A New Era for TIC
The evolution of the Trusted Internet Connection (TIC) program – from TIC 1.0 more than 10 years ago to TIC 3.0 today – reflects how technology often moves in unexpected ways.
The evolution of the Trusted Internet Connection (TIC) program – from TIC 1.0 more than 10 years ago to TIC 3.0 today – reflects how technology often moves in unexpected ways.
When it comes to using and deploying technology to respond to the coronavirus, time is of the essence.
The National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) has baked the DevOps mindset into its organizational structure.
The hope now is that agencies won’t have to bend backwards to satisfy TIC. The hope is that TIC will instead be flexible enough for agencies to adopt modern solutions tailored to their needs.
The updated Trusted Internet Connection (TIC) 3.0 policy keeps up with the modern needs that agencies have to connect to their digital working environments faster and more securely.
Cloud computing can give Chief Information Officers (CIOs) the ingredients they need — such as adaptability and security — to cook up modern agencies.
The continuous process of managing data — not just the deployment of a cool service — is the true producer of value in data.
In 2018, one agency in Washington became America’s first to transition its entire digital platform for delivering Medicaid assistance into cloud.
For tens of millions of Americans, this program ensures that they can afford health care despite their limited income and resources.
A new public sector workforce will usher in an era of citizen-first services, all supported by the cloud.