GovTech Biz
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The gov tech market expert breaks down a "strong first half," including major deals in the public safety and property tax spaces, and forecasts an increase in activity for the remaining months of 2025.
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The young Ohio company provides software that fire and EMS personnel use for a variety of tasks. According to Tyler, Emergency Networking tools already meet new federal reporting requirements.
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The project, a collaboration between the North Central Texas Council of Governments' TXShare arm, the Alliance for Innovation and Civic Marketplace, provides an AI tech purchasing platform with already vetted vendors.
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Amazon remains hush on any word involving the placement of their new HQ.
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The young company is fresh out of the 500 Startups accelerator.
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The Bay Area is world-renown when it comes to tech, but that success has come with steadily rising living costs and growing crowds. Now, a push to attract startups to Sacramento is taking shape.
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The scale, timing and nature of the attack remain unclear.
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Accenture finds evidence that people would have a hard time trusting artificial intelligence to handle various activities.
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The 10-21 Video service aims to bring police video recordings to cellphones, without the burden of storing it.
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Sacramento-based business Pondera Solutions adds anti-fraud expert Malcolm Sparrow to its list of board of directors.
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A contract, awarded to Inrix and StreetLight Data, will extend out to multiple state agencies and local governments, streamlining information sharing and improving the state's transportation network.
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The company is only a year old, but it's moving quickly.
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This share transaction system, which would enable people to buy and sell digital stakes as they wish, will run on a blockchain.
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Caught up in the chaos, we should be looking at the Amazon RFP completely different.
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Two combined contracts with Tyler Technologies are worth $5.29 million.
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A lot of local governments are using citizen engagement technology, but there's room for improvement in how they use them.
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Joe Morris, vice president of research for e.Republic, Government Technology's parent company, talks about what winning looks like when selling to the public sector.
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Some tools are very, very popular.
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The county’s commissioners unanimously approved a 5-year contract with OpenGov Inc. for its Budget Builder and Intelligence software at a rate of $45,690 per year.
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Two brothers attending Stanford University are launching a civic engagement startup together.
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Urban.Us is starting to get a clearer picture of the gov-tech startup ecosystem