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LinuxTag 2011 - OMMM

OpenMind ManagerMorning organised by LinuxTag and LiSoG e.V.

Topic: “Open Minds in science, industry and society“

Peter H. Ganten, Managing Director, Univention GmbH and Holger Dyroff, Vice President, Business Development, SUSE Linux Enterprise, Novell

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

The Pittsford Chamber of Commerce is a local organization that serves to connect people, consumers and business owners in the Village of Pittsford through social events, community gatherings, workshops and meetings to facilitate economic prosperity.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Ingevity Corporation (NYSE: NGVT) today announced plans to establish a new global headquarters in the city of North Charleston in Charleston County, South Carolina, to accommodate its significant business growth.

 

Photo by Ryan Johnson

First Quarter 2012 was great for Premium. Second quarter looks better than the first already.

Skills Matter - F# eXchange 6th-7th April 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/conferences/8053-f-sharp-exchange-2017. Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

The Healthy Neighborhood Market Network Training Series kicked off in South LA on Tuesday, March 19, with its first storeowner training of the year. This workshop supported Korean American neighborhood market owners who are interested in selling healthy food.

Cindy Modzel is a business development professional with 10 years of experience in customer service, sales development and sales operations support. Cindy joined SIGMA Marketing Group in 2008 and often provides the first introduction to SIGMA, and as such is an integral part of the business development department..

Prior to joining SIGMA Cindy held, Business development, sales support and CRM administrative roles at Concentrix Corporation, Sutherland Global Services and Join the Call Audio and Web Conferencing Services.

 

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Images Copyright of wemakepictures.co.uk

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Skills Matter - F# eXchange 6th-7th April 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/conferences/8053-f-sharp-exchange-2017. Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

Richard Sanchez, Chief Information Officer, Los Angeles County speaking at the GovWin State and Local Executive Breakfast featuring City and County of Los Angeles’ top technology leaders.

Relations at Work - Public Affairs & Business Development

 

New Web Services Trailer.

 

- Full Social Media Integration

- Cloud Based Web Services

- Optimized Web Content Delivery

- Better Security Protection

 

Relations at Work

 

www.relationsatwork.com

cms.relationsatwork.com

 

relations, work, public affair, По связям с общественностью, 公共事务, business development, Развитие бизнеса, 业务发展, consulenza, consulting, Консалтинг, 咨询, internazionalizzazione, internationalization, Интернационализация, 国际, lobbing, lobbying, Лоббирование, 游说

(760) 487-1007

 

Allison Maslan Blast-Off!

 

Blast Off Business Mentoring is a completely unique and proven system that she has strategically developed from her own life and in-depth business experience. Allison can help you to reach your business goals and create the career of your dreams! She personally teaches you the formulas she has used in creating success and prosperity in the business world while enjoying fun and love in her personal life. Allison has built 9 successful businesses and coached hundreds of clients to build successful companies and create financial prosperity. She will teach you to do same.

 

Allison Maslan Blast Off business coach, career coach, management coaching, business coach Los Angeles, business coach San Diego, business coach Orange County, business consultant, business mentor, business consultants, business advice, business adviser, business mentoring, business development, business consulting, business advice, business management consulting, entrepreneur, entrepreneur career, entrepreneur coach, women in business mentor, women entrepreneurs, grow your business, building my business, growing you business, corporate coach, corporate coaching, business success stories, executive business coach, executive coach, executive and life coaching,

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Skills Matter - F# eXchange 6th-7th April 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/conferences/8053-f-sharp-exchange-2017. Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

The selling of pottery demonstrates that business is growing fast in Mwandama, largely due to increased access to credit.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Itialian Delegation discussion of Business Development in China and participation in the Milan Expo

 

Philip McMaster

www.DragonPreneur.com

www.PeacePlusOne.cn

www.SustainabilitySymbol.com

John Tichich emphasises on taking a balanced approach towards goal setting. This means that you should set goals that cover important aspects of your life for instance financial goal, educational goal, and family, artistic goal and also goal related to attitude.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

The selling of pottery demonstrates that small scale business is growing fast in Mwandama, largely due to increased access to credit.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Skills Matter - F# eXchange 6th-7th April 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/conferences/8053-f-sharp-exchange-2017. Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

Skills Matter - F# eXchange 6th-7th April 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/conferences/8053-f-sharp-exchange-2017. Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

Images Copyright of wemakepictures.co.uk

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

One of the incredible aspects of Nicaragua is just got geographically different the country is: from dry and flat Leon to lush, hilly Matagalpa forests

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

DATA IS THE INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE DIGITAL AGE.

