IT is Everywhere, So Let’s Show Our IT Professionals Some Love
Please take a moment this week to salute those who keep our country up and running: the professionals who work tirelessly to ensure that IT truly is everywhere.
Please take a moment this week to salute those who keep our country up and running: the professionals who work tirelessly to ensure that IT truly is everywhere.
In surveying 116 public sector IT professionals, we found that agencies are actively moving much of their infrastructure to the cloud, while still keeping a significant number of applications in-house.
Despite its status as a threat magnet, federal IT professionals can actually use social media networks to thwart attackers.
The difference today, of course, is that Linux and open source software in general have evolved from a “hobby” to preferred solutions for many organizations, including government agencies.
According to Frank Konieczny, Chief Technology Officer for the Air Force, there are three main objectives behind most malicious operations.
To understand the power and possibilities of data, let’s look at three government websites that will blow your socks off with the data they provide.
Assuming you’ve already developed a streamlined user interface (UI), it’s time to start centering your attention on the behind-the-scenes processes that will help you build and maintain that connection between governments and citizens.
If you were in charge, what’s one thing you would change in your office tomorrow?
We asked a panel of federal experts about the most important skills employees need to navigate government, advice about lateral career moves and more. Here’s what they said…
Retired Air Force Lt. Col. Dan Ward has made a bit of a name for himself as a leading thinker in terms of pushing and supporting innovation within the typically slow-moving world of federal acquisition. The author of two books, Ward has advocated loudly and eloquently for pushing for speed and simplicity in procurement, andRead… Read more »