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(3/12/2007) After more than a decade of e-government analysis, discussion, policy debate and collaborative brainstorming, only one national program reaches out to all three levels of Canadian government. Five years after its conception, the small phenomenon that's known as BizPaL remains an isolated model of cross-jurisdictional service delivery. CIO Government Review catches up with the little licensing Web app that won't stop growing. | (3/12/2007) After more than a decade of e-government analysis, discussion, policy debate and collaborative brainstorming, only one national program reaches out to all three levels of Canadian government. Five years after its conception, the small phenomenon that's known as BizPaL remains an isolated model of cross-jurisdictional service delivery. CIO Government Review catches up with the little licensing Web app that won't stop growing. | (3/12/2007) After more than a decade of e-government analysis, discussion, policy debate and collaborative brainstorming, only one national program reaches out to all three levels of Canadian government. Five years after its conception, the small phenomenon that's known as BizPaL remains an isolated model of cross-jurisdictional service delivery. CIO Government Review catches up with the little licensing Web app that won't stop growing. | (3/12/2007) After more than a decade of e-government analysis, discussion, policy debate and collaborative brainstorming, only one national program reaches out to all three levels of Canadian government. Five years after its conception, the small phenomenon that's known as BizPaL remains an isolated model of cross-jurisdictional service delivery. CIO Government Review catches up with the little licensing Web app that won't stop growing. | (3/8/2007) The U.S. Department of Transportation has quietly put the kibosh on Windows Vista, Office 2007 and Internet Explorer 7 (IE7), banning upgrades to those Microsoft Corp. products - at least for now. | (3/2/2007) Security is soaring at Canadian airports with the rollout of a dual biometric-based airport identification card program by the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority (CATSA). The Restricted Area Identity Card (RAIC) program, implemented across 29 Canadian airports, was an initiative by the Ministry of Transport that began in 2002 in a bid to beef up security at Canada's airports. | (2/15/2007) The FBI lost 160 laptop computers in less than four years - an average of nearly four each month - according to the inspector general for the Department of Justice. In many cases, the FBI didn't know what was on the missing computers. The inspector general criticized the agency for not enforcing its own rules on reporting lost or stolen hardware and hit the agency for not being able to detail the contents of the laptops. | (2/5/2007) During the planning and development of an electronic health record (EHR) what you are talking about and doing is fundamentally putting information out there for others to, at some point in time, pull from. | (1/26/2007) In a little more than a month from now, users of the country's largest Wi-Fi network - Toronto's recently launched One Zone - will begin paying up to $29 a month for the privilege of cruising the information highway wirelessly. | (1/18/2007) A proposed database that would keep track of hundreds of millions of money transfers in and out of the U.S. will not be ready by the original target date, according to a report issued by U.S. Department of the Treasury Wednesday. | (1/9/2007) The dangers of easy access wireless LANs recently prompted government officials in New York and California to create new laws to prevent network "piggybacking" and exposure of sensitive data in both businesses and homes. |
  |  |  | | Blog Spotlight: Sandford Borins |  | As Professor of Strategic Management at the University of Toronto, Sandford Borins brings InterGovWorld.com readers exclusive insights into how and why the public sector is changing. You'll find new perspectives and questions, observations and objectives, lessons and answers. Cover to Cover, the blog by Prof. Sandford Borins, appears every Thursday. Inside Cover to Cover | |
|  | | Unified Communications |  | Unity is a word often heard in the public sector, with myriad agencies and departments looking to foster collective thinking around some of today's most pressing issues. The word, however, doesn't usually get mentioned in the same breath as technology. That's a situation, though, that might soon be changing, thanks to a new software platform known as unified communications.
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