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Tuesday, 16.04.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

Cloud Computing

  • GB: Pssst, public sector - wanna buy some Cloud?

    The doors have been flung open on the UK public sector Cloud revolution with the release on Sunday morning of the first tranche of providers whose offerings are included in the CloudStore.

    In total there are over 1700 services that made it through the G-Cloud framework accreditation process and are now available in a searchable catalogue at www.gov.uk/cloudstore.

    On first sight, aside from the new breed of SME providers who’ve made it onto the initial ranking, the big winners are Microsoft – the CloudStore itself has been built on Microsoft Azure – and SAP - whose Business Objects and Business ByDesign ERP offering are among its entries onto the catalogue - as well as Google which makes it onto the list which conspicuously doesn’t have a lot of the better known ‘Cloud champions’ from the US.

  • GB: Scotland's economic future tied to the cloud, says under-secretary of state

    The future of Scotland's economy lies in the cloud. At least, that is the view of David Mundell, under-secretary of state for Scotland.

    "In the global race for growth, business and government need every competitive advantage possible. We need a strong, thriving and innovative ICT sector across the UK and here in Scotland," Mundell was quoted as saying by CloudPro.

    Mundell made the comment on a recent trip to the Glasgow-based cloud services provider iomart Group. He said cloud computing could help revive the Scottish economy by creating jobs and giving companies a competitive edge.

  • GB: Universities to share £12.5m cloud services

    As it finalises details of university budget cuts, England’s higher education funding body announces £12.5m shared cloud services programme

    The Higher Education Funding Council of England (HEFCE) has allocated £12.5 million to a new cloud computing shared services initiative for universities and colleges.

    Last week, HEFCE announcemed the details of its cuts to university funding. In what HEFCE chief executive Sir Alan Langlands described as a “challenging financial settlement”, £940 million will cut from teaching, research and buildings budgets in the coming financial year.

  • GB: Will Connect Digitally wind up - or enter shared cloud future?

    One of the most successful government-backed initiatives to promote e-services, Connect Digitally, is to be wound up next week, when its funding comes to an end. However talks are underway about possibilities for follow-up activities building on its success, UKAuthority.com has learned, with one spin-off project featuring shared services and cloud computing already pointing the way to possible new sustainable e-service models'

    'Connect Digitally', formerly the school eAdmissions national project set up in 2004, is a central-local partnership funded by the Department for Education (DfE) and led by Hertfordshire county council. Its focus is online school admissions and automated application for free school meals, helping achieve electronic service take-up rates in some areas of 80% or higher, the level at which the government considers services to be "digital by default". More recently its work has widened to boost take-up of all online public services.

  • Government agencies should look to cloud computing,data analytics and agile development in 2012:Ovum

    Cloud computing, data analytics and agile development will be the trends to watch in 2012 according to Ovum.

    In a new report (2012 Trends to Watch: Government Technology), the independent technology analyst firm claims that next year will be the year that governments turn to cloud computing, data analytics and agile development to respond to times of austerity.

    Dr Steve Hodgkinson, Ovum research director and co-author of the report, commented: “Cloud computing is maturing as a revolutionary step change in the way computing can be sourced and managed. Governments need to look beyond the hype and see the reality of both the opportunities and risks of cloud computing and factor these into both their industry development policies and their internal IT strategies.”

  • Government cloud projects move ahead in Taiwan

    The ROC Executive Yuan will complete cloud computing projects in medical services, tourism, and the cultural and creative industry in the second quarter of this year, according to Minister without Portfolio Cyrus C.Y. Chu Jan. 18.

    The projects will help make government information available to the public and stimulate innovative industries, Chu said.

    Chu, who also serves as deputy convener of the Board of Science and Technology under the Executive Yuan, made the comments at a BOST meeting on open data promotion strategies.

  • Government-as-a-Service: Can it become a reality with cloud computing?

