-
The company has made a cellphone alternative to police body cameras.
-
Margaret Brisbane, coming up on 16 years with the county, will lead an IT department that has been modernizing, leaning into data-driven policy and bolstering election security for more than 2.7 million residents.
-
Patrick Moore, who served as Georgia's state CIO about 10 years ago under Gov. Sonny Perdue, is joining the gov tech company Granicus during a pandemic that has increased demand for its services.
More Stories
-
Ohio CIO Stu Davis sees data analytics as the biggest game-changer of his career.
-
Government Technology caught up with Benny Chacko, CIO of the Los Angeles County Probation Department, who discussed the importance of understanding your agency’s unique business needs and thinking beyond technology.
-
Carr will assume the role chief information technology officer for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power in mid-November.
-
Obama noted that while Silicon Valley may produce lots of cool stuff that can improve our lives, its methods are no substitute for the principles of government.
-
The incoming chief data officer will focus on standardizing data and creating a more centralized system.
-
Ellis logged his last day as a state employee and is moving on to work at hardware and software reseller SHI International.
-
The District's CDO has has his sights set on improving the data capacity of one area of city government in particular: business intelligence.
-
The Colorado-based research, training and education center could make the state a hub for cybersecurity activities.
-
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy appointed Arthur H. House to the role. House has been serving as the chairman of the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, where he has been heavily involved in combating digital threats to the critical utilities of electricity, natural gas and water.
-
Although the city didn’t win the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Smart City Challenge, CIO Scott Cardenas says Denver is committed to moving ahead with its plan.
-
Although a national leader in patents, innovation and STEM jobs, the state's well-educated population is also highly mobile — leading to a troubling net loss of workers.
-
CIO Mike Hussey explains how being transparent helps IT meet state agencies' expectations.
-
Aaron Snow, who's been there since the beginning, is moving on.
-
The Indiana CIO sees the cloud as an integral part of his storage exit strategy.
-
The nation’s next president could help strike a balance between privacy and the government’s need for data. Here's how the two candidates match up.
-
The role, which is expected to be filled in the next month, may be the first of its kind in state government.
-
Extracting real value from data means bringing together disparate sources, says Mississippi CIO Craig Orgeron.
-
One priority for Alan Howze is gathering data across Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City departments to identify where blighted properties exist and how they happen.