The Borneo Post

Alibaba’s City Brain to be implemente­d in other parts of Malaysia

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HANGZHOU: The City Brain by Alibaba Cloud, which is being carried out on a trial basis in Kuala Lumpur is expected to be rolled out to other parts of Malaysia after its pilot project is completed.

The Malaysia City Brain initiative, carried out in collaborat­ion with the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporatio­n (MDEC) and the Kuala Lumpur City Hall, is a significan­t milestone as it’s the first time for the City Brain solution to be adopted overseas.

It is developed on Alibaba Cloud’s robust cloud computing infrastruc­ture and will support Malaysia’sdigitaltr­ansformati­on with cloud technology and artificial intelligen­ce.

Alibaba Cloud president Simon Wu said that every city faced similar problems especially in terms of traffic woes, and the City Brain was aimed at shaping a more modern and convenient transporta­tion system.

“The scale of network is expanding rapidly, but traffic demand varies in space and time,” he said during the Alibaba Cloud Conference here yesterday.

Wu said that by leveraging on cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce, the system could collect data from the traffic pattern, hence improving the city’s management system, especially in transporta­tion.

TheCityBra­ininKualaL­umpur, announced last year, is currently monitoring and collecting data on traffic movement especially around the city centre. The roll out was in collaborat­ion with ride hailing applicatio­n Grab and MDEC.

Meanwhile in Hangzhou, where the city brain was first implemente­d in 2017, the programme is now moving into the second phase.

“Traffic in the city has improved tremendous­ly since the implementa­tion and has reduced emergency response time. The City Brain will also centralise informatio­n on energy, constructi­on and emergency rescue,” he added.

The pro g ramme will encompass five core elements, namely 5G networks, high positionin­g system, high precision driving map, electronic signs, traffic operation and control centre and integrated applicatio­n, all aimed at creating a smart expressway.

“A smart car itself could not be fully utilised if the infrastruc­ture does not support it,” said Alibaba AI Labs Chief Scientist Wang Gang.

He added that it would be more economical if the sensor that captured traffic flow was installed to the infrastruc­ture rather than installing it in individual cars.

“In order for a city to transform, it needs to have the support from infrastruc­ture. If not, it would be a waste,” Gang added. — Bernama

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