GovLoop

Disruptive Tech: using the Netflix model in government and you’ll meet the Johnny Appleseed of Open Source


Disruptive Tech: the Netflix model in government and you’ll meet the Johnny Appleseed of Open Source by GovLoop Insights

We start off with a topic we come to so often… your money…

The House Budget Committee passed the Republican version of the fiscal 2013 budget yesterday — but just barely. Ezra Kline in the Washington Post’s WonkBlog notes that the House Budget Committee has 38 members — 22 Republicans and 16 Democrats. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), the chairman of the House Budget Committee, is the man who has in many ways defined the conservative approach to the federal budget… and yet the Ryan budget passed by only one vote.

Some of that leads the Wall Street Journal to suggest we may be headed to… yes, you know it — a government shutdown… even in the weeks before the election. The Journal says the budget act passed last year has been coming apart in pieces and the disagreements between the White House and congressional Republicans over spending levels has heightened the chance of a government shutdown just weeks before the November election. The budget agreement signed into law last August was supposed to help avoid such a showdown, but today, it seems possible. And the Journal says the flashpoint came this week Congressman Ryan called for more than $1 trillion in discretionary spending for the year beginning Oct. 1. That represents $19 billion less than the level agreed to with the White House last year and put into law.

We’ll watch it carefully, of course… we always try to stay away from shutdown hype, but even the talk impacts how government operates, so we’ll keep an eye on it.

On today’s program…

We start with the stories that impact your life for Thursday the 22 of March, 2012… your government world in 120-seconds…

________________________________

Disruptive innovation
Bill Eggers, global director of research and thought leadership for Deloitte’s public sector industry practice

It’s called disruptive innovation — and it is having an impact on how you do your job. And you’ve been having to deal with it already. But what is disruptive innovation… and how can you be at the forefront rather than being run over by it.

Bill Eggers [GovLoop; Twitter; Facebook; LinkedIn] is responsible for research and thought leadership for Deloitte’s Public Sector industry practice. He is the person who came up with the term Government 2.0 — in fact, he actually wrote the book on the subject. His most recent book is If We Can Put a Man on the Moon: Getting Big Things Done in Government. He is one of the real thought leaders in the public sector.

And I asked him to define disruptive innovation…

More information:

________________________________

Making government information available: The Johnny Appleseed approach
Waldo Jaquith, open government technologist

Virginia Decoded — its an open source platform designed to make accessing and understanding state-level legal information easier. Basically it takes the states, bills, codes and acts and compiles them together in an easy to understand and search-able platform. Virginia is the first state to deploy this platform, and the man behind it is Waldo Jaquith. He took me on a tour of the site.


Before we finish up… a few closing items…

Coming up tomorrow on GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER… it’s Friday so we’ll have our issue of the week… and there is little doubt about what the big issue has been this week. It is one that we talk about a lot… we’ll have that for you tomorrow.

That does it for us today. The producers of GovLoop Insights’ DorobekINSIDER are Emily Jarvis and Stephen Peteritas.

I’m Christopher Dorobek… Thanks for being here. Go out and do good work.

And we’ll see you online… DorobekINSIDER.com

Exit mobile version