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Copenhagen Lighting the Way to Greener, More Efficient Cities (nytimes.com)
37 points by dnetesn on Dec 10, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 3 comments



Light pollution and LED lighting is complicated.

LEDs appear to reduce light pollution as they are much more directional. They are also far brighter than sodium with better color rendition.

Because of this we get images that look like light pollution is reduced: http://singularityhub.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/LA_LED_... http://i.imgur.com/XHqUPOY.jpg http://wpmedia.ottawacitizen.com/2014/05/photo-of-new-led-st...

Unfortunately, light reflects. Particularly off of snow. What appears to be a reduction in light pollution is in fact a dramatic increase in brightness, resulting in lower exposure photographs that appear to have darker darks. http://www.universetoday.com/107372/leds-light-pollution-sol...

LED lighting is awesome but it won't darken our sky for stargazers.


“It is now or never,” said Munish Khetrapal, who helps lead so-called smart city efforts at Cisco Systems. “If you lose the opportunity, it’s going to take another 20 years.”

What???? Marketing by FUD? Why should the above statement be true? The implication is that if you don't get your solution out now, you need to wait 20 years for the replacement cycle? If anything, early entrants to the market are going to make a lot of mistakes. No way the first implementations are going to be around for 20 years.


Hopefully Copenhagen can get this done in a sane manner, by hiring a highly skilled in house team to develop the software that connects all the pieces of the puzzle they're installing.

All the sensors and reactive devices are useless without real usable software linking them together in intelligent ways. Sadly, I don't have a lot of faith in US Cities to pull this off. Government Agencies are model's of ineptitude, and the big contractors that know how to navigate the system make big promises that are riddled with budget overruns, and shoddy final products.




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