Skip to main content

AT&T to collaborate on smart cities development in Ireland

Telecommunications firm AT&T is to collaborate with IDA Ireland and Dublin City Council to collaborate and exchange information about smart cities solutions. The collaboration also includes the opportunity to work with other organisations on IoT-related development projects across the country, including Dublin’s Docklands IoT project.
March 6, 2017 Read time: 1 min
Telecommunications firm 1970 AT&T is to collaborate with IDA Ireland and Dublin City Council to collaborate and exchange information about smart cities solutions.

The collaboration also includes the opportunity to work with other organisations on IoT-related development projects across the country, including Dublin’s Docklands IoT project.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Ireland tolls in the cloud with Indra
    March 14, 2023
    Third-generation toll interoperability management platform put in place for TII
  • Barcelona urban mobility challenge is on
    January 25, 2023
    Deadline is 1 March for entries in first part of €200,000 competition to help safety
  • Imtech brings ImFlow and ImCity solutions to Intertraffic
    March 24, 2014
    The Traffic & Infrastructure division of Imtech, the global, Netherlands-headquartered technical services and ICT company, is exhibiting a vast array of transport-related solutions and services from across Europe, North America and Brazil. This year’s exhibits demonstrate live projects from across the global business, from traffic management systems in Copenhagen and St. Petersburg to parking technology in Rio de Janeiro, tunnel solutions in Maastricht to telecommunications networks in Brussels. The company
  • Dynniq’s FlowSense gives green light for city mobility
    March 19, 2019
    Putting an end to traffic jams – including those involving freight - and improving the air people breathe are major goals for city authorities everywhere. With FlowSense, Dynniq thinks it may have some answers. Adam Hill asks how Sitting in traffic is top of the list of many commuters’ pet hates: a necessary evil, perhaps. But at least it doesn’t kill you - the same can’t be said of toxins in the air. Indeed, the World Health Organisation estimates that 4.2 million deaths worldwide are due to outdoor pol