Cloud & Computing
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Next year will bring a complex mix of evolution, correction and convergence when it comes to AI. It will become more powerful, more personal and more ubiquitous — and also more expensive, more autonomous and more disruptive.
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Minnesota Chief Transformation Officer Zarina Baber explains how modernizing not only IT but all executive agencies and moving to an agile product delivery model is driving maturity statewide.
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Mayor Eric Garcetti appointed Jeanne Holm as the new leader for budget and innovation. Holm also served as chief knowledge architect and digital strategy manager for NASA before joining the city.
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The University of Wyoming is now one of a few universities in the country to have a blockchain-focused educational center. Stakeholders believe it will attract even more blockchain businesses to the state.
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Butler County Job and Family Services is expanding their online capabilities to improve accessibility for their clients.
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SponsoredTrue situational awareness is achieved by combining a dozen, 100 or even 1,000 data feeds into one cohesive whole.
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Sponsored“There’s a cost to doing things in the cloud, and if you don’t build cloud-native applications, you’re not really getting all the benefits you thought you’d get.”
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As companies like SpaceX and Amazon launch more satellites, space will become incredibly crowded. Autonomous technology will be key to managing all the new traffic off Earth's surface — and more.
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By absorbing the expertise of a company focused on IT infrastructure and managed services, GCOM intends to help government customers set up unified, virtual-ready networks to handle future demands.
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The state’s health department has launched a voluntary smartphone app that will alert users if they have come in contact with someone who has tested positive for the virus. No personal information is shared in the app.
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In a bevy of appointments yesterday, Gov. John Carney nominated Jason Clarke as the permanent IT chief. He has been serving as the acting CIO since September, when James Collins departed for a private-sector opportunity.
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Bottenfield, who has been serving as the state's chief information officer since 2018, plans to retire at the end of the year. As of yet, there is no word on when a successor will be named.
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A new book by historian Jill Lepore explores the early days of using big data in politics and how presidential campaigns used unprecedented technology to measure and connect with the American voter.
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The technology modernization strategy adopted by Pittsburgh nearly two years ago helped to guide the city as it was faced with unprecedented operational challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The licensing and permitting company from California has new applications to help governments process occupational licenses and service requests, as well as new data visualization and mobile tools.
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Colorado's new CIO, Anthony Neal-Graves, has worked extensively on expanding the state's broadband reach and says he wants to prioritize IT delivery, cybersecurity and expanded virtual access to services.
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David Johnson has been employed by the state for more than two decades. This week marks the beginning of his tenure as the state's chief information officer, taking over for Craig Orgeron who retired earlier this year.
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The St. Lawrence Health System is one of the latest victims in an ongoing cyberattack campaign against U.S. hospitals. Federal agencies first issued a warning about the cyberthreat in late October.
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The major social media firms have taken a largely piecemeal and fractured approach to managing the problem.
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Iowa CIO Annette Dunn knew from her time at the Iowa Department of Transportation that a cloud-based ERP system was the clear choice for the state, no matter the technical or political hurdles the project might face.
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