Government Technology - October 2008 - (Page 58) signal: noise BY PAU L W. TAYLOR CHIEF STRATEGY OFFICER CENTER FOR DIGITAL GOVERNMENT index j Jurisdictions/Agencies: District of Columbia’s Office of the Chief Technology Officer 32 Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 52 Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM) 44 National Association of Counties 52 New York University’s Center for Catastrophe Preparedness and Response and the Public Entity Risk Institute 52 Open Source Lab 26 Oregon Department of Human Services 26 U.S. Department of Defense 26 U.S. Library of Congress 36 Blurring the Lines ” I wouldn’t say that it is Microsoft making its peace with the open source community,” said my friend Stuart McKee, national technology officer of state and local government at Microsoft, “but it is a microcosm of an awakening and maturing on all sides.” We were talking about Open eGov, the open source content management software developed by Newport News, Va., and subsequently merged with PloneGov, a repository of sharable software, with the participation of 55 other government organizations around the world. “I agree with Stuart. It is a sign of maturity in the software market,” said Andy Stein, IT director of Newport News and champion of the Open eGov collaboration. “It is the responsible thing to do.” Stein takes seriously his responsibility to expand capacity, share broadly and advocate for what he calls “fair and equitable cost sharing.” That is all consistent with the tenets of the open source movement, but none of it is inconsistent with close ties — organizationally and architecturally — with commercial software providers. In fact, Stein said the next big project for Open eGov is to integrate the platform with Microsoft technologies, such as SharePoint and Active Directory. “Andy is astute on sharing and leveraging platforms that people want in creative ways,” McKee said, noting that almost half of the 130,000 open source projects at SourceForge.net are built on Microsoft’s platform. The intersection of Microsoft, open source and public-sector IT hasn’t always been this civil. Remember the high-stakes, career-defining dispute between Microsoft and Massachusetts just a few short years ago? It’s too easy to attribute the changes to a shift from a set of quasi-ideological drivers in the open source movement (Massachusetts) to more pragmatic concerns (Newport News). The blurring of the lines between commercial and open source software has accelerated in the interim. Consider that respected industry watcher Mark Anderson of the Strategic News Service said that at a post-Bill Gates Microsoft, Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie is charged with finding the company’s role in cloud computing — where shrink-wrap is no longer king. Consider too that Microsoft now has an open source strategist and he is reportedly proposing a WAMP (Windows, Apache, MySQL, PHP) stack that can be used independently or as a platform for other components, but runs on Windows. Stein said Open eGov is moving toward a WAMP stack too, but the collaboration needs Microsoft’s help to make the integration work through access to SharePoint and other application programming interfaces — the same stuff the average Microsoft business partner or independent software vendor relies on. While he is waiting, Stein said Newport News has begun hosting Open eGov as a service for Franklin County, Va., at $260 per month. Simultaneously the collaboration has extended its membership to Waynesboro and Staunton, Va., and started merger talks with Plone-using Albuquerque, N.M. That leaves him with precious little time to bask in the reflected glory of the J. Robert Havlick Award for Innovation in Local Government, which Newport News picked up from the Alliance for Innovation in spring 2008. Vendors: Adobe 32 Apple 14 BlackBerry 14 Cisco 14 Communication Laboratories (EmNet) 40 Das Keyboard 54 Dell 54 Fugro EarthData, Inc 44 Google 32 Microsoft 32, 36, 58 Newton Peripherals 54 OpenText 14 Targus 54 Terremark 36 Verizon 56 Advertisers Index Bearing Point 35 Brother 21 Canon 60 CDW-G 30-31 Diskeeper 33 ESRI 23, 51 Hewlett-Packard PSG 2 Hewlett-Packard TSG Blades 5 Hewlett-Packard TSG Low End 7 IBM 59 Ingram Micro 17 New World Systems 45 Northrup Grumman 27 Qwest 39 SAP 25 Sprint 47 Verizon Business 53 Verizon Wireless 9 OCT_08 58 http://www.SourceForge.net http://www.govtech.