Neil Proctor, vice president of Engineering R&D at Acronis SCS, joins host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to discuss how his company can help a federal agency accomplish the goal of resiliency.
For some insight, Federal Drive with Tom Temin spoke to Executive Director of Strategic Workforce Planning and Analysis at the Department of Homeland Security Kimya Lee.
The Defense Department’s criminal investigations always had the goal of evidence data, but the traditional methods of investigation are now merging new forms of data analysis. The Naval Criminal Investigation Service (NCIS) sees several changes ahead as a result.
A mastery of data literacy could mean a workforce that generates better planning and better decisions. One CDO said in order to make that happen, she gives her employees the ability to make data-driven decisions.
Greg Garcia recently retired after 38 years in government where spent the last two-plus years as the deputy CIO of the Army.
Sultan Meghji, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s new chief innovation officer, is developing his roles and responsibilities as he shapes this position.
The Technology Modernization Fund board says the $9.6 million loan will help mission areas deploy resources more effectively.
Matt Bradley, vice president of Global Security Solutions at On Solve, joins host John Gilroy on this week's Federal Tech Talk to discuss how a new stack of products from OnSolve can help federal IT professionals reach their goals for 2021 and beyond.
For DoD, the cloud is about one thing: Improving capability delivery to warfighters, and doing it more quickly and more securely.
This week on Federal Tech Talk, Will LaForest, public sector CTO at Confluent joins host John Gilroy to discuss federal use cases that apply the event streaming platform Apache Kafka and how it fits into the federal data strategy.
Monitoring potential criminals or terrorists, and developing counter threats, whether physical or cyber, is increasingly becoming a matter of data analytics. Nowadays every domain of criminal activity – for example, crimes against children, financial, trafficking in illegal drugs or firearms, or deliberate disinformation campaigns – have a cyber nexus.
CIOs at these agencies say there’s no going back to the status quo before the pandemic, and are looking at accelerating their IT investments.
Presuming the Biden State Department wants to use data to inform its decisions, the CDO position should be in high demand.
Thanks to advances in information technology, data about everything has become an abundant commodity. But it’s not always a highly available one. That’s got to change, because recent statute and policy obligates federal agencies to use data in decision making about programs, operations and budgets.
As more agencies begin exploring how artificial intelligence can benefit their missions, one question keeps coming up: how to prioritize the potential use cases to get the best return on investment, and best serve their constituents?