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Lauren Katims Nadeau

Lauren Katims previously served as a staff writer and contributing writer for Government Technology magazine.

To keep up with electronic messaging trends and save itself from insolvency, the U.S. Postal Service is digitizing itself.
Asheville, N.C., saves big money by switching to a $20,000 solution for its city-owned wireless network used by public safety.
California Rep. Anna G. Eshoo, D-Palo Alto, introduced the Next Generation Wireless Disclosure Act earlier this week, which requires wireless carriers to provide detailed information regarding guaranteed minimum data speed, network reliability, coverage areas and pricing.
Gov. Matt Mead celebrates Wyoming’s status as the first state to install Google Apps statewide.
Until recently many of us may have thought that government documents were secure, but WikiLeaks has provided a much-needed jolt back to reality.
Despite industry objections, the Wisconsin state Assembly approved a budget amendment that allows the public broadband network, called WiscNet, to remain online until at least 2013.
While Roanoke County’s latest website has been active since mid-March, it was a small training seminar conducted about the site a few weeks ago that spurred the idea for a larger educational component.
Tom Suehs, executive commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, was awarded the Bob Bullock Award for Outstanding Public Stewardship at the Government Technology Conference Southwest in Austin on Tuesday, June 14.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is the largest federal agency to choose Google for hosted e-mail services.
Vice president Joe Biden will lead governmentwide campaign to cut unnecessary and wasteful spending on websites.