Andy Blumenthal, ATF

 

Connecting state and local government leaders

Andy Blumenthal, chief technology officer of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, says Web 2.0 technologies, mobile technologiers and cloud computing are among the top IT issues for agencies in 2009.

Andy Blumenthal
Chief Technology Officer
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives

1. Government 2.0

a. Sponsored social media

Currently, President-elect Barack Obama and a number of federal agencies are using third-party sites like Twitter, YouTube, Facebook and others to keep the public informed. At the same time, interagency collaboration and discussion is occurring in publicly available social media spaces such as GovLoop. In 2009, I believe we will see the emergence of other government-sponsored social media networks, akin to the president-elect’s Change.gov. This is not to say that the daily Obama “tweet” will go away, but rather that there will be a shift toward a growing official social media presence hosted by the government that is supplemented by private sector social media.

b. Use of Wikis for information sharing

With Wikipedia, the concept of a collaborative "community of knowledge" went mainstream in the public arena, paralleled by Intellipedia within the intelligence community and Diplopedia for the State Department. Next year, I foresee more use of wiki technology by the government, eventually to enable public-private collaboration in the area of information sharing across a wide range of subjects. Of course, like government-hosted social media networks, this will require significant investment in creating policies and frameworks that work. For example, if the government hosts a wiki that the public can modify, obviously there needs to be some discussion and clarification about whether the content on that wiki is considered official or not. But if we get it right, we could generate some extremely rich content as well as save the taxpayer money by working collaboratively, iteratively for the good of all.

2. Mobile computing

Our government agencies are supplying services to our citizens across the country as well as globally. We need to support a mobile workforce with robust computing and telecommunications to enable them to stay in touch and be productive. Further, in the tough economic environment we are in today, everyone, including our agencies, is expected to do more with less. One thing that they are doing is cutting facility costs and encouraging alternate work arrangements for staff such as teleworking, hoteling and so forth. So in the coming year, there will be greater emphasis on providing technologies such as laptops, cell phones, mobile e-mail devices, and high-speed Internet to overcome both the geographical distance as well the psychological distance of working out in the field and away from the traditional office workspace.

3. Cloud computing

Today, we are seeing rapid forward movement towards IT capabilities provided to the government as a service — hosted by third party vendors — rather than done by the agency itself. No longer do agencies need to build, host and maintain many applications and platforms in-house, but instead they can consume these as a paid for service, on-demand from a provider. I believe agencies will increasingly turn to these flexible, modular, externally hosted IT solutions, or cloud computing, to meet their needs in a cost-effective way. Vendors will continue to address the security and privacy concerns, and the trend toward getting utility computing services outside the agency will accelerate.

4. Enterprise solutions and virtualization

A common problem with distributed computing is that we have stood up IT solutions in silos that are not cost efficient and do not share information well. In these stovepiped solutions, we have redundant applications doing similar functions — such as multiple financial systems, document management systems and so forth—but not talking to each other. Further, we have hardware, such as servers, that are minimally utilized, while the rest of the platform remains essentially dormant. This is truly a waste of taxpayer money and agencies will increasingly move to break down the stovepipes and build enterprise or common solutions. We will house these solutions in virtualized computing environments, where servers and other technology resources are pooled by a variety of agency applications. We can learn to play together in the sandbox.

5. Enterprise search

As citizens and consumers, we have all become accustomed to going online and being able to search literally any keyword(s) and find information instantaneously. This is very useful as information junkies, and also very fulfilling to us as creatures who crave immediate gratification. However, at work, in our agencies, it is often a very different story—where structured and unstructured information is housed across the enterprise and is not easy to find or access. Often, government workers have to access multiple applications and search many databases in a laborious fashion, only to come up with half answers to their questions. I recently read somewhere that we are spending as much as 40 percent of our time at work searching for information, instead of actually doing our jobs. So, enterprise search will be a top priority in the coming year, as we seek to make information more discoverable and accessible for our people and our agencies more productive for taxpayers.

Some other general comments:

1. In 2009 we will see IT take center stage as a government priority as the new administration appoints a chief technology officer.

2. In 2009 we will see an increased emphasis on enterprise architecture and IT governance as a way to plan, manage, and oversee the rapid forward movement of advanced technologies.

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