    Anyone familiar with government bureaucracies is likely to acknowledge that it will generally take a government agency ten weeks and a hundred people, to accomplish what a private company could accomplish in a single afternoon with a couple of clerks and a spreadsheet. Beyond that, government agencies do have an unfortunate tendency to reinvent the wheel.

    Just take a look at any government RFP—specifications tend to be highly granular and unduly specific, to the point where off-the-shelf commodity software often has to be replaced with a custom job.

  • Governments will turn to cloud hosting in 2012

    A new report has forecast that 2012 will be the year governments turn to cloud computing technology.

    The report, entitled Trends to Watch: Government Technology, was carried out by independent analyst firm Ovum and details key government technology trends set to make their mark next year.

    In addition to cloud computing, the report predicted data analytics and agile development as other emerging trends.

  • Healthcare Heads Toward The Cloud

    Healthcare has been slower than most industries to embrace cloud computing, but that's starting to change.

    The cloud is destined to play a much larger role in healthcare than it has so far. That will be especially true as more providers adopt e-health records and other digitized clinical systems. It will also be pushed along by storage-hungry systems like 3-D medical imaging and health information exchanges looking to provide more efficient ways to share data.

    Healthcare has been slower to embrace cloud models than other industries. The reasons for this range from security concerns to a heavy reliance on paper that has kept many hospitals and medical practices from moving quickly to electronic systems.

  • Helping the public sector to build trust in the cloud

    All around the world, public sector organisations are beginning to understand the transformative impact that the cloud can have on their operations. The Estonian government, for example, has created its Virtual Data Embassy Solution, which is undoubtedly at the cutting edge of national e-governance policies. Global pharmaceutical tech company Catalent, meanwhile, has boosted global efficiency and productivity with cloud services. And the UK’s Department for Education is using the technology to help it improve education and learning, and to achieve greater transparency.

  • How to Avoid Cloud Vendor Lock-in

    For decades vendor lock-in has been one of the fears that businesses, large and small, have faced. The problem frequently occurs when a company invests a great deal of money in a proprietary software product that only one vendor develops and supports. As long as the company intends to keep using the software and paying for support, it must go through the same vendor.

    Problems arise when the company becomes unsatisfied with the vendor or simply wants to switch to another software package with better features or lower cost. Suddenly, your IT people realize that everything, including all of your data, is locked in a proprietary system that the vendor will not reveal to you. Moreover, if that vendor stops supporting the software or even goes out of business, you have no way of recovering your data.

  • How to Bring the Cloud to the Edge and Accelerate Smart City Initiatives

    Here are ways agencies can leverage tools to deliver computing to any point on a map.

    Local governments can finally realize many of the objectives they’ve been planning for the past few years. Much of this is thanks to rapid advancements in artificial intelligence. It’s now possible to extract real-time actionable intelligence and decision-making from virtually any point on a map.

  • Huawei releases National Cloud 2.0 solution to help governments achieve digital visions

    Huawei has released the National Cloud 2.0 solution world to help government organisations around the world accelerate national digital transformation and promote intelligence.

    Mr Hu Yuhai, Vice President of Huawei Hybrid Cloud, said: “Global digital transformation has reached a new stage of full intelligence driven by data and AI.

    The National Cloud 2.0 solution from Huawei provides trusted cloud infrastructure, innovative cloud services, and extensive industry know-how. We aim to help governments achieve national digital visions faster.”

  • i-Government: Trusted Services Cloud infrastructure

    Governments moving to Cloud will be such a major stimulant for the market not just because their spending can act as an ‘anchor client’ for helping new local start-up businesses, those creating local “Green Data-centres”, but because they literally have to play an essential role in creating the Cloud itself.

    To explain this consider the concept of “i-Government”, rather than e-Government, simply to reflect the role Identity technologies will play. Universal adoption of standards like OpenID will enable ‘single sign-on’ across all web applications, including those of government.

  • iland’s Marc Beder on Digital Transformation and the Cloud

    VP of Solutions Architecture at iland, Marc Beder, talks to DIGIT about the digital transformation landscape and addressing commonly-seen shortcomings using the Cloud.

