How to Determine the Relative Smartness Level of a City

Written by srivassid | Published 2020/12/07
Tech Story Tags: negative-power-quarter-law | innovation | creativity | agriculture | smart-cities | super-linear-scaling | relative-city-smartness-level | kleibers-law | web-monetization

TLDR There are several indicators that have been defined to arrive as a number of smartness levels. These include natural environment, water and waste, transport, economy, education, health and governance indicators. The law, Kleiber's Law, was found by Max Kleiber, a Swiss scientist in 1910. He found that a city that was 10 times as bigger than another was not 10 times more innovative, but 17 times more. A city 50 times bigger was 130 times more creative than a smaller city. The code used in this article can be found here.via the TL;DR App

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Written by srivassid | Data Engineer
Published by HackerNoon on 2020/12/07