@Conso_xyz
If AI can do this easily, municipalities are the real bottleneck not technology.
Tweet: weekend-built YOLO26 real-time parking system- live slot monitoring, accurate detection for overlaps/angled cars. Support 70%, no confrontations.
Someone built a real-time smart parking system over a weekend using YOLO26. Monitors every slot, tracks occupied vs available live, and holds accurate detection even when cars partially overlap or park at angles. https://t.co/fhaEl11TkM
Real-time analysis of public opinion and engagement
What the community is saying — both sides
the AI can handle this; the real barrier is municipal regulation and process, not the code.
GIS and utility professionals see clear value and want details because they still annotate spots manually.
suggested business model: stores subsidize the app as a customer perk (e.g., free for Target red‑card holders).
reaction: the prototype is impressive but requires UX refinement and production hardening.
quick, low-cost builds threaten legacy parking‑management companies; the moat appears eroded.
lighthearted take emphasizing the app’s simplicity and convenience: one-and-done parking vibes.
I’ll extract the distinct viewpoints and return a short, blog-style list of numbered points with the most important phrases highlighted using HTML. Example output:
Argue the policy will boost jobs and reduce costs.
Most popular replies, ranked by engagement
If AI can do this easily, municipalities are the real bottleneck not technology.
This looks awesome. I want to know more. Where can I find more about this. I'm a GIS ENGINEER working in the utility domain. We basically annotate each spot manually.
Stores should pay for this app and provide it to valued customers. Target should provide this app free to any holder of the $TGT red card.
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