ITU‐T's Technical Reports and Specifications 317 3.5 Education and tourism The ICT infrastructure should also serve to improve aspects such as education and tourism; that is in general to ensure tangible economic growth such as higher standards of living and employment opportunities for its citizens. Besides the known contribution of ICT to education, both classroom‐based and distance‐learning, the influence of the SCC will mean that the citizen will be placed in the center of the educational scenario. The perimeter of the physical space in which educational experiences develop is becoming increasingly more indefinite and liquid, by hosting more informal practices characterized by high density of social interactions. The SCC itself has the potential to serve as a teacher; for example, cities that already have a strong historical or artistic component must be an open book for the citizens and visitors supported by ICT. The visions are cities increasingly more open to participation in a smart and spatially widespread temporal education: online learning systems, training by computer, support forums and collaboration with experts, information about job opportunities and meetings that promote retraining etc. Other functionality may also include the use of new information and communication technologies to develop virtual museums, digital public libraries, augmented reality, digital art, co‐creation and other leisure activities and assisted real‐time translation and cultural mediation. Data analysis, mobility and ICT are part of the industry trends in travel and tourism. New computing tools and large volumes of data are being used to retain customers, improve operations and meet the service experience of travelers in hotels. For example, the Electronic Guides that are found included in mobile applications, allow the visualization and identification of points of interest for the tourist (municipalities, commerce, museums, churches and hotels) through the Geo Positioning systems. Reality Augmented services (later is extended the concept) have also emerged as new applications for mobile phones that provide information to tourists based on their experiences, geographic locations, and interests. The Smart Sustainable City concept could positively affect tourist arrivals with environmental or technological concerns. On the other hand, it may offer to tourists, as well as everyone involved in this business, updated and accessible information (location and hours of entertainment events, etc.). 3.6 Environment and waste management The ICT infrastructure can establish an environmentally responsible and sustainable future which \"meets the needs of today without sacrificing the needs of future generations\". Aspects such as improvement of transport courtesy the ICT infrastructure and its applications, and an improvement in energy efficiency, can reduce pollution e.g. The environmental sustainability of an ideal SSC could be achieved by upgrading the following infrastructure: Use the IoT technology to form a closed‐loop management for the monitoring, early warning and control of pollution sources. Use distributed sensors to enhance the air quality and urban noise monitoring, to communicate with the public, and using mobile communication systems to strengthen the linkage between the supervision and inspection departments. Strengthen the real‐time water quality testing network system constructed for reservoir, river, and residential building secondary water supply so to guarantee true real‐time monitoring.