In an increasingly digital world, cities have a powerful opportunity – andresponsibility – to use technology not just for progress, but for good.
Public sector organisations are under pressure to deliver more with less, as the UK government plans to reduce running costs by 15% by the end of the decade.
Smarter spending isn’t just about cutting costs, it’s about investing wisely to simplify processes, reduce duplication, enable transparency and free up staff time to focus on care rather than admin.
In high-stakes environments like justice, technology must go beyond basic functionality to earn trust and serve the public good through transparency and fairness.
The biggest AI breakthroughs aren't generating content, they're predicting the future and optimizing complex systems.
Cities, high streets, parks, offices, shopping centres… the spaces where we live and work can be experienced in many different ways across the day. That same place can also be experienced very ...
Mark Zuckerberg’s well-known approach to innovation at Facebook was encapsulated in his phrase “Move fast and break things.” In a 2009 Business Insider interview, he stated, “Unless you are breaking ...
Who’d be a Charge Point Operator (CPO)? As UK transport accelerates toward a low-emission future, CPOs must scale networks, anticipate demand, balance regional discrepancies and leverage grid capacity ...
Like most law-enforcement organizations, Bedfordshire Police, in the UK, faces multiplying crime threats and limited resources to fight them. We need to be effective and efficient in protecting ...