Mouser Electronics Inc. is teaming up with celebrity engineer
Grant Imahara for the Shaping Smarter Cities project, the
newest series in the successful Empowering Innovation Together program.
The
exciting series features five videos that showcase engineers and companies from
around the world that are working to make cities more intelligent and
resourceful through innovative smart technologies. The new series is supported
by Mouser’s valued suppliers Analog Devices, Intel, Microchip Technology and Molex.
In
the first Shaping Smarter Cities video, Imahara
meets with WIRED Brand Lab host Michael Copeland in San Francisco to kick off
the series. Together, they explore the challenges facing today’s growing cities
and set the stage for how the series will unfold.
“Innovation
is the true source for creating solutions to existing problems,” said Glenn
Smith, President and CEO of Mouser Electronics, a leading global distributor of
the newest semiconductors and electronic components. “We look forward to seeing
how engineers around the world are crafting solutions to problems that are
unique to their locations, and then learning how these solutions can be applied
to other cities as well.”
“It’s
always exciting to be at the forefront of this type of critical discussion on
what the cities of tomorrow
will be like,” said Grant Imahara. “Engineers, by nature, are problem
solvers, so I am excited to see what these engineers around the globe are doing
to shape the smart cities of the future.”
The
series will take viewers to cities in Portugal, Japan, and Southern California,
covering regional challenges and the fascinating
new technologies developed to address them. Mouser and Imahara will explore how
buses and city vehicles with connected access points and sensors are forming a
mesh network that provides free Wi-Fi and massive amounts of data to help a
city run more efficiently. The series then investigates how indoor farming
could be the future of agriculture in dense cities, and follows up with how
augmented reality can help engineers visualize and troubleshoot construction of
a massive project before it’s even built.
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