Profile of J. Nicholas Hoover
Senior Editor, InformationWeek Government
News & Commentary Posts: 1254
Articles by J. Nicholas Hoover
posted in January 2010
1/25/2010
The newly published data sets are the first concrete deliverables of the Obama administration's directive toward broader open government strategies.
1/25/2010
After four decades of government service, capped by a revitalization of the DoE's cybersecurity protection plans, Tom Pyke is retiring.
1/22/2010
The VidyoRoom HD-220 steps into the telepresence arena with Cisco -- at a fraction of the cost.
1/21/2010
As it prepares for the 2010 enumeration, the U.S. Census Bureau is tapping the cloud for software-as-a-service and Web hosting.
1/21/2010
In a policy speech, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton outlines five 'Internet freedoms,' and calls on tech vendors and other businesses to play a role in promoting Internet access and fighting censorship.
1/20/2010
The Obama Administration has been using EMC's EmailXtender e-mail management software since the President's first day in office.
1/20/2010
The company wants to see laws that strengthen privacy and security and encourage more consistent international data policies.
1/19/2010
CrisisCommons is quickly organizing techies to lend IT and software development skills to the earthquake relief effort.
1/19/2010
The U.S. lead in science, engineering, and technology is slipping as Asia's capabilities rise, report says.
1/15/2010
The military and other branches of the U.S. federal government are rolling out new and old technologies to bolster the Haiti earthquake relief effort.
1/15/2010
Virginia's incoming secretary of technology faces a major challenge in a sputtering outsourcing deal with Northrop Grumman.
1/15/2010
The President is pushing federal agencies to implement an IT management plan based on ideas suggested by private sector tech leaders.
1/14/2010
The U.S. Army and NASA are at the vanguard of federal government entities offering iPhone applications.
1/14/2010
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and executives from Facebook, Sprint, Adobe and other tech firms are scheduled to meet with government officials to discuss innovation and leadership.