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@article{143757,
author = {Anuradha Manikrao Patil and Sagar Gawande},
title = {Energy Management for Smart City},
journal = {International Journal of Innovative Research in Technology},
year = {},
volume = {3},
number = {1},
pages = {124-125},
issn = {2349-6002},
url = {https://ijirt.org/article?manuscript=143757},
abstract = {A smart home may be defined as a well-designed structure with sufficient access to assets, communication, controls, data, and information technologies for enhancing the occu-pants’ quality of life through comfort, convenience, reduced costs, and increased connectivity. The idea has been widely acknowledged for decades, but few people have ever seen a smart home, and fewer still have occupied one. A commonly cited reason for this slow growth has been the exorbitant cost associated with upgrading existing building stock to include “smart†technologies such as network connected appliances. However, consumers have histori-cally been willing to incur significant costs for new communication technologies, such as cellular telephones, broadband internet connections, and television services.},
keywords = {},
month = {},
}
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