Australia beyond Gov 2.0 – Gov 2.0 Radio broadcast from the Govinnovate forum
Find out more about the broadcast, panel and Gov 2.0 radio at gov20radio.com/2013/12/beyondgov20/
Or listen to the panel below.
Find out more about the broadcast, panel and Gov 2.0 radio at gov20radio.com/2013/12/beyondgov20/
Or listen to the panel below.
It’s all well and good to say there’s over 200 Twitter feeds from Australian federal, state and local governments – but to get a picture of the level of activity, and see what they’re saying, look at eGovAU’s Twitter feed here (note that it is a free service and occasionally down for maintenance). This page…
Over the last few days there’s been some significant calls for a slowdown or pause in artificial intelligence research and development, or at least for a pause on public implementations of AI. There’s some significant rationale behind this – with the arrival of GPT4 (which I’ve been extensively experimenting with) we have seen another huge…
Every now and then a work shines through with absolute clarity. The video below, sent to me by a former colleague, provides such clarity regarding the fifth great media shift in the last 500 years – the internet. It may be very useful for public servants in educating their colleagues about the changes occurring around…
Dave Fletcher has published a post on his Government and Technology Weblog about how the community is making use of Utah government traffic data to create innovative tools to help drivers. Covered in If it could all be so effective as this, Dave covers how the information is shared with the public – much in…
Online social media is becoming an important tool for governments to engage citizens during emergencies to rapidly disseminate information. in fact it is even beginning to be credited with saving lives during health crises. According to Nextgov, Federal health agencies relied heavily on social media to inform the public about the recent outbreak of salmonella…
In Pat’s Citizen 2.0 workshop we’ve been discussing how citizens have changed – their expectations and behaviours. Below is the list we came up with, and a video from William Perrin (given for Public Sphere) on how these changes are affecting government. Changes in citizen expectations and behaviours Instant access to information – instant response…
This archive mirrors the original eGov AU blog — Craig’s professional commentary on AI, digital government and technology in public life, running since 2006.
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