Emerging Tech

What other states can learn from Indiana’s investment in quantum technology

COMMENTARY | The emerging technology holds the promise of transforming public services at the state and local levels. Indiana’s collaborative model is a blueprint for states seeking to cash in on quantum.

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Eliminate Manual Processes Route and Approve Invoices from Anywhere

Today’s finance teams carry a heavy burden, supporting everything from growth strategies to long-term planning – all while continuously delivering monthly and quarterly numbers and keeping cash flowing. But even as demands on finance departments grow, many still spend excessive time using paper, spreadsheets, and e-mails to process vendor invoices, approvals, and payments.

Letter from Congress warns county against Chinese drone use

Arguing that the drones put privacy and national security at risk, a U.S. House committee is asking the country to stop buying them. The letter hints its efforts could expand to localities nationwide.

One year ago, New York City introduced a sweeping AI plan. Here’s how it’s going.

In a Q&A with Route Fifty, one of the architects of the city’s ambitious AI Action Plan discusses the process and challenges for ensuring the technology is used responsibly and ethically.

States still on a ‘learning curve’ amid generative AI’s promise

Leaders acknowledged the technology’s promise at the recent National Association of State Chief Information Officers conference, but said data management is a major obstacle preventing widespread use in government.

For rural transit agencies, a rocky road to zero emissions

Rural public transit agencies are up against limited choices and resources as they work to decarbonize their fleets.

Why people aren’t buying heat pumps—and what states can do about it

COMMENTARY | New research from the coldest part of the country finds we need to tell people what heat pumps are before telling them why they should buy them.

AI fatigue

COMMENTARY | It's true, workers are already experiencing AI burnout. Here's how leaders can recognize and manage it.

Water-challenged state uses AI, satellites to find leaks

New Mexico will use artificial intelligence to monitor satellite images to identify leaks before they become major problems.

As wildfires burn throughout the West, officials are turning to AI

In California, fire officials began using artificial intelligence last year to scan cameras for smoke.

Two years later, money from the CHIPS Act is moving

Now that more than half of the almost $53 billion federal investment has been spoken for, the real work has begun as state and local governments look to cash in. Here’s what experts say officials need to do.

A new solution for flood-prone cities? Concrete made from shellfish waste.

Researchers have developed a type of concrete that uses discarded shells to trap water. It's now combating floods and food waste in urban gardens and along cycling paths.

Oakland’s new school buses don’t just reduce pollution—they double as giant batteries

A new fleet of buses can send power back to the grid, stabilizing it instead of straining it.

The right to repair electronics is now law in 3 states. Is Big Tech complying?

You're legally entitled to fix your own gadgets in California, Minnesota, and New York — but not all tech companies have gotten the memo.

States move to protect recording artists from AI-generated likenesses

After Tennessee passed the ELVIS Act this past winter to protect an artist’s name, image and likeness from being used by digital replicas, other states are considering similar legislation.

Does California's AI bill go too far or fall short? It depends who you ask.

The legislation requires developers of large AI systems to test if they can be used in various extreme scenarios. It has support as well as plenty of detractors in the state’s large tech community.

In some cities, second thoughts about gunshot detection sensors

Recent studies on technology that alerts police to gunfire have found it has little impact on shootings or prosecutions.

What cities should know about ShotSpotter technology

COMMENTARY | ShotSpotter may have benefits for improved gun shot detection and response, one expert says, but it offers little benefit for enforcement and did not reduce gunshot victimization.

Policymakers move to get ahead of deepfake political ads

Several states already require that AI’s use in elections and campaigns be disclosed, but adoption is not universal. With the election on the horizon, efforts have increased to make sure voters can identify AI-generated content.

How one state is using technology to curb high pedestrian fatality rates

Texas has the second highest pedestrian fatality rates in the country. It is looking beyond just physical infrastructure to curb traffic deaths in the state.

Rescue from above: How drones may narrow emergency response times

While research has often found that drones arrive faster than first responders, there’s little conclusive evidence that drones improve health outcomes.