-
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.
-
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.
-
In addition to upskilling and transforming their workforce, IT leaders in government are investing in enterprise technology that can scale for the future.
More Stories
-
Government is going Lean these days, and it should go without technology, at least for now.
-
Web 2.0 can be found everywhere in government, but so far it's no killer app.
-
The New York State Office of the State Comptroller institutes a Business Analysis Center of Excellence.
-
New agreement between IBM and the Texas Department of Information Resources for Texas' data center consolidation is expected to be completed in February, according to the two parties.
-
Virginia Gov.-Elect Bob McDonnell appoints Jim Duffey, IT consultant and former vice chairman of the Northern Virginia Technology Council.
-
South Africa's preparation for the 2010 World Cup provides valuable lessons for IT leaders.
-
Texas' innovative procurement of an updated state portal.
-
Why aren't more people interested in becoming government cyber-security experts?
-
HP and Microsoft invest $250 million in infrastructure-to-application model.
-
Utah, Michigan and other states try to reduce costs by sharing services.
-
Citizens can access state spending and map data on Open.alabama.gov.
-
Data location, access and security are crucial to cloud computing contracts.
-
New list of broadband stimulus eligibility requirements enable urban cities to compete by not mandating 'unserved' or 'underserved' coverage status.
-
Report identifies fastest broadband speeds and most unique IP address for 201 countries worldwide.
-
In massive IT transition, states have less than four years to upgrade disease diagnosis code sets.
-
Quasi-government agency plans public-private partnership to give Web-based e-mail and office productivity applications to state and local governments.
-
In 2011, five U.S. cities will get the chance to receive a customized Web 2.0 solution to improve transparency and efficiency.
-
State-operated government clouds add another option to a growing menu of hosted infrastructure and application offerings.