Civic Innovation
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The City Council has approved three contracts to replace its veteran accounting, payroll and human resources management software. A consulting firm will help with oversight and advisory services.
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The Marin County Digital Accelerator takes an agile approach to gov tech, moving fast to get work done. A recent project found a “single source of truth” to modernize planning and permitting.
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The Bismarck Municipal Court system handled nearly 87,000 new cases from 2020-2024 and saw a 40 percent caseload increase in 2024. Officials are examining what systems might be upgraded to handle the additional burden.
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Startups are harnessing both the outrage and jubilation Americans are experiencing in the wake of the election, by giving users a way to speak out on divisive issues.
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What if people could apply for multiple services in one place?
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The U.S. Chief Information Officer's push to encrypt all federal government domains will take a little longer.
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Plus, a new data visualization partnership within federal government.
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An Israeli firm that hopes to predict traffic accidents is expanding to the U.S.
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One organization's quest to pair data with a banjo.
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Will government tech advancements progress under President Donald Trump? Few answers, many questions.
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Plus, data storytelling at the Department of Defense and a conversation about civic tech under the president-elect.
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There are often easier ways to do the things that government does.
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The company is alleging Taser interfered with the contract process.
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The deal will give members the ability to buy directly from the website as part of a competitive procurement contract.
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The company's focus on APIs plays out in a new open data offering focused on collaboration.
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The market research firm Onvia doesn't expect the next president to change much for the government technology business — at least not immediately.
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Market research firm Onvia examined bid and RFP data across federal, state and local entities to identify governments’ spending priorities.
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The company will offer Wdesk on top of its own software.
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The company wants to apply artificial intelligence to body cameras.
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On the roster for the newly launched venture capital firm: a former Philadelphia mayor, a former chief data officer from Chicago and a New Jersey attorney general.
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500 Startups' 20th batch of companies includes several government-facing firms.
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