Sentences with phrase «tech planned community»

The Estridge Company is building Centennial, a high - tech planned community outside Indianapolis, and First Mile is providing local phone, high speed Internet access, security monitoring, and cable TV to each house as a standard feature.

Not exact matches

• XFactor Ventures invested in e-commerce company Everywear, cooking device startup Nomiku, community platform about sex O.School, financial planning platform The Beans, crop yield forecaster Vinsight, cloud platform Ellen & Paul's New Startup, virtual assistant Clara, and legal tech platform Court Buddy.
«It has the power to influence public debate, mobilize communities, and — most importantly — offer creative solutions to help people receive better care, no matter where they live or who they are,» write Richards and Karp, who believe that the tech industry owes its success to both of its employees as well as the communities it serves, whose health needs are often partially met by Planned Parenthood itself.
The rallying hashtag is encouraging the tech community to take action and vocalize their support for Planned Parenthood.
Meanwhile, over 200 tech investors and entrepreneurs are planning to send Trump a letter today that looks past the ban, calling the order and a likely forthcoming crackdown on foreign worker visas «morally and economically misguided,» adding it will «inflict irreversible harm on the startup community and America's ability to compete globally.»
TORONTO — The public will have to wait until late July to see «initial sketches» of a plan for a proposed high - tech community in the city, while a more detailed proposal is set to be released in October, Sidewalk Labs and Waterfront Toronto said Thursday at a consultation meeting that offered scant new information.
From the turn - key access in AAA - grade office space right downtown, to the great community of other high tech companies in our building, and not to mention the flexibility to grow faster than we had originally planned, Our company's space in LaunchPad was the key to establishing our new business quickly and professionally on PEI.»
Hogsett and Fadness also plan to bring the tech community, business executives and other community leaders into the discussion.
During the past year Louisville's news has been dominated by several seemingly disparate issues — the troubled relationship between the police department and the African - American community; efforts to build more mixed - income housing in the city; adoption of a regional plan intended to moderate suburban sprawl; disagreement about the number and location of proposed new Ohio River bridges linking Louisville and southern Indiana; a campaign to attract high - tech business to the downtown area; and a lively election campaign around the issue of a city - county merger.
The goal is to allow for residential development without stifling the influx of tech and new media businesses to the area's loft - style office space, according to the New York Observer.Proponents of the plan hope retailers would follow the new residents to the neighborhood and help create a 24 - hour mixed - use community.
This initiative has brought together community leaders in education, workforce development, and industry to develop a plan that will propel our region's high - tech economy into the future.
Calling it a «game - changer for Dunkirk,» Gov. Andrew Cuomo formally announced the state's plans to spend $ 200 million to build a high - tech drug manufacturing center in the depressed Chautauqua County community.
Last year, the Coalition for Queens worked with New York Governor Andrew Cuomo's New York City Regional Economic Development Council to incorporate Queens tech companies and the area's start - up community into the state's long - term planning, and the group is urging Cuomo to make the borough the site of a business incubator and an Innovation Hot Spot.
The 52 plans approved today budget a total of $ 45 million for projects, including $ 26 million for Classroom Technology purchases, $ 15 million for School Connectivity projects, $ 4 million for High - Tech Security projects, and $ 23,000 for Community Connectivity projects.
Fueled by a confluence of interests among urban parents, progressive educators, and school reform refugees, a small but growing handful of diverse charter schools like Capital City has sprouted up in big cities over the past decade: others are High Tech High in San Diego; E. L. Haynes in Washington, D.C.; Larchmont Charter School and Citizens of the World Prep in Los Angeles; Summit in Northern California; the five - school Denver School of Science and Technology (DSST) network; Community Roots, Brooklyn Prospect Charter School, and Upper West Success Academy in New York City; and Bricolage Academy, planned for New Orleans (see sidebar, page 33).
But for folks here in this quirky swath of tech - start - ups, shopping malls and renovated artist studios, the citywide plan has proven to be less of a solution and more of cautionary tale, a lesson in how hard it can be to take a community schools dream and turn it into a workable reality, even when almost everyone likes the idea.
As a part of my graduate work at Virginia Tech's Alexandria urban planning program, I asked managers of current and planned North American bike sharing systems what they have done to increase access to bike sharing for low - income communities, and minority groups disproportionately underrepresented in bicycling.
If you are tech - savvy person with interest in a specific platform or community, it's reasonable to consider buying a token you actually plan to use.
Primalbase plans to launch the first ever shared coworking spaces for the tech community leveraging Waves» technology with a token that gives lifelong access to office facilities.
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