TERMINALFOUR, a leading web content management company, today announced that its web content management solution (WCM) is being used by Derby City Council to deliver greater online services to citizens 24x7 and improve overall online communications.
government
Mass.gov redesigned state portal using Percussion WCM Software
I'm a huge fan of eGovernment and Government 2.0 initiatives. A few years ago we started seeing government sites adopting open data initiatives and adding features that allowed the public to provide more feedback to the government that served them. Changes such as these are good initiatives by governments as they continue their evolution into the digital age. Recently, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts redesigned their official website, Mass.gov, using the Percussion CM System.
Before I begin, let me confess that I don't know much about Percussion Software beyond what I read in their press releases. In fact, you'll find that some of the information here came straight out of one of their press releases and you'll want to continue your research beyond what you read here. However, personal experience has shown me that any redesign work done with government websites is hard work with my hurdles to cross. So after I took a look at the Mass.gov site, it didn't take much arm twisting from Percussion's marketing people to go beyond my comfort level and talk about a product I really should know a whole lot more about.
Bury Metropolitan Borough Council selects GOSS for content management value for money
In May 2011, Bury Metropolitan Borough Council deployed their new website. The website was built by GOSS Interactive and uses GOSS iCM (intelligent Content Management) to manage the site content. Since selecting GOSS and launching the site, the web team have be very impressed with the levels of service, professionalism and understanding of the public sector supplied by GOSS.
HyperOffice, now on Amazon's AWS GovCloud, offers a Google and Microsoft cloud alternative
ROCKVILLE, Md., Nov. 10, 2011 -- Today, HyperOffice announced that in partnership with Amazon its award winning cloud communication and collaboration software is available through AWS GovCloud, a cloud infrastructure built to meet the security and compliance requirements of the public sector.
The National Governors Association Launches with Jahia 6.5
Jahia, provider of Java-based open source CMS solutions, announced today that the National Governors Association has re-launched its website using Jahia 6.5, the first open source next-generation CMS, which bridges web, portal, social, search, and mobile user experiences with a single composite platform.
Four Cool WP .gov Sites
Matt Mullenweg: I was in Washington DC last week at the OpenGovDC conference where I participated on a panel about design. The organizers and many of the speakers were pretty Drupal-focused, but I did get to meet some folks and learn about the ever-growing use of WordPress inside the Beltway. Here are four...
CMS Expo: The Right CMS For Government
The use of content management systems in government is a personal and work interest of mine, so this is a panel that I'm looking forward to hear from the speakers. There is actually a lot of diversity in what governments need their CMS to do and I'm curious to see how well the panel handles that diversity. I'm expecting Tony White, Ars Logica, to be the moderator for this panel.
Leaders from Featured CMSes will be on-hand during this panel discussion to participate in a live analysis of the CMSes, asking probing questions of each, to determine how their represented Content Management System (and supporting community and infrastructure) best meets the demands of today's governmental needs, whether at a municipal, state or federal level.
Represented on this panel are: Lee Middleton (SilverStripe), Shaun Walker (DotNetNuke), Brian Colhounyan (TERMINALFOUR), Benjamin Mack (TYPO3), Ken Wasetis (Plone), Jeff Kline (Accrisoft), and Casey Neehouse (Umbraco). The following questions were asked either by the moderator, Tony White, or audience members. The panels' answers to these questions are paraphrased.
What features in your CMS make it a good choice for government?
- Plone - Government is already actively using Plone. Plone can address complex and flexible workflow. Import/export capability for security purposes.
- TYPO3 - Addresses accessibility (Section 508 in US government).
- Umbraco - Lots of state agencies are switching to .Net CMS. Umbraco and Dotnetnuke are .Net CMS. Section 508 compliance.
- Accrisoft - Local government is the specific client for this company...delivering a turnkey solution.
- TERMINALFOUR - The UN is a client. Multi-language is why the UN chose TERMINALFOUR for their CMS.
- SilverStripe - SilverStripe sees government as partners and have built a very robust product that can be used by government.
- DotNetNuke - Microsoft has helped partner with DotNetNuke which has been a positive in introducing DNN and open source to all level of governments.
5 ways to use social media for better emergency response
As some of you know, I'm very interested in how government and large organizations are using information systems, collaboration tools, and social media. This past weekend, I had a chance to read some of the trade magazines stacked under my desk and collecting dust. I came across a great article published in Government Computer News that discussed how emergency management is using social media tools such as Facebook and Twitter.
The artice, written by Rutrell Yasin, lists five ways to use social media for better emergency response which include:
- Reach a wider audience
- Send and receive emergency alerts
- Monitor the conversation
- Integrate data sources for situational awareness
- Collaborate with responders
The story gives a good snapshot to how social media is currently being used and hope to be used by various emergency management organizations. If you're interested in the article, the article is available online (and unfortunately the online format isn't as good as it is in print).
