futuristic city
Crazy futuristic city being populated by people willing to leave the real world behind
Woven City is a bold experiment by Toyota. There is a futuristic city designed and built from the ground up in Japan to test the latest technologies. It's called Woven City, and it's a bold experiment by Toyota to transition from being just an automaker to a broader mobility company focused on the future of movement. Far from a traditional testing ground, this is a fully functional urban environment designed for real people to live, work and play while contributing to groundbreaking research. Think of Woven City as a real-world laboratory.
- North America > United States > California (0.05)
- Asia > Japan > Honshū > Chūbu > Shizuoka Prefecture > Shizuoka (0.05)
- Asia > China (0.05)
World's first 'city of the future' welcomes first residents who'll live there rent-free... but there's a catch
The world's first'city of the future' is nearly ready to welcome its first residents. Developed by car maker Toyota, 'Woven City' sits at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan and features at least 11 'smart' homes powered by hydrogen, AI and other technologies. CEO Akio Toyoda said the 10 billion utopia would serve as a'lab' for innovators to develop the technologies of tomorrow. The city is poised to welcome its first 100 residents, which will be employees, this fall, who will live there for free -- though they'll need to already be Toyota employees and work on developing experimental tech for the company. The program will then expand to 2,200 more people, who will include innovators and their families, parents and pets.
- Asia > Japan (0.63)
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Las Vegas (0.06)
Toyota aims to open its futuristic city near Mount Fuji this year
Toyota Motor plans to move in the first 100 residents of a futuristic city at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan by as soon as this fall. The initial residents of Woven City will be composed mostly of the carmaker's own employees and their families, and will gradually expand to about 2,000 residents as part of its initial phases, Toyota said Monday. "This year, residents will begin moving in as we slowly bring Woven City to life," Toyota Chairman Akio Toyoda said at a news conference at CES in Las Vegas. "We aim to accelerate the pace at which new technologies can be tested and developed at Woven City." Toyoda debuted plans for the "living laboratory" five years ago as Toyota's then-president, saying then it would be a fully sustainable city and real-world showcase for artificial intelligence, advanced robotics, self-driving cars and smart homes.
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Las Vegas (0.27)
- Asia > Japan (0.27)
La veille de la cybersécurité
Artificial intelligence is quickly advancing in the field of video generation. That could have a profound effect on our social media feeds one day. AI's creative abilities are outstripping its driving skills. While self-driving car technology is going nowhere, there's been a remarkable explosion in research around generative models, or artificial intelligence systems that can create images from simple text. In just the past week, AI researchers from Meta Platforms Inc. and Alphabet Inc.'s Google have taken an extraordinary leap forward, developing systems that can generate videos with just about any text prompt one can imagine.
12 futuristic cities being built around the world, from Saudi Arabia to China
With world's population continuing to increase and climate change drastically affecting our environment, many metropolises are struggling to grow, develop and even support citizens within current and traditional urban designs. Governments, entrepreneurs and technology companies are employing some of the world's leading architects and designers to rethink the idea of cities, how people can interact and how to live within them. From reclaimed land, groundbreaking skyscrapers in the desert and cities rising in the metaverse, here are 12 incredible futuristic cities redefining the urban spaces we live in. The $500 billion Neom project in Saudi Arabia is set to be home to a record-setting 170-kilometre-long skyscraper called the Mirror Line. It will be the world's largest structure, comprising of two buildings up to 490 metres tall, running parallel to each other.
- Asia > Middle East > Saudi Arabia (0.61)
- Asia > Maldives (0.07)
- Africa > Middle East > Egypt > Cairo Governorate > Cairo (0.07)
- (11 more...)
- Information Technology (0.88)
- Energy > Renewable > Solar (0.71)
- Automobiles & Trucks (0.70)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (0.48)