And publicly available data can now illuminate solutions to challenges like no other time in our history. There is no single entity that collects and manages more data than government. Unfortunately, many of the systems and processes that collect this data have not kept up with the demand and the potential for it.

 

The world-wide Open Data movement asks government entities of all sizes to make their data—a public asset—available to developers and entrepreneurs so its potential can be realized.

 

Go Code Colorado is taking a lead position in this movement.

 

The first and only statewide effort of its kind, Go Code Colorado brings together a community of entrepreneurs, business partners, and developers to make use of public data through a series of events. These events center around a challenge weekend in five cities across the state, engaging the entire state in two days of innovation around the use of public data. Teams in each of the five cities compete to build apps that use public data to help businesses make smarter decisions. Two teams from each city move on in the competition, getting help from a network of mentors—including a mentorship weekend in Boulder—as they further develop their ideas. The teams come back together again for a final event where they pitch their ideas to judges.

 

The three teams deemed the best are awarded a contract with the state—an invaluable first customer to a fledgling business that provides critical initial revenue.

 

Go Code Colorado is an initiative through the Colorado Secretary of State’s Office, which seeks to return value to Colorado businesses from business registration fees they collect. In its inaugural year, this is the value Go Code Colorado returned to our state:

 

COMMUNITY BUILDING AND CIVIC ENGAGEMENT

 

Go Code Colorado increased civic engagement in the business, entrepreneurial, and tech communities.

Business leaders volunteered their time across the event series because they desire more access to government data—they know how important this is.

Dozens of business leaders volunteered a day with Go Code Colorado organizers to define the problems they face that public data can help solve.

179 people attended the Kickoff event.

130 people and 25 teams competed in the challenge weekend across Colorado (Boulder, Denver, Ft. Collins, Colorado Springs, and Durango).

The Mentor Weekend brought together 23 mentors to meet with ten teams.

The Final event attracted 223 people.

29 businesses supported open data and Go Code Colorado through $75,000 in cash donations and $120,000 worth of in-kind donations.

Companies like Google, Esri, SendGrid, Rally Software and Gnip (now Twitter)

TECH AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is the most concerted effort in the state to increase the volume of public data in the state’s central repository.

33 new data sets were published as a result of last year’s efforts by agencies such as Revenue, Local Affairs, and Higher Education.

At least three businesses were created around three apps that use this data.

For instance, the winning team, Beagle Score created an app that helps provide a scorecard for business site-location decisions.

Beagle Score relies on many public data sets, including:

Business Registration dataset

City Taxes

County Taxes

Crime Statistics

NREL energy statistics

Traffic counts

Nearest Intersection

Energy rates and providers

Broadband service

and more

PROCUREMENT INNOVATION

 

Go Code Colorado is flipping traditional government procurement on its head, creating value to Colorado businesses and society.

According to the Standish Group, 94% of large federal IT projects over the past ten years were unsuccessful. Over 50% were delayed, over budget, or didn’t meet user expectations, and 41% failed completely.

Go Code Colorado challenges developers and entrepreneurs to solve business problems using public data by awarding companies who create working apps, not those with just a promise to do so.

GOVERNMENT EFFICIENCY AND TRANSPARENCY

 

Go Code Colorado imagines a day when pulling a data report is a matter of a few pop up menu selections, and doesn’t require specialized knowledge, when data managers across government are able to focus on the work they do best and anyone can access the public data they collect and curate.

This is the promise of open data, and the step forward taking place with Go Code Colorado.

Skills Matter - F# eXchange 6th-7th April 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/conferences/8053-f-sharp-exchange-2017. Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

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