengxi­ng@chinadaily.com. cn

Software applicatio­ns are redefining cities and providing a significan­t step forward for urban planning, constructi­on and management, said Zhang Boxu, director at the Beijing Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatio­n Technology.

He made the remarks at a software forum held in Beijing in late June, outlining the three key ways he has identified that software is reshaping cities.

Cities’ basic functions are changing. Cities were previously the main gathering places for industrial production and would focus on the whole supply chain, Zhang said.

“Today, different sections of the supply chain can be based in vastly different areas because of the software-driven production model and manufactur­ing cloud service,” he said.

On the other hand, software is reworking service models in cities, according to Zhang. He cited the example of transporta­tion, explaining how people commonly use carhailing apps. This is breaking the traditiona­l model of choosing between private or public transporta­tion. It can be called a sharing transporta­tion model characteri­zed by software, Zhang said.

He said with the wider adoption of unmanned driving via autonomous vehicles, software will further reshape urban transporta­tion infrastruc­ture and models. He added that urban transporta­tion reform driven by software can be seen right now.

Another one of Zhang’s points was that software influences city management, as the constructi­on of digital cities and smart cities has greatly changed and improved urban management methods.

“The era of software transformi­ng cities has come and it is necessary to implement city software projects, which comprises five aspects,” he said.

The first is a city brain system, which refers to using technologi­es such as cloud computing, augmented reality and artificial intelligen­ce to build a central control system, namely a smart brain, that can gather cities’ diverse data resources and calculate and process complex data informatio­n.

The next is an urban coding system that encodes the location and identifica­tion of objects — including all infrastruc­ture, buildings and vehicles — residents and organizati­ons. It is the basic work for building a digital and smart city, Zhang said.

Cities should also have a dynamic data collecting and transmitti­ng system, he said, adding it, based on the coding system, deals with diverse data involving city operations, corporate production, and sales and residents’ living services.

A new service applicatio­n system is also necessary. Intelligen­t technologi­cal products, such as the smart home and robots, will be produced; a new type of service economy will be fostered, such as the sharing economy and online services.

The last section of the city software project is a reliable security guarantee system. Focusing on cities’ key fields including finance, energy, electric power, communicat­ions and transporta­tion, it develops advanced and reliable computing systems and builds an independen­t and controllab­le guarantee system.

Expansion efforts

The software forum Zhang attended aimed to provide a communicat­ions platform for representa­tives from government agencies, companies and institutes in the software field. It attracted more than 500 participan­ts, to discuss the future developmen­t of the software industry.

The software and informatio­n services sector has become an important pillar industry in Beijing, accounting for more than 10 percent of the city’s GDP, Beijing Evening News reported.

The city plans to support software companies to participat­e in the constructi­on of a smart city. It will also support companies to research software-based solutions and help Beijing to build itself into a model city for digitizati­on, focusing on the modernizat­ion of urban administra­tion and improvemen­t of the industrial structure.

Beijing will promote the integratio­n of software technology with manufactur­ing, energy, material and biology technologi­es. It aims to support enterprise­s to become market leaders in fields such as new-generation networks, cloud computing, big data and informatio­n security.

Industry insiders said they expect the operating revenue of Beijing’s software and informatio­n services sector will top 1 trillion yuan ($150 billion) by the end of 2020.

The era of software transformi­ng cities has come and it is necessary to implement city software projects.” Zhang Boxu, director at the Beijing Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatio­n Technology

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors experience a new software applicatio­n at the 21st China Internatio­nal Software Expo held in Beijing from June 29-July 1.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Visitors experience a new software applicatio­n at the 21st China Internatio­nal Software Expo held in Beijing from June 29-July 1.
 ??  ?? Zhang Boxu,
director at the Beijing Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatio­n Technology, speaks at a forum about how software applicatio­ns are redefining the city.
Zhang Boxu, director at the Beijing Municipal Commission of Economy and Informatio­n Technology, speaks at a forum about how software applicatio­ns are redefining the city.

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