For 10 years, this page has taken a 5-Minute U approach to what we’ve learned this year. Here are the five things we’re likely to remember about 2010 five years from now.
IPhone. Droid. Windows Phone 7. BlackBerry. Nielsen research projects there will be more smartphones than any other kind of mobile phones by the end half of 2011. The ubiquity of smartphones, and a continuing campaign to reclaim spectrum for wireless broadband, means that mobile is no longer an alternative delivery channel — it’s where real people do real business, including using public services if there’s an app for that.
Public agencies can design and deploy services that: (a) citizens need; (b) citizens say they want; or (c) citizens respond to. Pick one.
As the year ended, the tally of data sets on Data.gov was pegged at 305,692. Some states seemed engaged in a data arms race too. But apps competitions and communities of true believers are not a substitute for public agencies doing their jobs, which is more than surfacing the data they hold but also providing the context necessary to make it understandable, digestible and usable.
After years of hit-and-miss forecasts, the skies opened this year with cloud becoming a permanent part of the environment in a growing number of states and localities. Talk of the cloud will likely dissipate, which is the typical pattern when people stop speculating and start doing.
Consolidation rhymes with assimilation. The former was done for efficiency’s sake; the latter is being done for survival. IT is in play (again), either reverting into the agencies from which they emerged or rolling forward into newly combined über agencies. The CIO’s span of control will contract or expand accordingly.