Not all cybersecurity threats come via email. But because email targets people, it's most likely to do damage now that network perimeter controls have improved so much.
Applicants, especially students, want jobs they're excited about and will enjoy doing, and they want to be nicely compensated for it. Well, duh.
It's also the sort of case illustrating how data analysis can prove a hunch or turn something up altogether new.
In a marathon, you're done in three or four hours. The Best Ranger runs from 6 a.m. on a Friday morning until sometime around 4 or 5 Sunday afternoon. No rest or sleep
The step forward now for the federal government is integrating the experiences people have whether they "visit" online or in person, or maybe on the telephone. Corporations have struggled here.
Air traffic controllers: When you can see what's really going on aloft, you think, whatever we're paying those people, it's not enough.
Is the federal government becoming more corrupt? The big picture says no. It's why we still get startled when it does occur.
For the EPA and other agencies, smart phones, wireless connectivity and the development of cheap, accurate, radio-equipped sensors combine to rev up the power of citizen science.
Those with delicate privacy sensibilities or who thought Apple was a cultural phenomenon rather than a shrewd manufacturer, well, sorry if you're disappointed.
Some weeks just seem weirder than usual. Last week was one of them. Federal Drive host Tom Temin has some nominations for strange and shocking stories.
People like Andy Grove, brilliant at business though they are, also are driven by a desire to change the world by developing new things or totally disrupting existing things.
Seeing the Cubans waiting for glimpses of the Obamas, you can see the informality of the country and its apparent love of color.
Because cybersecurity is an operational, intellectual property and safety concern, program managers should look at cybersecurity the same way they consider engine readiness or whether oxygen lines leak.
Wiedefeld did two things that show imagination and leadership. First, he put two plus two together. Second, upon reaching a conclusion, he acted decisively.
I doubt a long application really deters GS-15s from trying to gain admittance to the SES. But it does seem odd for an experienced person to need more than a resume, references, and some interviews.