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Showing posts with label media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label media. Show all posts

Friday, July 2, 2010

How Social Media is Changing the Way Government Does Business


Steve Radick is a communications consultant with Booz Allen Hamilton, a global technology and strategy consulting firm. He has worked with clients from across the U.S. government to develop and implement strategic communications plans and campaigns.



There has been plenty of discussion about how governments are using social media to engage with the general public and open up their vast amounts of data to collaborators. The interagency collaboration occurring behind government firewalls using wikis and blogs is also well-publicized. A topic that’s received less attention are the ways that social media and the principles of openness, collaboration, and authenticity are transforming how the government does business. How is social media changing the government contracting process? That’s the $500 billion+ question.
The world of contracting is one of the most important, complex, and least transparent within our Federal Government. From 100-page Request for Proposals (RFPs) to GSA schedules to organizational conflicts of interest to non-disclosure agreements (NDAs), the environment has long discouraged real discourse in favor of strict rules, processes, and policies. Too many companies of all sizes are frustrated and overwhelmed by the intricacies and red tape connected to doing business with the government.
But social media has brought about some positive changes. Here are three important ways it’s done so.

1. Getting Inside the “Black Box”


As Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan put it, “bureaucracy is the ultimate black box of government … [it] is impervious to full public understanding, much less control.”
Five years ago, if a junior consultant wanted to talk with someone like Linda Cureton, NASA’s Chief Information Officer, about Spacebook, he would have to:
  • Brief his manager on why he wants to talk with her
  • Discuss his business objectives for the meeting
  • Get his manager to contact a senior manager within the NASA account team and schedule a meeting with him/her to discuss intentions
  • Discuss his business objectives with him/her
  • Hope that this person would then have the time to reach out to Linda’s assistant to get on her calendar
  • Attend the meeting with a NASA account representative (because a junior consultant couldn’t go by himself)
Those are six steps of red tape, all for a quick follow-up conversation with an acquaintance from a networking event. Unfortunately, the culture of the government contracting industry was one where everything, including everyday conversations, was heavily controlled and regulated. Nevermind () if the conversation had nothing to do with a current procurement or new contract — it was just safer to avoid talking altogether.
Social media however, has allowed us access to this black box and the humans inside. According to a recent 2010 Federal Community Social Media study by Market Connections, 55% of respondents are using social media either formally or informally to communicate with their government audiences. I can now follow more than 30 government CIOs on Twitter, I can friend them on Facebook (), and I can comment directly on their blogs. What used to take six steps now takes one direct message: “Linda, I’ll be down at NASA HQ for a meeting today – would love to talk with you about Spacebook while I’m there if you’re available.”
For me, the tipping point came when potential clients started contacting me on Twitter () and my blog instead of calling the “official” points of contact listed on established org charts. Once we saw social media as a new way to actually conduct business, our legal and marketing teams went to work revising our communication and social media policies. While we’re still highly encouraged to involve the right people with the right expertise as we talk with our clients, the social networks of many of our junior employees are now rivaling the Rolodexes of some of our senior staff.

2. Smarter Bidding on Government Contracts


If you’ve ever done business with the Federal Government, you’ve probably encountered a process that is “challenging, complex, convoluted, and inconsistent,” and you’ve “encountered high barriers to entry, or didn’t get the communication you thought you needed or had to have.” That was the opening line of Mary Davie’s address at Tim O’Reilly’s Gov 2.0 Expo held in Washington, DC this past May. Davie is the Assistant Commissioner for the Office of Assisted Acquisition Services (AAS) in the GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service (FAS).
Disclosure: I was on the Gov 2.0 Expo Program Committee.





Yet we all accepted these struggles as the norm because “that’s the way the government works.” Government contracting is a $500 billion a year industry, involving thousands of people, thousands of companies, and just as many rules and regulations. The complexity of this problem has been exacerbated as government agencies all interpret these rules and regulations differently.

That’s where the Better Buy Project comes in. Developed as a joint project of the National Academy of Public Administration and the American Council for Technology in conjunction with the GSA, the Better Buy Project implements Uservoice to create a public platform where anybody can submit, view, and comment on ideas to make the government acquisition process more collaborative and transparent.
One of the implementations is the Better Buy wiki where anyone can ask questions and help shape future procurements in a transparent manner. The GSA is using Twitter to update interested parties on the status of active procurements. The Better Buy blog allows the public, the government, small business, big companies — anyone — to get new perspectives and expert viewpoints on making the acquisition process more open and accessible.

3. Turning “Enemies” Into “Frenemies”


What if the Federal Government, industry, local governments, small business owners, concerned citizens, and academia worked collaboratively to solve some of our nation’s toughest problems? It’s happening in the government contracting industry.
Thanks to social media, the walls that guarded against leaks of proprietary data have given way to conferences, meetups, and webinars where most participants subscribe to the “rising tides lift all boats” theory. At these events and sites, contractors, government staffers, media, and interested citizens gather together to talk about everything from the challenges of implementing open government to how government can better collaborate on issues related to the Gulf Coast oil spill.
Larger and more complex contracts mean many former competitors have now become collaborators. Government contractors large and small have recognized that instead of waiting for proposals and information, they can now work together to help define those requirements, saving time, improving quality, and increasing transparency.