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Government Technology - October 2008 Government Technology - October 2008 Contents Point of View On the Scene Big Picture Four Questions for... Letters Cover Stories: Border Crossing The Australian E-Connection Easy Rider Northern Exposure Technology on the Cheap Ditching the Desktop Heightening the Experience Pipe Dream Falling Between the Cracks Come Together, Right Now... It's a ... Car? Digital State of the Art Spectrum Products Two Cents signal:noise Government Technology - October 2008 Government Technology - October 2008 - (Page Bellyband1) Government Technology - October 2008 - (Page Bellyband2) Government Technology - October 2008 - Government Technology - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Government Technology - October 2008 - Government Technology - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Government Technology - October 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Government Technology - October 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Government Technology - October 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Government Technology - October 2008 - Point of View (Page 6) Government Technology - October 2008 - Point of View (Page 7) Government Technology - October 2008 - On the Scene (Page 8) Government Technology - October 2008 - On the Scene (Page 9) Government Technology - October 2008 - Big Picture (Page 10) Government Technology - October 2008 - Big Picture (Page V1) Government Technology - October 2008 - Big Picture (Page V2) Government Technology - October 2008 - Big Picture (Page 11) Government Technology - October 2008 - Four Questions for... (Page 12) Government Technology - October 2008 - Letters (Page 13) Government Technology - October 2008 - Cover Stories: Border Crossing (Page 14) Government Technology - October 2008 - Cover Stories: Border Crossing (Page 15) Government Technology - October 2008 - The Australian E-Connection (Page 16) Government Technology - October 2008 - The Australian E-Connection (Page 17) Government Technology - October 2008 - The Australian E-Connection (Page 18) Government Technology - October 2008 - The Australian E-Connection (Page L1) Government Technology - October 2008 - The Australian E-Connection (Page L2) Government Technology - October 2008 - Easy Rider (Page 19) Government Technology - October 2008 - Easy Rider (Page 20) Government Technology - October 2008 - Easy Rider (Page 21) Government Technology - October 2008 - Northern Exposure (Page 22) Government Technology - October 2008 - Northern Exposure (Page 23) Government Technology - October 2008 - Northern Exposure (Page 24) Government Technology - October 2008 - Northern Exposure (Page 25) Government Technology - October 2008 - Technology on the Cheap (Page 26) Government Technology - October 2008 - Technology on the Cheap (Page 27) Government Technology - October 2008 - Technology on the Cheap (Page 28) Government Technology - October 2008 - Technology on the Cheap (Page 29) Government Technology - October 2008 - Technology on the Cheap (Page 30) Government Technology - October 2008 - Technology on the Cheap (Page 31) Government Technology - October 2008 - Ditching the Desktop (Page 32) Government Technology - October 2008 - Ditching the Desktop (Page 33) Government Technology - October 2008 - Ditching the Desktop (Page 34) Government Technology - October 2008 - Ditching the Desktop (Page 35) Government Technology - October 2008 - Heightening the Experience (Page 36) Government Technology - October 2008 - Heightening the Experience (Page 37) Government Technology - October 2008 - Heightening the Experience (Page 38) Government Technology - October 2008 - Heightening the Experience (Page 39) Government Technology - October 2008 - Pipe Dream (Page 40) Government Technology - October 2008 - Pipe Dream (Page 41) Government Technology - October 2008 - Falling Between the Cracks (Page 42) Government Technology - October 2008 - Falling Between the Cracks (Page 43) Government Technology - October 2008 - Come Together, Right Now... (Page 44) Government Technology - October 2008 - Come Together, Right Now... (Page 45) Government Technology - October 2008 - Come Together, Right Now... (Page 46) Government Technology - October 2008 - Come Together, Right Now... (Page 47) Government Technology - October 2008 - It's a ... Car? (Page 48) Government Technology - October 2008 - It's a ... Car? (Page 49) Government Technology - October 2008 - Digital State of the Art (Page 50) Government Technology - October 2008 - Digital State of the Art (Page 51) Government Technology - October 2008 - Spectrum (Page 52) Government Technology - October 2008 - Spectrum (Page 53) Government Technology - October 2008 - Products (Page 54) Government Technology - October 2008 - Products (Page 55) Government Technology - October 2008 - Two Cents (Page 56) Government Technology - October 2008 - Two Cents (Page 57) Government Technology - October 2008 - signal:noise (Page 58) Government Technology - October 2008 - signal:noise (Page Cover3) Government Technology - October 2008 - signal:noise (Page Cover4)
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