What Agencies Can Learn from the Space Force’s Digital Workforce Training
The Space Force has a comprehensive plan for training its IT professionals and keeping them up to date. Agencies at all levels can learn from the program.
The Space Force has a comprehensive plan for training its IT professionals and keeping them up to date. Agencies at all levels can learn from the program.
Sign up for the free 2022 Google Government Summit on Tuesday, Nov. 15 in Washington, D.C.
The General Services Administration has used a traditional networking model focused on the perimeter, meaning that anything inside it was trustworthy. The agency is shifting to Zero Trust Architecture. Here are some of the things they’ve learned.
October is Cybersecurity Awareness Month, and the theme for this year is “See Yourself in Cyber.” This personalized theme is designed to help us see our role in making sure not only our systems and information remain secure, but see how our actions can impact the systems we and others rely on each day.
Open source software has become a default for agencies looking to modernize their technology. But you don’t need to rely on libraries of open source software to take advantage of its opportunities — you can create your own.
Streamlined workflows allow agencies to eliminate points of friction — hard-copy signatures and procurement paper trails, for instance — and respond better and faster to constituents. Indeed, automation can make a big difference.
The cloud is recognized as a critical element of IT modernization. But it can’t solve problems alone; it needs to work in conjunction with on-site systems.
Agencies need to provide services more quickly and effectively to meet constituent expectations. But sometimes, “solutions” make things more complex.
The latest installment of “Management Minutes with Mika” covers hybrid work myths.
Zero trust enables the Army Corps of Engineers to share the data it needs to, and still keep it secure.