Author Archive
S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
When X doesn't mark the spot
With more agencies building geographic information systems, standards are key to making them work right.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
New wave
Thanks to open standards, the market for application servers is a lot friendlier than it used to be.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Infrastructure
The march of IDES
Integrated development environments have become increasingly complex and encompassing over the past few years. The basics remain the same, but the ways in which applications are built and developers work together has changed significantly.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
RFP CHECKLIST: Enterprise search
Unlocking the information at your agency may require a robust enterprise search platform.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
A sharp eye for details
Giving users near-instant access to precise information is a tall order. But expand that requirement across all an agency's data, or even sources of related data, and the task seems insurmountable. Yet that's the promise of enterprise search technology.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
Mixing the menu
If there were ever a technology that seemed tailored to the needs of government, it's service-oriented architecture. With thousands of disparate systems needing to share information across organizational boundaries'particularly homeland security information'SOA offers agencies an attractive shortcut to their data-sharing goals.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
Managing a network of networks
Once upon a time, network management was one of the most straightforward of tasks: Monitor the health of key network devices like routers, hubs, switches and servers, and alert someone when something went down.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
Everything's on the record
As the business of government, like that of the rest of the world, is increasingly done digitally, the task of managing official records becomes increasingly important.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Infrastructure
Davis, Calif., gets fast with ColdFusion
Seth Duffey, a systems specialist for the City of Davis, Calif., started off developing with Microsoft's Visual Basic, but he's left the tool and isn't turning back.
- By S. Michael Gallagher
Digital Government
Rapid, really
Rapid application development in the 1990s was, generally speaking, a contradiction in terms.
- By S. Michael Gallagher