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Diaper King to Build Chicago-Sized Smart City?

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Thu, Sep 23, 2021 06:19 PM

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The technology for creating the most basic building block of a true smart city simply does not exist

The technology for creating the most basic building block of a true smart city simply does not exist yet. It involves what would be the city's smallest, most numerous, most important sensors. Right now, they have a crucial flaw. But there’s a new technology on the horizon that could change everything, and one small company owns the patents to it… The technology for creating the most basic building block of a true smart city simply does not exist yet. It involves what would be the city's smallest, most numerous, most important sensors. Right now, they have a crucial flaw. But there’s a new technology on the horizon that could change everything, and one small company owns the patents to it… [Wealth Daily logo] Diaper King to Build Chicago-Sized Smart City? [Alex Koyfman Photo] By [Alex Koyfman]( Written Sep 23, 2021 Dear Reader, Meet Marc Lore. In an age where extremes in all things have become commonplace, his life story reads pretty much as you'd expect. [marclore] He founded The Pit Inc., an eBay alternative, and sold it for a couple million bucks; founded Diapers.com and sold it for a couple hundred million bucks; and founded Jet.com and sold it for a couple billion bucks. The final sale was to Walmart, which landed Marc the position of head of Walmart's U.S. e-commerce. I won't get into the details because at this point, who really cares? He's another guy with hundreds or even thousands of times more wealth than the richest people you personally know. You hear about these people on a daily basis, and if you're anything like the me, you've learned to tune it all out... Except the parts where I get to read about the most ambitious ways that some of these mega-wealthy individuals decide to create their legacies. I'm not talking about 500-foot yachts, personal skyscrapers, or condos in low Earth orbit. I'm talking the truly world-changing ideas that some of these people have proposed to spend their wealth — and in this regard, Marc actually becomes interesting. His idea is to create a high-tech city of up to 5 million residents on 150,000 acres. That's about the size of Chicago and its surroundings — making it among the most ambitious of any proposals anywhere in the world. Below is one artist's impression of how it could look, as featured in Bloomberg: [telosa] Lore's dream city, code-named Telosa, will feature drought-resistant water systems, carbon-neutral power generation, ubiquitous internet connectivity, and all of the other features commonly associated with the real-world tech utopia we've come to know as the "smart city." Facebook Has Already Bet $50 Billion on ThisForget 5G — 2021’s Biggest Gains Will Be Here Mark Zuckerberg is no fool. So when he invests $50 billion in a brand-new technology, you'd better pay attention — especially when venture capitalists have also plowed $45 billion in it. Apple and Google have quietly added it to more than 1 billion smartphones. And this exclusive video reveals why this new tech breakthrough is about to revolutionize the computing world... and make a lot of people very rich. Early investors stand to make extraordinary gains of as much as 9,910%. But you have to hurry — this technology is about to go mainstream. [Click here now to get the inside story.]( Cumulative World Smart City Population 2021: Zero As of this moment, this is still in the concept phase, with the location itself still to be determined. The list of candidates includes desert ecologies like Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Arizona, and Texas as well as the raw wilderness of the the Appalachia region. If you're questioning the validity of building a giant metropolis in a place generally not hospitable to humans and expecting people to just flock there from all over, you're not alone. Cities, through the history of humanity, have emerged organically, in places where humans naturally come together. This generally takes place along coastlines, at the meeting points of multiple rivers, or in any other place where the geography tends to focus the flow of human traffic. Smart city concepts like Telosa tend to fly in the face of this natural process, relying on something besides the benefit of location to pull residents in. That something is the technology itself. It's the unprecedented integration that a smart city allows between the people living there and all of the city's parts, moving and stationary. Whether such technological marvels will be enough to turn deserts and mountainous wilderness into the next Dubai remains to be seen. But there is another hurdle that Marc Lore, Bill Gates, and every other mega-rich, potentially megalomaniacal person who dared to dream this dream may find even more difficult to overcome. The Smallest Piece... The Biggest Problem The technology for creating the most basic building block