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OpenGov Technology Matrix

Page history last edited by Lucas Cioffi 14 years, 4 months ago

Description: This OpenGov Technology Matrix shows examples of how Web 2.0 tools (wikis, blogs, etc) can be used in government. You may also be interested in how these tools are used specifically for transparency, participation, or collaboration.

 

Please Note: This page is originally based on USA.Gov's Matrix of Web 2.0 Technology and Government.  The purpose of this page is not to duplicate the GSA's great work, but instead to provide an editable version that can grow and improve over time with your input.

 

Technology
Simple Description Example Uses
Applicability to Open Government
Blogs Journal or diary with social collaboration (comments Govt info to new audiences. Puts human face on govt using informal tone. Opens public conversations. Surface issues & solve them.
Wikis Collaborative authoring & editing Workgroup or public collaboration for project management, knowledge sharing, public input. Contributions to 3rd party sites e.g. Wikipedia
Video Sharing (and Multimedia) Videos, images, & audio libraries (YouTube, AOLVideo, YahooVideo, tubemogul, heyspread…) Public outreach, education, training, other communication for “connected” and on-line audiences. How To videos & audios to improve service and achieve mission.
Photo-Sharing Photo libraries Cost savings potential. New audiences. Awareness.
Podcasting Multimedia content syndicated out for use on iPod TM, Mp3 players & computers More ways to get message out. Build trust with conversational voice. Use for updates, live govt deliberations, emergencies, how-to messages
Virtual Worlds Simulations of environments & people
(Webkinz, Club Penguin, Neopets, Stardoll, Whyville, Second Life, Active Worlds, Kaneva, ProtoSphere, Entropia Universe, uWorld)
Public outreach & other communication for kids and niche Internet audiences. Virtual Town Halls, Education, Training. Ability to bring people together worldwide for meetings, lectures, etc.
Social Networking Sites Connecting people globally
  • EPA Facebook group
  • NASA Colab
  • USAgov Facebook page
  • USAgov MySpace page
  • USAgov on Linkedin
Intranet use to cross internal stovepipes. Cross government coordination. Public communities. Viral impact. Knowledge mgmt. Recruitment. Event announcements.
Syndicated Web Feeds Automated notifications of frequently updated content
(think RSS)
Do more with RSS, XML/Web feeds. Expand reach. Pull content together across government. Authoritative source. Reduce duplication.
Mashups Combine content from multiple sources for an integrated experience Lots of potential. Improved govt reach, service, usefulness, and functionality. Integrate external data. Get licenses, stay vendor neutral. Make content available to others who create mashups
Widgets, Gadgets, Pipes Small applications & code in Web pages or for desktop use Increase awareness, use, and usefulness of .gov sites, information, and service. Bring content to the user’s home page (iGoogle, netvibes, etc)
Social Bookmark &News (Sharing, Tagging) Sites Ways of sharing content with others Increase the popularity and use of .gov pages, information, and services. Viral marketing.
Micro-blogging.
Presence Networks.
Form of blogging which allows brief (Instant Message size) text updates.
  • Twitter
  • Jaiku
  • Cromple
  • Pownce
  • NASA Edge
  • USA.gov
  • GovGab
  • Univ of Mich
Seek input. Broadcast msgs: emergencies, news, announcemts. Real time reportg.Recruitg.
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       

 

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