“There are five key areas when we envision Taiwan’s intelligent government,” said Su. “They are citizen-centric and on-demand e-services, citizen participation through increasing transparency, mobile access to citizen services, social networking and web 2.0, and ICT-enabled green services,” said Su, who appreciated the opportunity to share Taiwan’s journey with his peers from China.
Weiterlesen: Taiwan reveals e-govt plans at FutureGov Summit China
Tao Wen-lung, secretary-general of Taiwan's International Cooperation Development Fund (ICDF), told participants that the event was organized to promote ICT development in the Caribbean and narrow the digital gap between developing countries in the region and developed nations, according to a statement by Taiwan's Embassy to Saint Lucia.
Weiterlesen: Taiwan helps Caribbean allies develop information technologies
The survey on the public's opinion of e-government services and other related issues showed that 62 percent of respondents knew how to use the computer and 95 percent of computer users made use of the Internet.
Weiterlesen: Taiwan: Booking hospital visits, train rides popular among E-gov users
These were among the major projects to be carried out by the RDEC for 2010, according to Minister Chu Chin-peng of the Cabinet-level agency.
"Evidence of Taiwan's strong competence in advancing e-government is not fading. There is ongoing development of online government services with enriched Web site content and the widespread promotion of usage of these Web sites, " said Sung Yu-hsieh, deputy minister of the RDEC, at the 2009 Asia-Pacific E-Governance International Conference in Taipei.
Weiterlesen: Taiwan shows competence in promoting e-governance: official