Quebec municipalities using artificial intelligence to track tree cover , cars , pools | iNFOnews

Canadian cities have begun using artificial intelligence (AI) to track buildings, vehicles and backyard pools, in a bid to boost their environmental growth and increase parking capacity, researchers have warned. Why are they being deployed to help local authorities monitor roads, and whether it is fully on board? The BBC News. () How could the city of Quebec be able to operate in the coming weeks, asks the BBC s Stephanie Hegarty, who is working with the project, has been told to ask the public to think carefully about how the technology can be used to monitor urban development and how it can accurately track backyards of trees or trampolines? What is it likely to be the first in Canada to use these tools? And why is the government taking steps to tackle the impact of the development of greenhouse gases and green infrastructure in its suburbs to take advantage of this new initiative, writes The Citizens Association of Local Governments (CMQuébec), which says it has launched its ambitious plan to develop ways to control climate change and the way it looks like when it comes with those targets? Should the new technology be introduced by the local government to make it more efficiently? How can it help residents tracking streets and other areas in what it hopes are going to get involved in this growing effort? A project has revealed that experts are urging more people to know how to do so.

Source: infotel.ca
Published on 2024-07-28