Page 8 - Redefining smart city platforms: Setting the stage for Minimal Interoperability Mechanisms - A U4SSC deliverable on city platforms
P. 8
7.3 Recommended specifications and frameworks ...........................................................................41
8 Useful results from the work on MIMs ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 42
8.1 MIM 1: Context information management ...................................................................................43
8.2 MIM 2: Shared Data Models ...........................................................................................................45
8.3 MIM 3: Ecosystem transaction management ................................................................................46
8.4 MIM 4: Personal data management ...............................................................................................47
8.5 MIM 5: Transparent AI ......................................................................................................................49
8.6 MIM 7: Geospatial information management ..............................................................................51
9 Conclusion ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 54
List of figures
Figures
Figure 1: The Gridwise 8-layer interoperability stack ....................................................................................5
Figure 2: Smart city architecture – City of Valencia, Spain – based on Recommendation ITU-T
Y.4201 ................................................................................................................................................................18
Figure 3: General architecture for smart cities ............................................................................................19
Figure 4: General architecture of smart cities in China ...............................................................................20
Figure 5: Smart city reference architecture (ITU-T Y-series Recommendations - Supplement 27,
ITU-T Y.4400 series) ..........................................................................................................................................24
Figure 6: FIWARE reference architecture .....................................................................................................25
Figure 7: User-centric IoT-based architecture – Aura Minora .....................................................................25
Figure 8: SynchroniCity project reference architecture ..............................................................................27
Figure 9: Platform-based agile solutions ......................................................................................................28
Figure 10: Core components of a generic architecture for processing and management for smart
cities and communities ...................................................................................................................................31
Figure 11: Smart city components and data sources ..................................................................................31
Figure 12: OASC MIMs ...................................................................................................................................39
Figure 13: High-level architecture framework model .................................................................................41
vi Redefining smart city platforms: Setting the stage for Minimal Interoperability Mechanisms