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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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California tightens IT spending approval; a majority of government workers are unsatisfied with their technology options.
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Industry Perspective: The technology behind the IBM supercomputer may lead to a new era of innovation.
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Application designers of winning entries in NYC BigApps 2.0 will split $20,000.
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No need to fear — next-generation IPv6 standard will provide a pool of addresses a “billion-trillion” times larger than the 4.3 billion IPv4 addresses.
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IBM’s free CityOne online game helps governments tackle real-world challenges.
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Kristin Russell, former Oracle vice president, appointed by Gov. John Hickenlooper.
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Application delivery controllers and server load balancers are one way to deal with peak traffic loads on election websites.
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Seattle Department of Information Technology working to include more functions in Seattle.gov’s single sign-on function.
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Gov. Mark Dayton names Carolyn Parnell, who works for the Minnesota System of Colleges and Universities, as the state’s next CIO.
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‘Machine-to-machine’ Internet communication enabled by microformatting will help citizens get more targeted information.
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IPads and other touchscreen tablets are already finding their way into local governments.
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Ohio CIO Sam Orth takes education job; Twitter banned on some computers at Massachusetts Capitol.
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First YouTube movie, DARPA works on visual intelligence for the military.
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Gov. Susana Martinez eyeing technology to identify waste within New Mexico’s state government.
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The Georgia Technology Authority confirms Gov. Nathan Deal’s selection of Calvin Rhodes as executive director and state CIO.
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Baltimore’s new open data website adds social media and interactivity to the mix.
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Since 1986, state departments of transportation have been saving money on shared software programs — kind of like Groupon.