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Dienstag, 19.03.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

eGovernment Business

  • Government Of India Launches eBiz Platform With Integrated Payment Gateway

    The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion, under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, has launched an eBiz platform along with two Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) services and an integrated payment gateway.

    The eBiz project is part of the National eGovernance Plan of the Government of India. The project will provide an integrated electronic services to investors, industries and businesses in the areas of information on forms & procedures, licenses, permits, registrations, approvals, clearances, permissions, reporting, filing, payments and compliances throughout the life-cycle of an industry or business entity.

  • Accenture and Microsoft to Launch Enhanced Accenture eGovernment Accelerator in

    Accenture and Microsoft today announced plans to introduce an enhanced version of the Accenture eGovernment Accelerator, which will include Microsoft's Gateway portal solution.

    Integrating Microsoft's Gateway Solution with the Accenture eGovernment Accelerator will help governments speed up the rollout of new electronic services. The Accelerator is designed to offer transactional forms and information on the Internet that are integrated with "back-end" government IT operations. The Gateway Solution previously was used in the United Kingdom.

  • Accenture und CSC sahnen in England ab

    Die britische Regierung hat im Rahmen ihres Sonderprogramms für die technische Runderneuerung des National Health Service (NHS) zwei weitere lukrative Verträge im Wert von zusammen umgerechnet 2,7 Milliarden Euro an die Dienstleister Accenture und Computer Sciences Corp. (CSC) vergeben. Accenture erhielt nach dem Regionalvertrag für Nordostengland auch den für Ostengland mit einem Volumen von 934 Millionen Pfund und stach dabei Cerna, CGEY, EDS und LogicaCMG aus. CSC verdrahtet für das NHS den Nordwesten und die West Midlands. Bei dieser 973 Millionen Pfund werten Ausschreibung schauten Fujitsu, BT und IBM in die Röhre.
  • Alcatel powers e-government network in the Guangxi province of China

    Alcatel (Paris: CGEP.PA and NYSE: ALA) today announced that the government of China's Guangxi Autonomous Region has selected Alcatel to provide its e-government network solution for the province. This government's initiative will enable the deployment of a highly-available network offering real-time updated information such as policies and regulations, automated analysis of financial and economic data, intelligent processing for the regional affairs and decision-making support for the government.
  • Alcatel unterstützt eGovernment in China

    Der französische Telekommunikationsausrüster Alcatel gibt bekannt, dass die chinesische Guangxi Region das Unternehmen beauftragt hat, eine eGovernment-Infrastruktur für die Region bereitzustellen.
  • Alex Hart's Top 10 Tips for Public Sector Success

    1. Dabble Not

    Although it can be said that selling, at a fundamental level, is the same regardless of customer, the truth is selling in the public sector is different. To be successful in this space, recognize its unique needs and be willing to invest the resources necessary to address them.

  • Analysts predict 26 smart cities by 2025 – from zero today

    Spending on smart city technology is expected to reach US$327 billion by 2025, up from US$96 billion in 2019, according to a new forecast from Frost & Sullivan.

    The analyst company said an uncertain post-pandemic situation will compel cities to focus on developing collaborative, data-driven infrastructure for use in healthcare, public security services and more.

  • Argentinier heiraten schneller dank Siemens Business Services

    Siemens Business Services hat zwei E-Government-Aufträge in Argentinien erhalten: Für die argentinische Provinz Cordoba modernisiert der Siemens-Bereich die Rechenzentren und in der Hauptstadt Buenos Aires stellt er die Administration des Standesamtes von Papier auf elektronische Akten um. Paare können dadurch schneller einen Termin für die Trauung erhalten. Die Aufträge haben in Summe ein Volumen von rund 6,5 Mio. EUR.
  • AU: Before this decade is OUT: What if the “giants of the web” designed government service delivery?

    opinion/analysis

    What have we learnt from the past decade of “government online”? And what could we learn from the giants of the web: The Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital in London; the Ferrari Formula One Racing Team; the UK Government Digital Service (GDS); and the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)? Surely there is no common thread of insight to be gleaned from this diverse and eclectic grouping of organisations?

    Over the past decade or more, the achievement of “client-centric” remains elusive in a system where the client is exposed at the centre of complexity. “Client-centric” is an outside-in view by government agencies; “client context” describes the client’s own view of their needs and aspirations, and is not restricted to government.

  • AU: Defence too busy to review IT contracts

    The Defence Department says it is too busy to conduct value-for-money tests on computing deals with the private sector worth more than half a billion dollars.

    Government technology experts say the department has cut hundreds of public servants from its IT operations in the past three years without showing the promised savings.

    The decision to delay open tenders for $500 million worth of contracts, which was announced by the department this week, will see outsourcing giant Unysis "delighted" to earn an extra $50 million as it retains some of the work for another two years.

  • AU: ICT government spending remains cautious

    Some of the hot spots where government will be spending includes cloud, mobility, social and big data.

