Bringing the Cloud to Your Community
Cloud computing provides a simple way for state and local government to access servers, storage, databases and other application services over the internet.
Cloud computing provides a simple way for state and local government to access servers, storage, databases and other application services over the internet.
Government reports often languish in perpetuity, stalling valuable information from making it into the hands of decision makers. But what if these critical reports could be generated, processed, and filed faster?
GovLoop sat down with Tomicah Tillemann, co-founder of the Blockchain Trust Accelerator, to understand how blockchain can be used to hold government’s accountable and who is leading in the federal space when it comes to blockchain. This is part II of our interview.
To better understand what this technology is, how it works and what it means for government agencies, GovLoop sat down with Tomicah Tillemann, co-founder of the Blockchain Trust Accelerator.
Our IT teams truly are the heroes who make every day work possible for the rest of us, and keep the federal government running.
For Thursday’s online training, “IT Innovation and How to Get There,” GovLoop brought together experts Shashank Khandelwhal, Director of Cloud.gov at 18F, and Jason Adolf, Industry Practice Lead for Appian’s Federal Business, to discuss some of the challenges of digital transformation and strategies to achieve innovation.
Knowing the challenges that state and local agencies currently face with their existing solutions for tracking and reimbursement, what would make government employees and managers happier in terms of managing employee initiated spend? And will that path forward be easy, or are there challenges along the way?
A truly smart community is one that can avail the right technologies to manage its assets more effectively and efficiently. In this type of environment, government employees are able to move from tactical and repetitive tasks to strategic and value-added roles.
The White House council published a report on Aug. 30, and there’s a lot of information to consume. Here are the seven most important takeaways.
The stakes are too high for tech experts and non-IT professionals to operate on different wavelengths. There are things agencies can do to boost the chances that workers not only read but understand emails from the IT department.