Fact: CIO magazine is running a big story on the CIA’s Chief Information Officer Al Tarasiuk and his IT operation, and their online site is breaking it up into a four-part series running this week. Below I analyze the series.
Analysis: By the halfway mark in the series, the magazine’s reporter Thomas Wailgum had only accomplished a fairly rote recounting of what CIA is, what its CIO does, and how both those factors have changed since the good ol’ spy days amid the challenges of a post-9/11 world.
Part Onedescribed “a business-IT alignment project like few others,” although it mainly served to introduce CIO magazine’s broad readership to the unfamiliar world of a walled-off intelligence agency, waxing on about the hyper-security at Langley. Part Two similarly was background on the bureaucratic culture of the agency and its relegation of IT to backwater status – until 9/11 came along.
Filed under: Government, Intelligence, Microsoft, Society, Technology | Tagged: 2.0, Al Tarasiuk, BI, bureaucracy, business intelligence, Central Intelligence Agency, CIA, cio, CIO Magazine, data, data layer, Defense, DIA, DoD, e2.0, enterprise, Enterprise 2.0, ESJ, espionage, Government, government 2.0, IC, ICES, ICT, Intelligence, Intelligence Community, Intellipedia, IT, John Hale, Mark Drapeau, Mashable, mashups, Michael Hayden, military, NDU, news, SOA, social media, social networking, social networks, social software, Society, spies, spy, spying, tech, Technology, Ted Cuzzillo, Thomas Wailgum, Web 2.0, wiki, Wikipedia, wikis | 5 Comments »


Invisibility, Mind-Control, Great Coffee, and a New OS
http://www.MojaveExperiment.com
Lots of interest and blogoshere commentary beginning about “The Mojave Experiment.”
The reaction is reminiscent of one of those Obama or McCain provocative ads posted online, generating far more attention and buzz than the attention they get on the natural by being broadcast.
Sure, it’s a sales pitch, and pretty narrowly geeky at that (thanks GoogleFight!).
But at least it’s an innovative one – as the Wall Street Journal puts it today, “Give Microsoft people credit: They did it with humor, and they weren’t afraid to air the negative stuff.”
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Filed under: Microsoft, Society, Technology | Tagged: ad, ads, advertising, BBC, blogosphere, blogs, business, buzz, Chumbawumba, Coffee, comment, commercials, conspiracy, conspiracy theory, Eldridge, experiment, Folgers, fraud, GoogleFight, invisibility, marketing, McCain, Microsoft, Milgram, Milgram Experiment, mind control, Mojave Experiment, Navy, news, Obama, Philadelphia Experiment, Philip Zimbardo, political ad, politics, pop culture, psychology, reality show, reality shows, reality TV, science, Silverlight, Stanford, Stanford Experiment, Stanford University, Stanley Milgram, TV, Vista, Wall Street Journal, Wikipedia, Yale, Zimbardo, Zimbardo Experiment | 1 Comment »