mobile tech

The rapid embrace of computer tablets in and outside of government has escalated the debate among federal agencies over the merits of designing native applications for tablets.

But if the Government Printing Office offers any indication, the prevailing approach is expected to be for agencies to channel development resources into applications that recognize and adapt to a variety of mobile devices, rather than concentrating on specific products, according to Lisa LaPlant, GPO’s lead program planner for programs strategy and technology (pictured above center). Keep reading →

One of the nation’s top government chief information officers predicted within the next five years, federal agencies will be able to begin procuring enterprise level back office information systems as a service rather than having to develop or maintain their own systems.

Richard Spires, CIO for the Department of Homeland Security, and vice chairman of the Federal CIO Council, said federal agencies–including DHS–are actively trying to reduce and standardize the number of commonly used information systems. Keep reading →

A new, first-of-its-kind, national alert system in the U.S. that allows the public to receive major emergency alert notifications on their mobile phones without having to sign up or pay for them went live this past weekend, according to a report from Government Technology.

The new Commercial Mobile Alert System (CMAS) was developed through a partnership between the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the Federal Communications Commission and wireless phone carriers in what is seen as an important step forward to increase public safety nationwide, according to FEMA officials. Keep reading →

This story was updated March 23 to reflect additional reporting.

The White House may finally get what the rest of the nation has grown accustomed to at any Starbucks: Access to WiFi. Keep reading →

The federal government’s march to mobility will increasingly revolve around a new, broader digital strategy, expected to be released this spring, a White House Office of Management and Budget official said today.

Lisa Schlosser, deputy chief information officer at OMB, said the administration and Federal CIO Steven VanRoekel are continuing to embrace the mobility revolution. VanRoekel publically declared 2012 as the “year of mobile government” earlier this year in a speech at the Consumer Electronics Show and highlighted an initiative to develop a new Federal Mobility Strategy. Keep reading →

It sounds like a headline from The Onion, but it’s true: A project called “Homeless Hotspots” is turning homeless Austin residents into mobile wireless hotspots outside the South by Southwest convention center.

It’s part marketing stunt, part genuine charitable initiative — and it’s generating lots of double-takes and chatter from those who pass by. Keep reading →

The fact that the Department of Defense got its budget cut and the Intelligence Community got its budget increased in the White House’s 2013 budget request of Congress is indicative of more than the need to roll back a decade of military growth. It’s also indicative of a shift in IT focus–and a reflection that DoD’s network-centric focus is being overtaken by the IC’s big data-centric focus.

There are probably many reasons for such a shift. One is the world’s population. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates the world population passed 7 billion mark this past weekend. The rapidly growing number of people who will eventually have smartphones with multiple sensors (your iPhone has them now for GPS position, etc.) promises a future where there will be massive streams of real-time data that the IC will want to mine, looking for lone-wolf terrorists (who are relatively but easy to stop) who I have written about previously.

For companies like Google and Facebook, big data is big business, and for other companies big data is becoming their business as they mine their large swaths of data to improve their services and develop new business activities. The IC may not come out and say it, but it has to love the fact that Facebook will soon have 1/7th of the world’s population using it’s platform to share what’s going on. Or that Google is almost everyone’s favorite search engine because they can keep track of what people are posting and searching for much easier than many in government can.

The IC also has to love big data, and the rapid evolution of systems used to ingest and process it, because it helps push the technology wave, as Gus Hunt, CIA chief technology officer (pictured above), described it at the recent Government Big Data Forum.

Hunt said that in every aspect of their workflow at the CIA, from sensors to finished intelligence, massive, multiple, real-time sensor data streams cause bottlenecks on current networks that swamp current storage devices and overwhelm current query, analytics, and visualization tools, that are needed to produce finished intelligence.

So he wants his cake and to eat it too: He wants real-time analytics and visualizations that he says a few start-ups are trying to achieve. He also wants the Federal Cloud Computing Initiative to add two more services to Platform-, Software-, and Infrastructure-as-a-Service, namely, Data-as-a-Service and Security-as-a-Service.

Part of the solution is emerging from Google’s MapReduce, which is a parallel data processing framework that has been commercialized as Apache Hadoop (developed by Doug Cutting who named it after his son’s toy elephant) by Cloudera so one can store and compute big data at the same time.

Amr Awadallah, founder and CTO of Cloudera, calls Apache Hadoop a data operating system in contrast to Windows and Linux, which are essentially file operating systems (they store and manage all the files you create and are needed for your software applications). He points out that Apache Hadoop provides the three essential things: velocity, scalability, and economics, that are needed to handle big data.


So the IC, Gus Hunt, Amr Awadalla, and others at the Government Big Data Forum are leading the next technology wave and gave us a glimpse of both the technology infrastructure and the business organization with chief data officers and data scientists that will be needed to implement and succeed with big data.

More details about what was said can be found at CTOVision and at my wiki document, Data Science Visualizations Past Present and Future.


Gen. Keith B. Alexander, Commander, U.S. Cyber Command and Director, National Security Agency/Chief Central Security Service shares insights on leading for success in the mobile frontier and amid the rapid evolution of technologies and threats:

__________________________________________________ Keep reading →

Just as consumers are wrapping their heads around 4G, the wireless industry is thinking ahead to 5G. Soaring smartphone and tablet sales mean networks are growing clogged with cellular data traffic. For the time being, 4G technology can help relieve the congestion. Modern networks are able to cram more data into their airwaves than older technologies can. But soon, even 4G’s efficiencies won’t be enough.


The Government Accountability Office unveiled an iPhone and iPad application on Tuesday that links to mobile versions of all its reports, podcasts, videos and congressional testimony, Nextgov has reported.

The watchdog agency created the app because more people were visiting online versions of its reports and testimonies on smartphones and tablets, according to an emailed press release. Keep reading →

Page 6 of 141...2345678910...14