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The Food and Drug Administration, like many federal agencies, is working toward more efficient data optimization and a secure cloud strategy.
Read moreJohnson Joy, the chief information officer at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, said he wants to move the agency to the cloud, update its code, and replace desktops with laptops, among other things.
The General Services Administration is experimenting with blockchain to make it easier for vendors on the Schedule 70 IT program to establish contracts through automation.
Jeff Fossum, senior vice president at Booz Allen Hamilton, said agencies need to take a holistic view of their digital transformation effort, or face new systems or processes that miss the mark.
The modernization efforts will streamline various logistics systems into a single view, while integrating new technologies like barcoding.
Hanna Kim, who started as deputy director for Login.gov in January, will serve as its director starting in May. She will replace Dan Lopez-Braus.
The supplement to NIST’s digital identity guidelines could pave the way for agencies to adopt stronger multi-factor authentication methods.
Agencies know that the public now expects personalized CX from government services, the HCLSoftware product manager says.
The new capabilities, applications and business models unlocked by cloud adoption are expected to have an outsized effect on the business of government.
Charlie Armstrong, the chief information officer at FEMA, said two recent successful migrations of applications to the cloud demonstrates progress.
Margaret Boatner, deputy assistant secretary of the Army for strategy and acquisition reform, said new approaches to buying software already are paying off.
GSA is preparing to test out a facial recognition option for Login.gov, a one-stop shop for Americans to access government benefits online.