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        Microsoft Touts Azure IoT Partners and Smart Cities Efforts
        
        
        
        
Microsoft recently highlighted a few partners that have  joined its smart building and smart cities efforts using Microsoft Azure IoT  services.
One of them is the company View, which is using the Azure  Digital Twins spatial-mapping service (currently at the  preview stage) for its smart building applications. View is also using Azure  IoT Edge and Azure Sphere for controlling its "dynamic glass" product,  according to a  Nov. 13 Microsoft announcement. Dynamic glass is a pane of glass that's  designed to bring optimal amounts of natural sunlight into a building, with an  aim of benefiting the occupants and reducing building energy demands. 
Microsoft's IoT Edge service went  live in June. It adds access to various Azure services, including Stream  Analytics, Azure Functions and Machine Learning. It works via containers or "modules"  that run locally on devices, according to a Microsoft  document description of Azure IoT Edge. The other product being used by  View, Azure Sphere, is currently at the public  preview stage. Azure Sphere is Microsoft's Linux-based  microcontroller unit for use in Internet of Things (IoT) devices.
View is using the Azure Digital Twins service for its new  View SmartProtect security solution, which senses when building glass gets  broken. SmartProtect, which is "completely invisible," according to a  View announcement (PDF),  sends a notification about the location of the broken window and the time of  the incident. 
Another partner, Moovit, will be Microsoft's supplier of  public transit routing services to the Azure Maps service, Microsoft announced  earlier this month. The Azure Maps service delivers location information  that can be tapped by developers via APIs. The service can be used by  organizations, as well as partners building solutions for smart cities management,  for instance.
Moovit makes urban data analytics solutions (called "Mobility  as a Service"). It also has a transit application that delivers public  transit information to commuters and other users. Under its agreement with  Microsoft, Moovit is putting its public transit APIs on  Azure  datacenter infrastructure. Microsoft, for its part, plans to integrate Moovit's  public transit information into Microsoft apps and services, according to a  Moovit description (PDF).  Moovit's data could be used in Microsoft's Cortana personal assistant app to  assist with commutes, for instance.
Microsoft highlighted its partnerships in the context of  last month's IoT Solutions World Congress in Barcelona. Other highlighted partners  in the smart cities context include LTI, which is using Azure Maps in its  Advanced Operations Center for city administrators. The Advanced Operations  Center provides an interface for monitoring events using information gathered  from sensors in urban areas. Another company, LTTS, is using Azure Digital  Twins in a campus facility management solution. Microsoft also recently  pointed to partner Datahoist, which uses IoT devices to gather data from  building elevators. 
For this week's Smart City Expo World Congress event, Microsoft  highlighted efforts by the city of Antwerp, Belgium, to provide trip  planning services for citizens in a solution that uses "Microsoft  Azure-based Be-Mobile technology."  Another highlighted effort is an experimental "City-as-a-Service platform"  using  Azure services that was built by software company Tieto for the  city of Espoo, Finland. 
In the United States, the city of Denver is testing traffic  improvement solutions using "Azure and other Microsoft technologies."  The city of Houston is using Azure IoT Hub, AI and Cognitive Services as part  of a safety system for public buses, Microsoft indicated. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.