It has started already, but the next wave of innovation in unmanned technology will bring autonomy. That is, vehicles won't require human operators with a joystick flying them remotely.
Until sometime in the 19th century, people could wander into the White House. An open street ran between it and the Treasury Department into the 20th century.
False stories harm the reputations of both the government and the contractor. Even whole programs.
If someone is going to be unqualified for a job for a criminal past, why should hiring entities wait until down the line and waste everybody’s time?
More agencies need to become alert to when there's a shift in the market, technology, or best practice that requires a shift in approach.
DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson nixed a new color-code system. It's a case of where doing nothing proved superior to the do-something-do-anything mentality.
Apple's revenues fell 13 percent in its latest reporting quarter as sales of iPhones dropped 16 percent. But fundamentally Apple at the moment is lacking the next killer product or the next big thing.
Agencies need data of all types and sources available for applications they might not have yet thought of. This year's email mandate is only the beginning.
The life and actions of Harriet Tubman send a clean, laser-like message to us straight from the 19th century. Let the presses roll.
In the great cosmic government calculator, a corporal willing to put him- or herself in harm's way to defend an ideal gets paid $24,000 plus room and board.
Strategic sourcing for office supplies has worked out about as well as an unplugged electric pencil sharpener. Why saw the sawdust?
The "MyAgency" model tries to personalize federal offerings that are in reality offered on a mass scale.
On LinkedIn, the endless river "people you may know" presents an astonishing cross-section of one's life.
If this search tool OPM wants eventually takes off, you might as well go to a clearance hearing naked. You won't have much else to hide anyhow.
Mixing up cause and effect or finding effect when there's no cause, this way of thinking is particularly reckless for federal agencies.