Government Technology - July 2008 - (Page 14) PHOTO BY JOHN HARRINGTON Questions Four for Vivek Kundra CTO, WASHINGTON, D.C. 1 2 3 VIVEK KUNDRA, APPOINTED CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER (CTO) BY WASHINGTON. D.C.,MAYOR ADRIAN FENTY IN 2007, IS DETERMINED TO MAKE THE CITY’S IT ORGANIZATION ACT LIKE A STARTUP INSTEAD OF A BUREAUCRACY. THROUGH A CONCEPT CALLED OCTO (OFFICE OF THE CTO) LABS, KUNDRA TURNED HIS 700-PERSON DEPARTMENT INTO A TEST TUBE FOR CLOUD COMPUTING, OPEN SOURCE APPLICATIONS AND OTHER IDEAS. JULY_08 j 14 You’ve developed an interesting model for evaluating IT project viability. Describe it. I created a portfolio management model where we treat every project in government as a stock. We evaluate the management team; we evaluate how happy our customers are; we evaluate the performance, whether it’s on time, on budget and delivering value. We use that data to decide whether to hold on to the project, invest more or kill it — similar to what portfolios in a private market would do as far as sell, buy or hold. That’s brought a lot of scrutiny and moved us aggressively in terms of killing projects that won’t deliver. You use Google for desktop applications and e-mail instead of traditional desktop software. Why? The government ultimately is a consumer of technology, and a lot of times government gets into the business of developing massive applications. When I moved to Washington, I had more computing power on my laptop at the local coffee shop than the average police officer or teacher. We looked at the cloud computing model and the consumer space. Compared with the cost of owning infrastructure, it’s far cheaper. So the future of the computing platform in the district is software as a service and less hardware ownership? Absolutely. You look at our most recent procurement around project management. We decided to go with the cloud model instead of buying a ton of servers that would have taken me six to seven months to procure, configure and deploy. We were able to do that immediately. When we look at that platform in terms of collaboration, everything’s going to be in the cloud. As we’re looking at the whole data center model, the question really becomes, why do we need a data center? Government typically is risk averse. How do you change that? I think controlled risk is very healthy. That’s why I created OCTO Labs. The idea was that we would throw hundreds of ideas on the wall and even if five of them survive, they will be transformative. The question really becomes, why do we need a data center? WATCH GTtv’S INTERVIEW WITH VIVEK KUNDRA AT WWW.GOVTECH.COM/GT/MULTIMEDIA 4 BY STEVE TOWNS, EDITOR http://WWW.GOVTECH.COM/gt/multimedia http://www.govtech.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Government Technology - July 2008 Government Technology - July 2008 Point of View The Last Mile Big Picture On the Scene Four Questions for ... Generation 2.0 at Work Dangerous Convenience Tainted Justice? Are You Ready? E-Discovery Basics Smart Docs Advanced Math Online Video Blues Spectrum Personal Computing Products signal:noise Government Technology - July 2008 Government Technology - July 2008 - (Page Bellyband1) Government Technology - July 2008 - (Page Bellyband2) Government Technology - July 2008 - Government Technology - July 2008 (Page 1) Government Technology - July 2008 - Government Technology - July 2008 (Page 2) Government Technology - July 2008 - Government Technology - July 2008 (Page 3) Government Technology - July 2008 - Government Technology - July 2008 (Page 4) Government Technology - July 2008 - Government Technology - July 2008 (Page 5) Government Technology - July 2008 - Point of View (Page 6) Government Technology - July 2008 - Point of View (Page 7) Government Technology - July 2008 - The Last Mile (Page 8) Government Technology - July 2008 - The Last Mile (Page 9) Government Technology - July 2008 - Big Picture (Page 10) Government Technology - July 2008 - Big Picture (Page 11) Government Technology - July 2008 - On the Scene (Page 12) Government Technology - July 2008 - On the Scene (Page 13) Government Technology - July 2008 - Four Questions for ... (Page 14) Government Technology - July 2008 - Four Questions for ... (Page 15) Government Technology - July 2008 - Generation 2.0 at Work (Page 16) Government Technology - July 2008 - Generation 2.0 at Work (Page 17) Government Technology - July 2008 - Generation 2.0 at Work (Page 18) Government Technology - July 2008 - Generation 2.0 at Work (Page 19) Government Technology - July 2008 - Generation 2.0 at Work (Page 20) Government Technology - July 2008 - Generation 2.0 at Work (Page 21) Government Technology - July 2008 - Dangerous Convenience (Page 22) Government Technology - July 2008 - Dangerous Convenience (Page 23) Government Technology - July 2008 - Dangerous Convenience (Page 24) Government Technology - July 2008 - Dangerous Convenience (Page 25) Government Technology - July 2008 - Dangerous Convenience (Page 26) Government Technology - July 2008 - Dangerous Convenience (Page 27) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 28) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 29) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 30) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 31) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 32) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 33) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 34) Government Technology - July 2008 - Tainted Justice? (Page 35) Government Technology - July 2008 - Are You Ready? (Page 36) Government Technology - July 2008 - Are You Ready? (Page 37) Government Technology - July 2008 - Are You Ready? (Page 38) Government Technology - July 2008 - Are You Ready? (Page 39) Government Technology - July 2008 - Are You Ready? (Page 40) Government Technology - July 2008 - Are You Ready? (Page 41) Government Technology - July 2008 - E-Discovery Basics (Page 42) Government Technology - July 2008 - E-Discovery Basics (Page H1) Government Technology - July 2008 - E-Discovery Basics (Page H2) Government Technology - July 2008 - E-Discovery Basics (Page 43) Government Technology - July 2008 - Smart Docs (Page 44) Government Technology - July 2008 - Smart Docs (Page 45) Government Technology - July 2008 - Smart Docs (Page 46) Government Technology - July 2008 - Smart Docs (Page 47) Government Technology - July 2008 - Smart Docs (Page 48) Government Technology - July 2008 - Smart Docs (Page 49) Government Technology - July 2008 - Advanced Math (Page 50) Government Technology - July 2008 - Advanced Math (Page 51) Government Technology - July 2008 - Online Video Blues (Page 52) Government Technology - July 2008 - Online Video Blues (Page 53) Government Technology - July 2008 - Spectrum (Page 54) Government Technology - July 2008 - Personal Computing (Page 55) Government Technology - July 2008 - Products (Page 56) Government Technology - July 2008 - Products (Page 57) Government Technology - July 2008 - signal:noise (Page 58) Government Technology - July 2008 - signal:noise (Page 59) Government Technology - July 2008 - signal:noise (Page 60)
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