Whenever they find that the air quality reaches a certain level, they want to be able to remind citizens to stay indoors, not drive, and not go out to work if they have health problems,” Fong said. “This was all in response to a federal mandate that said, to get a certain amount of funding, you have to have some kind of notification system in place. So they came to us.” Granicus worked with the county and its sensor system to set up an automated email process associated with poor air quality measurements.
If the air quality reaches a certain limit
The air sensor sends an email to county staff. Once that information gets to the county staff and is verified, the staff uses their cell phone to send a message with the alert to Granicus, which sends the message to a specific monitoring site distribution list. “Essentially,” Fong continues, “it’s using automation to connect people and communicate with them about topics that really matter in an efficient, automated way. These sensors can collect information, deliver an action, and part of that action is communicating with the public to help them stay healthy.
Fong adds that the ability for other
Organizations to use this automated sensor communication is endless – natural resources departments can use it to send water contaminant alerts; transportation departments can use it to send traffic alerts; and so on. The power of exposing resources overseas chinese in canada data through sensors or APIs is obvious to many organizations. There are APIs for maps, weather, search, photos, data, stocks, and music. According to an article on ReadWrite, 75% of Twitter traffic is done through the API, and 60% of tweets come from third-party applications. “By extending our platform with APIs, we can expose a variety of resources so that systems or applications of government agencies can contact us through the API,” Fong explained.
This is important because governments
Reduce human resources by automating tasks – from expert commentary now video content is confidently expanding audiences, driving engagement, call-to-action messages, keeping more citizens informed, eliminating errors, managing topics, to sending alerts via email or SMS.” “As the world continues to evolve,” Fong said, “so does the way we serve government, and therefore the way governments communicate rich data with citizens. Imagine where we will be in 15 years.” Lying is the new normal. You can call it fake news, alternative facts or white lies, but the fact is that truth from clarity and honesty has gone as far as the typewriter. How did we get to this point where distortion, obfuscation, denial and counter-logic are enshrined as the first commandment of the communications and journalism professions?
Think of how many professions rely on lying to earn a paycheck
(1) televangelists; (2) politicians; (3) salespeople; (4) poker players; (5) actresses; and (6) lawyers. Did I miss anyone? Carol Kinsey Goleman of Kinsey Consulting Services reminds us that lying is part of human history and that we all lie, whether it’s subtle fabrications or outright lies. How many of us have lied? • Exaggerating on a resume or pushing the boundaries of self-reviews in a job interview? • Telling your partner that they look great in that dress when they actually look fat in it.