    ICT spending within the Australian government sector will remain cautious in the next 12 months and is set to hit $7.053 billion in 2015, an increase of 2.7 per cent from this year, which is expected to hit $6.481 billion, according to analyst firm IDC.

    The IDC report titled Australian Government ICT Market 2011-2015 details ICT spending across state, local and federal government verticals.

  • Australia: Cunliffe promises industry support

    Communications and IT Minister David Cunliffe says he will push for a fairer deal for small Kiwi technology companies trying to sell to the Government and will "roll out the welcome mat" to overseas companies which want to carry out IT development work in the country.

    The newly appointed minister has voiced a desire to prevent the "hollowing out" of the New Zealand economy, which looks set to be a theme of his stewardship of the portfolios.

  • Australia: Government announces IT supplier advocate to help SMEs win contract work

    The IT industry is being provided with a broker and spokesperson to help SMEs gain information about Government contracts which they normally could not access, Senators Kim Carr and Kate Lundy have announced.

    The IT Supplier Advocate role, which is part of Carr's $8.2 million supplier advocate program, will join advocates in the rail and steel industries in order to help SMEs gain a competitive edge.

  • Australian Information Industry Association urges more engagement with government for ICT industry

    The Australian Information Industry Association has urged companies and individuals in the ICT industry to engage more with the federal government and its agencies to take advantage of the business opportunities the public sector offers the industry.

    The Chair of the ACT Branch of the AIIA, Greg Boorer, says the vast opportunities presented by government work in the ICT sector can be overlooked because companies and individuals can be hesitant to tackle the sometimes “arcane processes involved in dealing with Government agencies.”

  • Australian IT to get advocate

    The IT Supplier Advocate is part of the Rudd Government’s $8.2 million Supplier Advocate Program, which appoints respected industry figures to provide leadership for targeted sectors. Advocates have already been appointed for rail and steel.

    Announced by Innovation Minister, Senator Kim Carr, and Senator Kate Lundy, the IT Supplier Advocate will work as a broker and spokesperson, particularly for small to medium enterprises (SMEs) in the information technology sector.

  • Azerbaijan studying Dutch and Canadian experience to build e-government

    The State Commission on Public Service under the President of Azerbaijan has studied the e-government experience of the Netherlands and Canada, the commission said on Thursday.

    In the Netherlands, the State Commission delegation familiarized itself with the process of functioning of the state register, the principles of e-recruitment in the civil service, open government information, software, legal framework in the field of e-government, construction and management of the "e-government" portal.

  • Bayern: Mittelstandsbeteiligung an Münchner Linux-Einstieg angemahnt

    Nicht nur Großunternehmen sollen Chance erhalten

    Ausdrücklich begrüßt hat der Förderverein IT- und Medienwirtschaft München e.V. (FIWM e.V.) - der Zusammenschluss der Münchner Multimedia-, IT- und Medienunternehmen - den Beschluss des Münchner Stadtrates, die gesamte Computerlandschaft für die rund 16.000 Mitarbeiter der Stadtverwaltung auf Linux umzustellen. Man fordert, in Zukunft bei geplanten Ausschreibungen im Open-Source-Bereich den Mittelstand stärker zu berücksichtigen.

  • Bayerns Staatskanzlei-Chef vereinbart E-Government-Projekte mit Microsoft

    Bayerns Staatskanzlei-Chef Erwin Huber (CSU) hat bei seiner USA-Reise mit dem Softwarekonzern Microsoft ein E-Government-Projekt für drei bayerische Städte vereinbart. "Wir haben uns seit längerer Zeit bemüht, Microsoft dafür zu gewinnen", sagte Huber am Freitag vor seiner Rückreise. Würzburg, Passau und eine weitere Stadt sollten ein Software-Rahmenpaket mit Grunddienstleistungen für ihr Online-Angebot erhalten. Es gehe darum, die weltweiten Erfahrungen von Microsoft mit den Gegebenheiten vor Ort zu verbinden. Längerfristig biete dies die Chance, die Online-Standards der Kommunen besser aufeinander abzustimmen.
  • Belgien setzt beim elektronischen Ausweis auf Steria

    Der europäische IT-Dienstleister Steria liefert an alle 589 belgischen Kommunen IT-Infrastruktur und Dienstleistungen für den Einsatz des elektronischen Ausweissystems (BELPIC). Bis Ende 2009 sollen 8,5 Millionen belgische Bürger im Besitz des neuen elektronischen Ausweises sein. Die sichere und skalierbare Karte ermöglicht künftig die Authentifizierung des Inhabers bei elektronischen Transaktionen.
  • Berliner Senat plant gemeinsame Pilotprojekte mit Microsoft

    PDS-Bürgermeister kündigt umfassenden Partnerschaftsvertrag an

    Berlins Bürgermeister und Wirtschaftssenator Harald Wolf (PDS) wird zur CeBIT eine intensive Zusammenarbeit mit Microsoft bekannt geben. Der Messerundgang Wolfs beginnt am Stand der Microsoft Deutschland GmbH.

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