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Intelligent Community Forum Announces Finalists for 2005 Intelligent
Community Awards
NEW
YORK (May 13, 2005) – The Intelligent Community Forum
announced the names of the finalists for its annual Intelligent
Community of the Year Awards. The awards will be presented at a
luncheon ceremony on June 14 during the second day of the ICF’s
annual conference in New York . The 2005 conference, “Building
the Broadband Economy,” is produced in association with the
Institute for Technology & Enterprise at Polytechnic University
and the American Society for Public Administration. It takes place
at the high-tech MetroTech campus of Polytechnic University , one
mile from lower Manhattan . The 150 year-old school, home to the
first campus-wide wireless network in New York City , has a history
of achievement in areas such as radar, microwave technology and
advanced telecommunications, and has produced three Nobel Prize
winners.
The Intelligent Community Awards are presented in four categories
to the Intelligent Community, Intelligent Community Visionary, Intelligent
Community Technology and Intelligent Building of the Year.
As many 200 delegates from around the world will gather to meet
and discuss ways that broadband communications is making a practical
but profound impact on the infrastructure, economy, business and
social growth in their regions. Delegates are expected to arrive
from China , India , Canada , Brazil , Japan and Portugal and discuss
best practices and case studies.
The Canadian Consul General of New York will host a reception honoring
the Top Seven Intelligent Communities and the finalists of the three
other awards on the evening of June 13 th in Manhattan.
Finalists
The Finalists for the Intelligent Community Awards for 2005 are:
Intelligent Building
of the Year
Northern Ireland Science Park (NISP)
– The Innovation Centre , Belfast , Northern Ireland . The
Center is the Park’s first building, a 56,000 square-foot
facility opened in 2003. It is considered one of Ireland ’s
most secure wireless facilities and offers tenants scaleable ICT
and real estate solutions, including the latest H-P and Cisco Systems
Voice over IP (VOIP) and international broadband connectivity. ICF
cited NISP’s robust telecommunications infrastructure and
its role in supporting Northern Ireland ’s quest to cross
the Digital Divide as key to its nomination.
Nankang Software Park , Taipei , Taiwan
. The Park is a state-of-the-art area dedicated to the development
of knowledge-based industries. Formed as a collaborative effort
between government and the private sector, the Park focuses on software
development, IC design and biotechnology. The Park employs nearly
13,000 people from 260 companies. ICF cited the Park’s scale
and model of government enabling commerce in a prosperous region
that continues to add to its progress as an intelligent community.
Taipei was one of ICF’s Top Seven Intelligent Communities
of the Year in 2004.
Ebene Cybertower , Mauritius . The
12-story building was cited by ICF for its development as a major
component of an integrated intelligent community project called
Ebene Cyber City , which is part of a plan by the government of
Mauritius to develop information and communications technologies
as a “fifth pillar” of the nation’s economy, as
it moves into the Digital Age.
Intelligent Community Technology of
the Year
InnerWireless System, InnerWireless , Richardson
, Texas , United States . Cited as one of the few true broadband
in-building wireless distribution systems that enable coverage for
an entire building or facility’s wireless services on a unified
platform, InnerWireless offers a protocol-neutral platform that
is capable of distributing wireless services across a unified system.
ICF cited the technology as one that would help introduce more wireless
broadband capacity in communities and commercial buildings –
thus enabling knowledge workers and improved communications in support
of business growth and service.
Smart Identity Card System (SMARTICS), Hong
Kong SAR Immigration Department, Hong Kong Special Administrative
Region. The SMARTICS system was developed by the Immigration
Department of Hong Kong (ImmD) to substantially streamline the production,
workflow process and issuance of the approximately 8,000 cards required
by the ImmD each day. In addition to simplifying work processes
and providing a paperless environment in this critical area to one
of the world’s busiest communities, the system enables people
to clear immigration in much the same way as a credit card enables
airline passengers to be ticketed. The card holder also has the
option to include a digital certificate inside the chip which enables
a variety of secure electronic transactions. ICF noted that because
Hong Kong is an international financial center, and depends heavily
on visitors and a steady stream of “knowledge workers”
entering and leaving, the ability to have an effective ID system
is vital to its economic development and security.
AN50e System, Redline Communications, Inc.
, Markham , Ontario , Canada . AN50e is among the world’s
first high-performance, low-cost multi-service solutions for carriers
and service providers seeking to expand their broadband wireless
networks and provide quality access to customers, especially in
areas where terrestrial (wired) solutions are impossible or prohibitively
expensive. The company’s patented enhancements to technologies
enable long-range and robust non-line-of-sight solutions. ICF cited
Redline’s technology as important to the expansion of broadband
access and the creation or enhancement of a broadband infrastructure
in communities where there are few, if any, options.
Intelligent Community Visionary of the
Year
New Partnership for Africa ’s Development
(NEPAD) for its E-Schools Africa Project. Initiated by the
Organization of African Unity, five heads of state from Algeria
, Egypt , Nigeria , Senegal and South Africa have collaborated since
2001 to pursue projects that enable African nations to pursue sustainable
economic growth and integrate the continent into the global economy.
ICF cited NEPAD’s E-Africa project, specifically its E-Schools
Africa project, as worthy of its vision of linking telecommunications
infrastructure to economic growth. The project aims to network 600,000
African schools to the Internet, mainly via satellite. Organizations
including the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), as well
as private sector companies such as Alcatel (France) and IP Planet
( Israel ) are partnering with the Commission to move this vision
forward and to use the project to further its goals of expanding
broadband access throughout the continent.
