government in comment and analysis
Richard Steel
CIO Profile Steel isn't afraid of making tough decisions after ditching Linux trials at Newham to sign a new licensing agreement with Microsoft a few years ago, and under Steel's leadership Newham achieved the government's electronic service delivery targets... [11 Jun 2008]
Martin Taylor
CIO Profile Taylor took time out from being a CIO in 2001 for a mixture of work that included personal investment, consulting to Microsoft founder Paul Allen's European private equity business, and a non-executive position on the UK government's police and... [11 Jun 2008]
John Suffolk
CIO Profile Although not a CIO in the traditional sense - each government department has its own CIO - John Suffolk is the public face of UK government IT and leads the work of the CIO Council to deliver the IT strategy behind the 'Transformational Government... [11 Jun 2008]
Dylan Roberts
CIO Profile Roberts, who has been at Leeds Council since 2003, is on the Local Government National CIO Council, is the Yorkshire and Humber regional executive of Socitm and chairs the West Yorkshire CIO group. As head of ICT at Leeds City Council, Dylan... [11 Jun 2008]
Where will the Silicon Dragon swoop next?
Comment One of the things is that the Chinese government is going to have a Nasdaq-type exchange for listings, so that will help propel things quite a lot. But how much further can the country go? Sino-tech expert Rebecca Fannin gives Steve Ranger the... [03 Jun 2008]
What scores in the global tech league?
Comment It seems every government is now playing this game, because the analysts are all publishing detailed charts and research that details the best place to offshore - aiming to guide those managers responsible for setting up offshore delivery centres. [03 Jun 2008]
Tech innovation goes global
Comment A location might also be chosen because it offers a vast number of software engineers - or because its population has access to free wi-fi and cutting-edge government services. Few CIOs can rely on local suppliers for all their technology needs. [03 Jun 2008]
The Naked CIO: Price of panic
Comment In fact if it's managed properly, IT can be almost entirely strategic - with the exception of the wonderful rules and regulations stifling innovation enforced by Her Majesty's Government. Capricious boardroom decisions based on the flawed thinking... [03 Jun 2008]
Dear silicon.com... Rural v City fat pipe row and ID cards
Comment And the idea that the government can effectively manage an IT project on this scale with five different suppliers, none of whom will actually be in competition, is farcical. Another familiar topic getting readers hot and bothered this week is ID... [29 May 2008]
The Weekly Round-Up: 23.05.08
Round-Up The peers have called on the UK government to lift the ban on the use of Segways on public roads and pavements in the UK. Spoilsport Lord Bassam said that while there are currently no plans to lift the Segway ban it is under review and the... [23 May 2008]
Don't paper over cracks in the digital nation
Comment And with many government and financial services increasingly being delivered online it's serious stuff people are being excluded from - not just throwing sheep at friends on Facebook or watching videos of Mentos and exploding Coke bottles on YouTube. [23 May 2008]
Dear silicon.com... Tech skills slump, gov't snooping, Segway safety
Comment When you look at what the government mandates as IT training in schools there is no wonder that we have a shortage of entry-level candidates. Also, the government's latest surveillance plans have had readers up in arms… and finally the recent calls... [22 May 2008]
The McCue Interview: Claire Hamon, CIO, Rok Group
Comment But Hamon admits those clear boundaries, strategic accountability, stewardship and delivery responsibility are not as easy for some of the larger government departments. I think there is still a lot of bureaucracy still in government. [13 May 2008]
The Weekly Round-Up: 09.05.08
Round-Up Call it a miserable old cynic but The Round-Up's guessing the government won't lose too much sleep over unclaimed benefits. Now the horse has long since bolted, the government decides to shut the stable door and secure its data. [09 May 2008]
Dear silicon.com... XP lives, the femtocell 'truth', BlackBerry bashing…
Comment And whatever happens with the law, government departments will be carefully and scrupulously made exempt from it. Windows XP was getting a lot of attention this week, with silicon.com readers undecided whether the OS should live on or not… And data... [01 May 2008]
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