GovTech Biz
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The company has bought GrantExec, a young company that uses artificial intelligence to help match grant providers with recipients. The deal is not Euna’s first foray into grant administration technology.
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The newest Transit Tech Lab competition focuses on such areas as data modernization, infrastructure management and workflows. Finalists have a chance to work with city officials and enter procurement.
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The largest city in Kentucky recently hired a public-sector AI leader, and marked the first AI pilot for the local government. Louisville, in need of affordable housing, wants to build AI leadership.
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The board, which regulates aspects of casinos, horse racing and charitable gaming, is working to unify its data and file management through one platform.
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CIS CyberMarket is now offering cloud access security brokering to its state and local government members.
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Turns out special districts serve a lot of different functions.
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Automated DL is going through an accelerator program right now, focusing on cybersecurity. But that's not the only thing the company is thinking about.
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Gridics, short for Grid Analytics, created a platform in which users can visualize real estate data in order to make smarter investment and development decisions.
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The team is working on the project for its submission in the 2017 NYC BigApps competition.
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Public safety has felt the positive impacts of Mark43 in a surprisingly short period of time.
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The most common type of local government is not the city. Not by a long shot.
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Federal Certification for Encryption Software Could Help Government Use Legacy System Data, HPE SaysHewlett Packard Enterprise has won a first-of-its-kind validation for format-preserving encryption.
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The newcomers have ties to IBM, Argonne National Laboratory and the Federal Reserve Bank.
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Ohio sought guidance from 18F, the federal team within the General Services Administration, and received 82 total proposals involving 129 business entities in response to its data analytics RFP.
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The Bay Area city makes the 15th government the startup has a contract with.
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A look at the exit rates among gov tech investors.
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The reporting system would feature multiple evaluations and a 30-day response period for contractors, among other stipulations.
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While the company is proud of its successes in the early '70s and '80s making enterprise software -- SAP has grown into a firm with $23 billion in revenue and seen its U.S. stock more than double since 2008.
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The company is working on solutions to help water utilities anticipate infrastructure failures.
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The way state and local government buys technology is changing. But how?
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The company, already huge in the market, is positioning itself for increased growth.