OneCleveland, Cleveland , Ohio , United
States . Launched only 12 months ago,this grass-roots organization
in one of America ’s struggling communities has developed
into an organization that has attracted support and attention throughout
the region, and is bringing the concept of the intelligent community
to the shores of Lake Erie . ICF noted that OneCleveland was founded
by entrepreneurs from the telecommunications sector who are championing
this effort and have energized people and resources in both the
public and private sectors. OneCleveland, according to ICF, has
begun to transform the community so dramatically that the organization
has already been nominated for several national awards, including
one from John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems (USA), for its innovative
use of technology. This cutting-edge regional network in a part
of the American Midwest noted for its declining manufacturing base
is underpinning the emergence of an intelligent community.
Gauteng Province , South Africa for the
Innovation Hub. In 2002, the Premier of Gauteng’s Provincial
government announced a project to create an infrastructure that
would stimulate the knowledge-intensive sector of the province,
and move the economy away from its historical resource-dependent
focus. The Innovation Hub was launched as a catalyst for this effort.
Considered a state-of-the-art science park, the Hub is designed
specifically to create and to link an information technology infrastructure
to an overall vision for a knowledge-based economy. The Hub officially
opened in 2005 and is the first facility of its type in Africa to
become a full member of the International Association of Science
Parks. The 60 hectare development incorporates a convergent broadband
infrastructure of VoIP, multi-media and “plug-and-play”
capabilities not seen in a South African project. ICF cited the
leadership of the province in bringing together multiple stakeholders
and noted the role that the Innovation Hub will play in becoming
a model for other regions in South Africa and the rest of the continent
in support of more intelligent community developments.
Intelligent Community of the Year
On January 19, 2005 , at the annual Pacific Telecommunications Council
conference in Honolulu , ICF announced its annual list of the Top
Seven Intelligent Communities in the world. Each will send a delegation
and representatives to the June conference, where they will be honored
by the Canadian Consulate General at a reception for conference
attendees on the evening of June 13. Earlier that day, the seven
will be together for the first time for a roundtable panel discussion
on their success strategies and programs.
In alphabetical order the Top Seven Intelligent Communities of
2005 are:
- Issy-les- Moulineaux , France
- Mitaka , Japan
- Pirai , Brazil
- Singapore
- Sunderland , England , United Kingdom
- Tianjin , China
- Toronto , Canada
The Power of Collaboration
"These finalists are not only leaders in their field, visionary
in their outlook and innovative in their approach, but also express
a natural tendency to be collaborative and understand the benefits
of collaboration - such as benefits gained through sharing resources,
expanding the range of opportunities, developing expanded audiences
and increasing the overall visibility and importance of the role
that an intelligent community plays in the daily lives of citizens
and the creation of wealth and business opportunities,” said
John G. Jung, chairman of the Intelligent Community Forum.
ICF noted that, while the Top Seven Intelligent Communities list
is often viewed as a competitive ranking, that is not its intent.
ICF has developed a list of five Intelligent Community Indicators
that provide the first global framework for understanding how communities
and regions can leverage broadband and digital technologies to succeed
in an economy that becomes more global by the day. The Top Seven
are chosen, not because they excel in all of these areas, but because
each demonstrates excellence in at least one or more of these criteria.
Because of the number of submissions, the complexity in evaluating
the “most intelligent” and the wide range of cultures
and approaches communities take to make the transformation to the
Digital Age the ICF establishes a theme each year that enables a
focused review for selection. In 2005 the theme for the Top Seven
and Intelligent Community of the Year is “collaboration.”
Collaboration takes on many forms in the development of communities
and their information-based economies. It includes the degree of
public-private partnership, the structural relationships that are
established among the multiple stakeholders, including the academic,
government and real estate sectors as well as the degree of collaboration
between the government and its constituents.
Intelligent Community Forum
The Intelligent Community Forum ( www.intelligentcommunity.org)
is a special project of World Teleport Association ( www.worldteleport.org)
that focuses on the uses of broadband and information technology
for economic development by communities large and small. ICF
conducts research, creates conference content, publishes newsletters
and presents annual Awards for Intelligent Community developers.
World Teleport Association is a nonprofit association of teleports,
Intelligent Communities and their trading partners in 20 nations
around the world.
InnerWireless
InnerWireless ® deploys its unified broadband wireless distribution
platform in hospitals and large commercial buildings to support
a full range of wireless services and applications. InnerWireless,
which guarantees wireless coverage inside buildings ranging in size
up to 10 million square feet, is properly engineered to accommodate
wireless systems essential for:
- Interpersonal Communications
including PCS/cellular, messaging/personal data, enterprise voice,
and paging
- Clinical Operations
including wireless infusion therapy/medical administration, enterprise/clinical
data, WMTS and portable patient monitoring, and people and asset
tracking
- Building Operations
including building automation, security and first-responder communications,
and push-to-talk radios
For more information about InnerWireless, see www.InnerWireless.com
For more information, contact:
Christina Teagarden
Trinity PR for InnerWireless
972-788-9456 x302
teagarden@trinity-pr.com
Louis Zacharilla
Intelligent Community Forum
212-825-0218 x12
lzacharilla@intelligentcommunity.org
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