empowering public

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I’ve just posted presentation on public data and government transformation

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Hi! getting back into swing of things after finishing my white paper on public data and data visualization for Don Tapscott’s Gov. 2.0 project (sorry, it’s only available to project subscribers) and preparing for my forthcoming speeches on the subject at the Personal Democracy Forum, June 23-4 & Netroots Nation, July 17-20. […]

Great sessions at Government Leadership Summit!

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

I’ll try to summarize stuff after I get back from the Government Leadership Summit. Major emphasis throughout on emergent behavior, “wisdom of crowds.”
Suffice it to say that I think Vivek Kundra, the District of Columbia’s CTO, is a rock star!
Gotta go: my panel, on Intellipedia, is up next!
Tell a friend:

Technorati tags: homeland […]

yipee! I’m speaking at Personal Democracy Forum 2008!

Monday, May 19th, 2008

I have officially died and gone to heaven!
Just got off the phone with Micah Sifrey, of TechPresident and Personal Democracy Forum fame.
He’s invited me to speak at Personal Democracy Forum 2008 on data visualization as a means to empower the public in government (especially its potential for sousveillance to hold government agencies accountable and […]

Those quakes aren’t just shakin’ earth, but also communications

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Hi. Breaking long radio silence (it’s because I’m working on a longer piece about neat research at U of Colo. by Leysia Palen that substantiates my “networked homeland security” approach, and on a white paper for Don Tapscott’s Gov. 2.0 project on my data visualization obsession..) because two recent earthquakes have driven home how […]

Another example of texting’s life-saving potential

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

The latest example of texting’s potential in emergencies is this news item about a teen who was home because of illness when two intruders entered her house. She texted her mom, who then alerted 911 and drove home (not too smart on mom’s part to physically challenge the perps instead of waiting for cops, but […]

Small is beautiful: Twitter your way out of foreign jail!

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

This blog has certainly suffered since I began my infatuation with the lil’ microblogging phenom, Twitter (hmm, maybe I should use ManyEyes to graph the inverse relationship between the number of recent “tweets” to recent blog posts…).
It’s at least partially because I like to really put some serious effort into each post on this […]

Check John Solomon’s new preparedness blog

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Aside from his deplorable choice of baseball teams to follow (BTW, shouldn’t the “Yankees” be the “Nieuwe Amsterdams” or the “Pieter Minuet Culturally-Insensitive Thieves Who Stole Manhattan” and Yankees should be the name of our local, New England-based lads?), John Solom0n is a great guy:

an esteemed pundit since the age of 13
an outstanding reporter
and is […]

Boston held a “planned disaster” Monday

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Amidst all the historical reenactments, Sox game (lookin’ good, boys!), and Boston Marathon, authorities also scheduled a major disaster drill in the Hub of the Universe Monday.Whoa! Was that a case of bad planning, or what? With hundred of thousands of people already milling about, weren’t the officials, as it were, looking for a disaster?
Nope.
As […]

Chertoff cyber-security plan: who will fill the post?

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

In general, I’m in support of Sec. Chertoff’s new cyber-security plan: let’s not forget that cyber-threats can be of all stripes (terrorists, organized crime, state-sponsored groups, or individual hackers), that 85% of our critical infrastructure is in private hands (hence his call for coordination with the private sector, and that the threats range from the […]

FCC & cellphone carriers get it! Targeted wireless alerts!

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

USA Today reports that the FCC may approve, as early as today, the technical standards for a nationwide system that would send text messages to cellphones and other wireless devices whenever there’s an emergency. The system could be operational by 2010, and could be used for terrorism, weather, or child abduction alerts.
That’s great: finally […]

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