Shout out to Chris Rasmussen, a former colleague in the intell biz who emails that he’ll be speaking on uses of Web 2.0 approaches in the Intelligence Community at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government in June…. as he put it in his email, “I’m pretty sure Danish dudes from southern California have been blacklisted from Harvard for hundreds of years. Well the times are changing.”
Chris has been involved in social-networking and other 2.0 efforts in the IC, both at the enterprise level and in grass-roots form — accomplishing the latter and encouraging the former (strongly). The Kennedy School program, “Web 2.0: Taking Action in Government” is advertised as “examining the lessons learned from first movers in both business and government and distilling what actions government leaders must now take to harness the power of these new tools and business models.” (more info here)
I especially like that the conference is being organized with the help of Don Tapscott, co-author of an excellent book: Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything.
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else’s compute capacity, web apps, services, storage, etc. Some others, however, as Amazon and others roll out their branded ability to do that reach, are beginning to call these “clouds” — I prefer to think about them as distinct platforms enabling cloud computing, but that’s starting to become a hazy definition.
given the attention and reposting/rehosting it has already received, the glare of publicity can only serve to prod better security practices.
FACT: Educators in the state of Alabama are chafing as the state celebrates a dubious anniversary: today marks ten years since