19. Oktober 2009 | Kommentare deaktiviert
Christoph Bieber schreibt bei CARTA: “Die Koalitionsverhandlungen wären ein ideales Testfeld, um politische Alltagsroutinen auch nach dem Wahlkampf digital anzureichern: Kontinuierliche Tweets zum Verhandlungsgeschehen und allabendliche Blogeinträge von den Verhandlungsführern könnten die Spekulationswut der Hauptstadtmedien angenehm konterkarieren.”
16. Oktober 2009 | Kommentare deaktiviert
“The Chief Technology Officer Council’s Information Domain have written some guidance on design considerations for how UK public sector URIs should be developed and maintained. It has been published as an interim standard , and we would greatly appreciate your feedback, so the people at Write to Reply have kindly hosted a version open for your input on which you can comment, commend or criticise.”
8. Oktober 2009 | Kommentare deaktiviert
Publishing Open Government Data – “To help governments open and share their data, the W3C eGov Interest Group has developed the following guidelines. These straightforward steps emphasize standards and methodologies to encourage publication of government data, allowing the public to use this data in new and innovative ways.”
7. Oktober 2009 | Kommentare deaktiviert
“The US Government has embarked on an initiative to enable people to sign into US Government web sites using commercial identities. The public announcements of the first steps were made last week during the Gov 2.0 Summit. Now that we can write about the initiative, here’s a personal recap of some of the steps that have gotten us here, and thoughts about what comes next.” Interesting summary by Mike Jones.
7. Oktober 2009 | Kommentare deaktiviert
Database with over 100 different social media policies. Nice!