TIC 3.0: Connecting Agencies to Today’s Technologies
In response to the global need to work from home, we’ve seen many government agencies put a renewed focus on equipping their workforces with modern, mission-critical technologies.
In response to the global need to work from home, we’ve seen many government agencies put a renewed focus on equipping their workforces with modern, mission-critical technologies.
Though cybersecurity teams were caught off guard by the sudden move to telework, the result has been something of a baptism by fire for government.
At the end of the day, workforce management solutions help agencies place the right people in the right place at the right time.
With the provisions of the CARES Act, SBA has pushed out more funds in the past four months than it had in all of its history put together.
In late April, millions of Americans filed for unemployment benefits, overwhelming government IT systems. But Delaware’s Labor Department website didn’t crash, not even once
This roundtable discussion covered topics, from the continued relevance of the original TIC vision to the uncertainty and excitement about its evolution.
Often, trusted best practices like “start small” are repeated at government conferences like they’re the IT national anthem.
AskTSA has had more 1 million social media engagements. It lives on Twitter, @TSA, and Facebook Messenger, and the account is monitored by TSA agents.
The grants process is simple enough on paper, but in practice, it can be difficult for governments to navigate.
As agencies grapple with how to manage the change of cloud environments, they should look for solutions that can shoulder their workloads.