of a true smart city simply does not exist yet. I'm not talking about the solar panels or wireless internet transponders, or even the drones that will keep the entire hive under video surveillance 24/7. All of that is readily available. What I'm talking about is a crucial flaw in the city's smallest, most numerous, most important sensors. Sensors that will do things like keep track of traffic, monitor the structural integrity of buildings, keep an eye on the water mains under ground and the weather in sky, and feed all of that data into a supercomputer that will make sense of the chaos. If the smart city were a human body, these sensors, numbering perhaps in the billions, would be the eyes, the ears, and the nerve endings. Not exactly a detail that can be overlooked. Strange Tech Will Kick-Start the 4th Industrial Revolution [twa electric glass finger]Take a look at this tiny little chip. It might be small, but according to PwC, this chip will soon kick-start "the fourth industrial revolution." And if you position yourself right, I expect you could have the chance to turn every $500 into exceptional gains of up to $131,600. [Click here to see the details of this historic opportunity.]( Forever Memory: The Last Piece of the Puzzle As of now, the technology that would allow these sensors to exist and function for months, even years on end without requiring external power or regular maintenance is still a thing of fiction. And until that changes, all of these concepts being floated by high-net-worth dreamers like Marc Lore are going to remain just that: concepts. However, that may all be changing. There is a [new technology on the horizon]( right now, and it's already making its presence felt in limited applications including space satellites and sport-bike racing, of all things. This patented new method takes data storage to the next level and very soon may play a critical role in bringing unprecedented levels of automated data collection to existing cities, as well as a new generation of planned population centers like Lore's Telosa. The [company that owns the patents]( is based in Arizona and trades on the Nasdaq at a market capitalization of just under $130 million — a tiny fraction of what this market could be worth in just a few short years. I put my readers onto this months ago [and released a detailed video on the topic](. To get all the details on the technology, the potential, and the company behind it, [click here](. Fortune favors the bold, [alex koyfman Signature] Alex Koyfman His flagship service, Microcap Insider, provides market-beating insights into some of the fastest moving, highest profit-potential companies available for public trading on the U.S. and Canadian exchanges. With more than 5 years of track record to back it up, Microcap Insider is the choice for the growth-minded investor. Alex contributes his thoughts and insights regularly to [Wealth Daily](. To learn more about Alex, [click here](. Browse Our Archives [Mao 2.0]( [Toast Seeks $18 Billion Valuation With Its IPO]( [Sailing in Trash]( [Are You Being Lied To?]( [Why Dick's Had a Great August]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This email was sent to {EMAIL}. It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you've received this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, you may [unsubscribe here](, and view our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. To ensure that you receive future issues of Wealth Daily, please add newsletter@wealthdaily.com to your address book or whitelist within your spam settings. For customer service questions or issues, please contact us for assistance. [Wealth Daily](, Copyright © 2021, [Angel Publishing LLC](. All rights reserved. 3 E Read Street Baltimore, MD 21202. The content of this site may not be redistributed without the express written consent of Angel Publishing. Individual editorials, articles and essays appearing on this site may be republished, but only with full attribution of both the author and Wealth Daily as well as a link to www.wealthdaily.com. Your privacy is important to us -- we will never rent or sell your e-mail or personal information. [View our privacy policy here.]( No statement or expression of opinion, or any other matter herein, directly or indirectly, is an offer or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell the securities or financial instruments mentioned. While we believe the sources of information to be reliable, we in no way represent or guarantee the accuracy of the statements made herein. [Wealth Daily]( does not provide individual investment counseling, act as an investment advisor, or individually advocate the purchase or sale of any security or investment. Neither the publisher nor the editors are registered investment advisors. Subscribers should not view this publication as offering personalized legal or investment counseling. Investments recommended in this publication should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company in question. ---------------------------------------------------------------

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