Civic Commons

Month

November 2011

9 posts

bijan sabet: Connecting local voices → bijansabet.com

bijan:

I live in a sleepy little town outside of Boston. I’m pretty sure that most folks in our town don’t quite understand how the board of selectmen work and function. I know there have been been things proposed that impact the lives of the elderly, education, home ownership, land development, security, transportation, communication issues that have enormous impact — but with little voter turnout or awareness. 

We need our connected web and the mobile web to change this and turn it around. The opportunity is simply too massive. 

In previous times, the national and global conversation was controlled by powerful gatekeepers. Now we know we can break through.

The same thing has to happen at a hyperlocal level. Members of each community have a voice and have real connective tissue to each other. Sometimes I feel more connected globally than the things happening down the street. That’s not right. 

You can see things happening when efforts become organized. Just look at the private/public efforts in NYC with things like the High Line. Or things like Neighborland that allows members of the community have a voice in urban planning. Or SeeClickFix which feels like the GetSatisfaction of towns and cities. 

It’s an exciting start.

We need more things that are bottoms up and less about coddling the status quo.

Local issues are critical and we need more ways to go from simply caring to real action.

Hear hear.

Nov 30, 201122 notes
“Indeed, this is the real hope. That a whole new category of winners emerges. That the barrier to use for software developers, entrepreneurs, students, academics, smaller companies and non-profits will be lowered in a manner that will enable a larger community to make use of the data and therefor create economic or social goods.” —Statistics Canada Data to become OpenData – Background, Winners and Next Steps | eaves.ca
Nov 28, 20111 note
“I can envision a system not dissimilar to the way things work here at Gun.io. Instead of awarding a lump-sum contract to a single corporation who claim they can build a system without ever even having to prove their competency, the government could have open contracts for the smallest possible components and award them to the first groups or individuals who can fulfill the requirements. This would reward talent and speed rather than nepotism and waste. Certainly, there is also room for a startup in this space to connect the open government contracts with smaller, independent software development studios. This would reroute government funds away from foreign-owned corporations towards American small business, which is exactly where America needs to grow.” —The Government’s $200,000 Useless Android Application - Gun.io
Nov 22, 20111 note
“And Maritz wants to do so without hooking developers to a particular software or hardware vendor, including VMware. “One of the potential bad things about this move to the cloud is that you might go back to how things were with mainframes in the ’60s and ’70s, where you had these very proprietary environments. Once you checked into the IBM universe, you could never check out again. Are we going to go back to that world with the Google cloud and the Microsoft cloud?” Maritz says. “If you’re a developer, you need a set of services that can make your life easy, but that don’t bind you forever and a day to the stack of one vendor.” —

Man Survives Steve Ballmer’s Flying Chair To Build ’21st Century Linux’ | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com

Wired article covering VMware’s new Cloud Foundry product — platform as a service that supports a wide variety of technologies, and is open source in its own right.

Nov 21, 2011
“UK Open Source Procurement Toolkit: The purpose of this toolkit is to ensure that there is a level playing field for open source and proprietary software and that some of the myths associated with open source are dispelled. It is intended for those who need to consider, evaluate or procure open source solutions as well as anyone just wanting to know more about open source.” —http://www.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/resource-library/open-source-procurement-toolkit
Nov 3, 2011
“As an Administration, we recognize the tremendous value of open source innovation and rely on it to accomplish key missions. For example, the U.S. Open Government National Action Plan recently announced that the source code for We the People and Data.gov would be open sourced for the entire world. Federal agencies are likewise spurring innovation through open source energy. For example, the Department of Defense issued clarifying guidance on the use of open software at the Department. And, the Department of Health and Human Services has become a leader in standards-based, open sourced policy to power innovations in health care quality and enable research into efficient care delivery. The tremendous growth of the open source and open data communities over the years, for delivery of both commercial and non-commercial services, shows that innovation can flourish in both the proprietary and open source software environments.” —Quentin Palfrey, Senior Advisor to CTO for Jobs and Competitiveness at the White House Office of Science & Technology Policy
Nov 2, 2011
“We have a system designed to prevent fraud, and mitigate failure, and what that does is give government yesterday’s technology at tomorrow’s prices.” —Government is not a Startup - Expert Labs
Nov 2, 2011
“Development opportunities are plentiful because Open311 isn’t hardware- or software-specific. “If you have a platform that connects to the Web, you can use the Open311 standard to pass data from that platform out to other applications,” he said.” —SeeClickFix Has National 311 Potential
Nov 2, 2011
“City of Toronto: 311 API: The City of Toronto 311 system is customer service for the City of Toronto government. Toronto 311 allows citizens to call and report a pothole, order a new garbage bin, learn about programs at local community centers, and more. Online access is also available and an API allows further access to these services. More information can be found by emailing open311@toronto.ca Full documentation is not available but users can visit http://open311.org/learn/ to view the open311 specification as it is used in other cities.” —56 New APIs: StackMob, Civicboom, Parse
Nov 2, 2011
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