Content Management System Built for Cities to have Presence at NAGW Annual Conference
Auctori:city, a web content management system designed for municipalities and built for SEO, is a sponsor of the National Association of Government Webmasters (NAGW) National Conference which will be held at the Millennium Hotel in St. Louis, Missouri September 22-24, 2010.
Unidev Introduces a Content Management System Designed for Municipalities
Auctori:city Provides Cities with an Effective Website as well as the Ability to Manage Content in Real-Time
St. Louis, MO –Auctori:city, a Microsoft Certified Web Content Management System (WCMS) built for search engine optimization and designed specifically for municipalities, launched on June 9, 2010. A silo of Auctori, an innovation of Unidev, Auctori:city was created to meet the specific online needs of city and government websites.
Local Governments Offer Data to Miners
New York Times: "In Washington, a Web site called Stumble Safely makes that possible. It is one example of the kind of creativity that cities are hoping to mobilize by turning over big chunks of data to programmers and the public.
Many local governments are figuring out how to use the Internet to make government data more accessible. The goal is to spawn useful Web sites and mobile applications — and perhaps even have people think differently about their city and its government."
Tamworth Regional Council Bolsters Online Services With Elcom
Regional council using Elcom’s enterprise content management and web design platform to improve online service delivery and simplify access to information
Sydney, Australia (June 22, 2009) – Tamworth Regional Council (www.tamworth.nsw.gov.au) is rebuilding its website with the help of Sydney-based enterprise content management company Elcom in an effort to improve its service delivery and offer better information resources to its customers.
Using Elcom’s CommunityManager.NET development environment, the new website will allow for certain services – such as rate payments – to be made available online in the future. It will also simplify the process of publishing and retrieving information, allowing multiple personnel that aren’t familiar with web publishing or HTML to publish content that adheres to the design and formatting guidelines set out by the Council’s internet committee.
“Our website has grown organically over the years, to the point where finding specific information can be difficult,” says Mark Crompton, Finance and IT Manager, Tamworth Regional Council. “Coupled with the fact that the systems running our website have reached the end of their lifecycle, we had a ‘perfect storm’ of reasons to completely rebuild our web presence.
“At the same time, we wanted to create a platform that will serve the Council well into the future, and allow us to innovate with new online services as the need arises,” says Crompton. “As a regional council covering more than 9,600 square kilometres and a population in excess of 53,000, making it easier for customers that live hundreds of kilometres away from regional centres to access information and basic services online can make a major difference to their lives.”
Citizen Spies
I just finished reading an article from last Friday's Wall Street Journal, Gulags, Nukes and a Water Slide: Citizen Spies Lift North Korea's Veil. The article discusses how collaboration and tools on the Internet allows ordinary citizens to uncover secrets governments wish others not to see. In this case, using collaborated information and satellite images to uncover North Korea's infrastructure.
In the propaganda blitz that followed North Korea's missile launch last month, the country's state media released photos of leader Kim Jong Il visiting a hydroelectric dam and power station.
Images from the report showed two large pipes descending a hillside. That was enough to allow Curtis Melvin, a doctoral candidate at George Mason University in suburban Virginia, to pinpoint the installation on his online map of North Korea.
Mr. Melvin is at the center of a dozen or so citizen snoops who have spent the past two years filling in the blanks on the map of one of the world's most secretive countries. Seeking clues in photos, news reports and eyewitness accounts, they affix labels to North Korean structures and landscapes captured by Google Earth, an online service that stitches satellite pictures into a virtual globe. The result is an annotated North Korea of rocket-launch sites, prison camps and elite palaces on white-sand beaches.
This is a fascinating article from the WSJ and I'm sure this type of tech empowerment has both positive and negative consequences for our world. Having some background in remote sensing, I recall a conversation I had with a landsat specialist several years ago. During the conversation he mentioned the recent launch of some cheap satellites with 1 km resolution to be used for non-military geological surveys. I asked the question, "if a cheap satellite can produce 1 km resolution what resolutions can an expensive landsat satellite produce?". He replied such information was classified. As I said before, that conversation took place several years ago and I can only imagine how much the technology has changed since then.
10 Ways to Change the World Through Social Media
Sustainablog:"For most of us, social media has changed our lives in some meaningful way. Collectively it is changing the world for good. Given the pace of innovation and adoption, change has become a constant. Every so often we find the need to stop and reflect on its most recent and noteworthy developments, hence the following list."
Remixing government data
GCN.com: "Through mashups and Web apps, third parties are making innovative use of agencies' information."

