Mark Serres: Difference between revisions

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{{Person |portrait=Mark-Serres.jpg |firstname=Mark |middlename= |lastname=Serres |company=USCubed |position=CTO |location=Huston TX |country=United States |sector=Utility |linkedin=https://uscubed.com/about-us/ }}
{{Person
|portrait=Mark-Serres.jpg
|firstname=Mark
|lastname=Serres
|company=USCubed
|position=CTO
|location=Huston TX
|country=United States
|sector=Utility
|linkedin=https://uscubed.com/about-us/
}}

Latest revision as of 05:57, April 28, 2022



Resume
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Mark Serres
Name Mark Serres
Company USCubed
Company Position CTO
City, State Huston TX
Country United States
Sectors Utility
Consulting: {{{skill}}}

Activities

Automated Meter Reading.jpg Leveraging Existing Automated Meter Reading for a Smart Alert Response Technology
The City of Houston is 10,062 square miles (26,060 km²), with 6,950 miles (11,184 km) of sewer pipeline ranging in size from 6 to 144 inches (15 to 365cm) in diameter and including approximately 123,000 manholes. Houston uses the Automated Meter Reading (AMR)/Advanced Meter Infrastructure (AMI) network for identification and mitigation of Sanitary Sewer Overflows as part of the City's system-wide operation, maintenance and management plan. Houston calls this plan AIM (Automated Infrastructure Monitoring).