Government Technology

Chad Vander Veen

Contributing Writer

Chad Vander Veen is a conference director for Government Technology's events division. He was previously the associate editor of Government Technology magazine.

 

Twitter: @govtechnews

Recent Articles

CES Showcases High-Def Displays, Storage and Gobs of Gadgets
January 28, 2008 - Surface is a touchscreen tabletop PC that users control with their hands and fingers. One demonstrator showed how easy it is to place a digital camera on Surface and, using one finger, drag images to and from the camera and the hard drive.

From Clinton and Obama to Rudy and Romney, Presidential Candidates Disappoint.
January 13, 2008 - 2008 presidential candidates are virtually interchangeable, except one: Ron Paul.

From Clinton and Obama to Rudy and Romney, Presidential Candidates Disappoint.
January 13, 2008 - 2008 presidential candidates are virtually interchangeable, except one: Ron Paul.

ESRI Founder Jack Dangermond Predicts the Future of GIS
January 11, 2008 - New tools like Google Earth and Virtual Earth complement traditional GIS.

Game On
December 28, 2007 - Axion Racing's autonomous car runs on Linux and a PlayStation 3.

A Visit From St. Internet
December 19, 2007 - A Visit From St. Internet

Well ... How Did We Get Here?
December 17, 2007 - Government's 20-year journey from the pre-Web era to today's always connected society.

Building Better Government: Finance
December 10, 2007 - Will Schwarzenegger's proposal for a privately managed California lottery pay off?

Government in the Age of YouTube: A Report on the eC3 Symposium Executive Summary
December 04, 2007 - "The more information you put out there, the more opportunities you give for citizen engagement. You really must loosen the grips of control. Nobody wants to collaborate with a control freak."

On the Map
November 27, 2007 - The Texas Historic Overlay sheds new light on Texas.

PREV 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 NEXT

Collaboration for the Public Sector



Collaborative Justice: Transforming Criminal Justice Services Through Unified Collaboration
This issue brief examines video collaboration in every stage of the human justice process, demonstrating how this technology can not only make services more efficient, affordable, and accessible.

Cloud-Based Services Accelerate Public Sector Adoption of Video Collaboration
Today, thanks to new cloud technologies and high-quality networks, mobile video services - which provide not only cost savings but which help governmental interactions become more efficient - are more feasible than ever before.

Modernization as a Service: Acquiring IT through Innovative Procurement

Five Ways Collaboration is Driving Government Performance

Mobile Video Collaboration: The New Business Reality