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Millennium Village in Mayange, Rwanda

 

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.

Business development comprises a number of tasks and processes generally aiming at developing and implementing growth opportunities between multiple organizations. It is a subset of the fields of business, commerce and organizational theory. Business development is the creation of long-term value for an organization from customers, markets, and relationships.

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.

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Marc Yagoda, Adam Lester, Todd Polk, and Philip Wisniewski

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

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

In 2008, a mobile bank started operating in Mwandama. It now has more than 1,000 clients. It has made more than 300 loans, and so far there hasn't been a single default.

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.

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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

Bringing more than 25 years of experience in managing new business, government relations and customer relationships within the field of corrections, both Tommy Alsup and Cynthia Taylor recently joined the Corizon Health team at the Brentwood Corporate Headquarters in Tennessee as Directors of Business Development.

 

Tommy joins us with over seven years of industry experience, most recently with Corrections Corporation of America (CCA), where he was Senior Director of Government Relations. Prior to CCA, Tommy served the City of Oak Hill, Tennessee, for eight years—first as Vice Mayor and then as Mayor. Additionally, Tommy has six years of additional leadership experience with other organizations.

 

Cynthia Taylor brings with her more than 25 years of experience in the correctional telecommunications industry. She spent 18 years as an Account Executive with Global Tel*Link (GTL) working to develop and create demand for GTL solutions, as well as supporting valued client relationships. She also worked in sales with RC&A Telecomm Management Corporation.

 

We welcome both Tommy and Cynthia to the Corizon Health team and wish them much success in their new roles.

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.

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

Bonnie Plants new facility in Silver Springs is expected to produce the best herb, flower, and vegetable plants available to service Northern Nevada and North Eastern California with locally grown plants for better and fresher stock in the area retailer's stores.

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

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.

www.beimmediate.comWe’re committed to the belief that strategic communication should be clear, persuasive, and infused with the power to move an audience. Im{media}te can help you cut through the clutter and bring your brand to life in the hearts and minds of your audience. Think of us as ‘an elite agency with freelancer’s rates’ and you’re still only getting half the picture. Add: flexible, experienced, and fluent in today’s technology – that’s how different we are.

 

Im{media}te’s mission is to Fuel Up Your Brand™. Our marketing methodology ensures that you connect with your external and internal audiences; informing them, shaping their perceptions, and influencing their behavior. Your message is just one of thousands. We help your audience hear your message above all the noise, listen to what you say, and take the actions you want them to take. It takes a disciplined process to effectively communicate your message. This is exactly what Im{media}te brings to the table.

 

With a wide range of services there is no need to use separate agencies for your website development, Out of Home Advertising (Fuel Top Advertising), social media development, print, photography and video projects. Call us today to discuss our Im{media}te solutions for your Brand Communication needs.

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

SKILLSCAST - Kent Beck on Explore, Expand and Extract (3X). 7th March 2017 in London at CodeNode. skillsmatter.com/skillscasts/9881-kent-beck-on-explore-ex.... Images Copyright of www.edtelling.com

Working with a team of UCLA MBA students, we carried out substantial market research- by very literally going to the market... make that many markets. As part of our research, we needed to find out where the crops that are sold wholesale and retail come from: where they're grown, what they cost, what the supply chains looks like, etc.

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.

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