Wednesday, July 27, 2005
The "Orange Button" in Public Administration
From the Anglo-Saxon cyberspace and especially of the blogosphere the syndication of news or RSS as channel of information, unmistakable "orange button", arrives us.
Already does a time that is starting to be used in and-administration and e-Government, as tool in order to reach information to the citizen. In Spain already the public sites that have implemented it as the Ministry of Industry, the Generalitat of Catalonia or the Town Council of Blanes. In the international area the examples that we can find as the place of the First French Minister, the New Zealand Government or all those that there are referenced in RSS in Government, where also you will be able to find information on the subject.
It is a clean channel (there is not spam), the receiver is subscribed to the desired contents and, the most important thing, when there is an update arrives automatically to the reader of feeds, besides it facilitates a lot the task to the issuer since its contents are only received by the interested group. With regard to its application you can read one post of Read/Write Web, RSS in New Zealand E-Government... Other interesting post is "RSS on government websites- a business case" in Tom 2.0. More information about Denmark, in a comment by John Gotze following this post...
I stake for , And You?
Technorati Tags: rss e-administration electronic+government e-government syndication
Wednesday, July 27, 2005
The "Orange Button" in Public Administration
Already does a time that is starting to be used in and-administration and e-Government, as tool in order to reach information to the citizen. In Spain already the public sites that have implemented it as the Ministry of Industry, the Generalitat of Catalonia or the Town Council of Blanes. In the international area the examples that we can find as the place of the First French Minister, the New Zealand Government or all those that there are referenced in RSS in Government, where also you will be able to find information on the subject.
It is a clean channel (there is not spam), the receiver is subscribed to the desired contents and, the most important thing, when there is an update arrives automatically to the reader of feeds, besides it facilitates a lot the task to the issuer since its contents are only received by the interested group. With regard to its application you can read one post of Read/Write Web, RSS in New Zealand E-Government... Other interesting post is "RSS on government websites- a business case" in Tom 2.0. More information about Denmark, in a comment by John Gotze following this post...
I stake for , And You?
Technorati Tags: rss e-administration electronic+government e-government syndication