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As a new federal administration prepares to assume control, the GovAI Coalition Summit showed the local promise of artificial intelligence, from solutions available to the leaders ready to make them work.
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While cybersecurity remains a high priority for many CIOs, we spoke to technology leaders to understand what other skills are difficult to find when recruiting new talent.
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In addition to upskilling and transforming their workforce, IT leaders in government are investing in enterprise technology that can scale for the future.
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Improved health, cost savings, improved ability to find and keep qualified staff cited as additional benefits.
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To draw the audience -- primarily state, local and national government IT management -- into the session and extract a reference model for additional communities on the spot.
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Put IT strategic planning, rather than tactical budgeting at the heart of the CIO management agenda.
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Unfortunately, few CIOs have the staff with the skill sets to adequately meet these externally focused demands and there has been little remaining funding for additional hires.
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Online document management offers benefits -- but some worry about security.
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Factors that denote significant impact include a high potential for disruption to IT or the business, the need for a major dollar investment, or the risk of being late to adopt.
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Cloud computing tempts the public sector.
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Improving government's IT business strategy.
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Security and privacy concerns slow adoption of cloud computing despite potential cost savings.
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Stix.to helps you customize the Web; Diigo helps you make sense of it.
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In 2004, the Congressional Research Service estimated the annual economic impact of cyber attacks on businesses to be more than $226 billion.
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"We battle new threats to our information security daily. Dan is consistently at the forefront."
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State now accepting text messages stored on a mobile device as proof of licensure.
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NASCIO releases national CIO policy and technology priorities for 2009
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The Washington State Department of Transportation finds the ubiquitous Web 2.0 app to be a real tweet when Web site traffic is high.
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New technology and office politics also weigh in.
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"The research shows that improving citizen satisfaction will improve adoption and recommendation, and anything that can improve the efficiency of government will help offset expenditure."
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