Looking Ahead




Federal IT Dashboard Image
These benefits don’t come without risks though. Complex contracting rules and regulations still exist and still apply. The culture of collaboration among the contracting community at events like the Gov 2.0 Expo does not decrease competition in the industry, but rather increases the quality of competitive submissions for billion dollar government contracts. The wiki that the GSA is using to bring more transparency and collaboration to the federal procurement process is leaving ethics officers, contracting officers, project managers, lawyers and technical advisers grappling with how to adapt to these new open and transparent processes.
Despite how far we’ve come over the last five years, there is still a long way to go before doing business with the government is as easy as doing business in the private sector. The Federal IT Dashboard is a great start, but it’s just the tip of the iceberg. Data transparency doesn’t necessarily lead to operations transparency.
Policies, regulations, and laws need to be updated. Contracting professionals need to learn new skills. IT security and privacy controls need to be adapted to protect confidential and proprietary information. Most of all, the people — the contracting officers, the project managers, the lawyers, the marketers, the proposal writers, and the IT specialists — need to stop talking about how difficult it is to do business with the government and instead focus on asking, “What makes this process so complex and what can I do to make it better?”

Friday, March 19, 2010

GOOGLE TV

Google TV Coming to Your Living Room Soon – Android Based TV!

http://www.blogcdn.com/www.downloadsquad.com/media/2007/04/googletv.jpg

What happens when 3 giants combine forces? Well you get Google TV. Sources claim that Google, Sony, and Intel are going to do just that. Google TV will pretty much turn your old boring TV and turn it into a device from the 22nd century.

Google TV will pretty much turn your TV to your Computer and you will have access to the web with the same usability and ease as you would on your personal pc. Since most new version of TV’s already has capability to connect to the internet, this should be a piece of cake for the three giants.

Google is claiming that the rumors are just that, Rumors and they made no comments about the collaboration of Google, Sony, and Intel to create Google TV. Google has been working in the background for the last few months trying to develop, Google TV.

While this can be a smart move for Google, this can also end up hurting them if this was true. The TV world is very much different. Although Google owns majority of the web, one only thinks that they will succeed at pretty much anything they do. Apple tried this w while back when they created the Apple TV but that proved to be a bust. We can only stay tuned and see what Google has in store for us in the following month.

I wish the three companies the best and hope Google TV will become a reality in the near future.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Secret Things VLC Media Player do

VLC Media Player is the most widely used Media player... but most people donno what that 10 MB installation come with .. other than playing any codec Videos...



here is list of those stuffs

1. Rip DVDs: VLC includes a basic DVD ripper. You probably would never use it when there are better DVD rippers available, but it helps to know that you can in fact, get a decent quality DVD rip with VLC. To rip a movie follow these steps: Go to the Media menu and choose Convert/Save. Click on the Disc tab.

* Here you can adjust the Starting Position and rip only specific titles or chapters.
* Enter file name making sure to end with .MPG, and start ripping.
* Click Save.




2. Record videos: With the new VLC, you can record videos during playback. The record button is hidden by default. To see it, click on View>Advanced Control. The record button will now appear. Clicking on the button while playing a movie or video will start recording. Clicking again will stop recording.


3. Play RAR files: Do you know VLC can play videos zipped inside RAR files? They play like normal video files and you can even use the seek bar. If the RAR file is split into several files, no problem. Just load the first part (.part001.rar ) and it will automatically take the rest of the parts and play the whole file.

4. Play in ASCII mode: VLC media player has an amusing ability, to playback movies in ASCII art. To enable ASCII mode, open VLC media player and click on Tools>Preferences. Open the section ?Video? section and under ?Output? select ?Color ASCII art video output? from the drop down menu. Save it. Now play any video file to enjoy the ASCII art.


5. Listen to online radio: VLC includes hundreds of Shoutcast radio stations. You just need to enable it through Media>Services Discovery>Shoutcast radio listings. Now, open the Playlist and browse through the stations.



6. Convert Audio and Video formats: In VLC you can convert video and audio files from one format to another. Several different formats are supported like MP4, WMV, AVI, OGG, MP3 etc. To access the converter:

* Go to Media>Convert/Save.
* Load the file you want to convert using the Add button and click Convert.
* Now choose the output format and output file location.



7. Download YouTube and other online videos: First grab the URL of the YouTube video page. Now click on Media>Open Network stream. Paste the URL and click Play.
Once VLC starts streaming the video, click Tools>Codec Information and at the bottom of the window you will see a Location box. Copy the URL and paste it on your browser?s address bar. The browser will now download the file which you can save it to your hard disk. Alternatively, you can record the video.