    Digital transformation, in a tangible sense that’s effective for businesses, seems to be becoming ever more nebulous, with strategies implemented with the best intentions often causing more harm than good when factors such as cost and the deployment of resources are not kept in check.

  • IN: Brain In The Fridge

    Cloud computing’s data centres are guzzling power. Is it worth it?

    You’ve probably heard of cloud computing—a popular way now to access data stored elsewhere from your device. Its mention evokes an imagery that is benign and endearing, like rain-bearing clouds. A beguilingly naturalistic metaphor for technology. For, what’s actually entailed in cloud computing are millions of square feet of energy-guzzling data centres filled with whirring hard disks that require a lot of electricity to run and be kept in ambient temperature. And they are leaving beh­ind a carbon footprint the size of the last cumulonimbus cloud you saw.

  • IN: HP and SHARE India to improve rural healthcare

    HP and SHARE India plan to work together to improve access to quality healthcare in rural India. The two will collaborate to deploy HP's cloud-enabled healthcare solutions in rural Andhra Pradesh. SHARE India is a NGO recognized as a Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (SIRO) by the Ministry of Science & Technology, government of India for its work in improving healthcare awareness and facilities to the underprivileged in India through affordable community welfare initiatives.

    As part of the MoU, HP intends to transform an existing rural health center in Aliyabad, located 45 kilometers from Hyderabad, into an eHealth center by deploying a fully integrated cloud technology solution. The solution will connect the medical equipment deployed at the eHealth center with an eHealth cloud and collect basic patient health data to enable better medical diagnosis. The eHealth Center is expected to give close to 20,000 people across 10 villages an opportunity to receive quality diagnosis and treatment from doctors seated at a telemedicine studio in SHARE INDIA - MediCiti Hospital at Ghanpur Village in Medchal Mandal, Ranga Reddy District of Andhra Pradesh.

  • IN: A cloud thrust before cloud-first!

    Private-only clouds could be limiting and even economically unviable for the government; a measured leverage of public and hybrid clouds is the way to go

    The cloud has the potential to transform the way the government functions internally or provides services externally, to citizens. It brings in the agility and flexibility to become more responsive to needs of both citizens and businesses. The paradigm completely shifts from asset ownership to using managed services that are linked to evolving technologies and not tied down to legacy ones.

    There are a variety of ways in which government can leverage cloud. For organisations that are just looking at retiring, replacing or augmenting their hardware infrastructure, they can start leveraging infrastructure as a service (IaaS). For those focused on application and software infrastructure, platform as a service (PaaS) and software as a service (SaaS) would be options to consider. Departments and state governments could also use cloud as an extension to their existing data centre assets, particularly for launching new services or augmenting existing services quickly. Depending on the context, some of these services could also be sourced from public clouds. However, concerns related to data privacy, security and sovereignty need to be addressed.

  • IN: Amazon Web Services to achieve full empanelment to deliver public cloud services

    This certification sees AISPL join a list of approved providers that meet pre-defined government standards of quality, availability, and security.

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) announced that Amazon Internet Services Private Limited (AISPL), an Indian subsidiary of the Amazon Group which undertakes the resale and marketing of AWS Cloud services in India achieved full Cloud Service Provider (CSP) empanelment, and successfully completed the Standardization Testing and Quality Certification audit from the Indian Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) for cloud services delivered from the AWS Asia Pacific (Mumbai) Region.

  • IN: Cabinet Approves Rs 1,670 Cr for eCourts

    The union cabinet chaired by prime minister, Narendra Modi has approved Rs 1,670 crore for the second phase of eCourts Mission Mode Project.

    The second phase of eCourts Mission Mode Project envisages enhanced ICT enablement of courts through universal computerisation, deployment of cloud computing, digitization of case records and enhanced availability of e-services through e-filing, e-payment gateways and mobile applications.

    The eCourts project of the government is aimed at providing necessary hardware and software applications to enable courts to deliver e-services to citizens, and to enable the judiciary to better monitor and manage the functioning of courts.

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