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Southbridge, Mass., now has a way for citizens to submit crime tips anonymously and receive police notifications by downloading the free "Southbridge PD" app. Officials say crimes in progress still require a call to 911.
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Two-way communication during an emergency event is what public safety officials are advocating for with the so-called CodeRed program.
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Patrol officers will soon be able to issue citations and quickly file them with district courts from their cruisers.
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An elementary school is teaching school children how to use computers properly.
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The company will spend $25 million on education and research institutes in the country.
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Domain-name managers from other countries want more control over local domain names than the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers is willing to give.
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The city's police force is under staffed, and the FBI said it is conducting a large number of terrorist-related investigations in the Seattle area.
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Budget woes caused by the economic slowdown plus new attention to security and business-continuity planning limits the resources available to states.
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Recommendations to Gov. Davis on the future of IT oversight in the state are scheduled to be delivered on July 1.
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The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers approved a plan to reform the way board members are selected.
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Predictions for 2003 aren't rosy, but states hope to bounce back.
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TechConnect East will focus on creating jobs and developing high-tech business, and the state would like to create more regional offices.
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This year's November elections promise to put many new faces into state legislatures and governor's offices, and the changing political landscape is creating challenges for state CIOs.
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When Minnesota wanted its IT projects to run more smoothly and with greater accountability, it created its own Project Management Academy.
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UUNet, one of the company's subsidiaries, handles more than 50 percent of U.S. Internet traffic, but analysts predict the backbone provider won't be allowed to die.
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