National Budget Video Game?

A USA Today article on Wednesday had an interesting bit buried deep within the text:

[Former White House Chief of Staff Erskine] Bowles has been in touch with Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer about creating a deficit-reduction video game that would enable anyone with a computer to take a stab at balancing the budget, much like the 1994 commission did.

Updated for 2010, Kerrey says, such a game could “go viral.”

The tech site Gizmodo picked up on the video game mention.

While it might not “go viral,” this might be a good way for the ordinary citizen to understand the Federal budget issues.

Library of Congress to Archive Tweets

Yesterday, Twitter and the Library of Congress announced that the Library will digitally archive all public tweets made on the social network Twitter.  The Library of Congress announced the plan on its blog, and Twitter did the same on its blog.  Wired has a good overview of the news.

Something I didn’t know, but the Library of Congress archives lots of websites (from the LoC blog):

So if you think the Library of Congress is “just books,” think of this: The Library has been collecting materials from the web since it began harvesting congressional and presidential campaign websites in 2000. Today we hold more than 167 terabytes of web-based information, including legal blogs, websites of candidates for national office, and websites of Members of Congress.

We also operate the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program www.digitalpreservation.gov, which is pursuing a national strategy to collect, preserve and make available significant digital content, especially information that is created in digital form only, for current and future generations.

The Federal government, the White House, and the Library of Congress are taking Twitter seriously- are you?  Let us know in the comments.

Giving the White House Feedback Thru Twitter

ExpertLabs and the American Association for the Advancement of Science have teamed up to help the White House identify major goals:

The White House wants to identify Grand Challenges in science and technology that will help inspire a new era of innovation. And they’re asking for your ideas, right on Twitter. These challenges will inspire innovations that create jobs, improve education, power clean energy, transform health care, and more.

Here’s how to help:

  1. Think big! Imagine an ambitious science or technology challenge (something huge like the moon landing!) which you think can inspire great new ideas and inventions.
  2. Reply to the @whitehouse tweet with your idea, or a link to ideas you find interesting. Use the hashtag #whgc.
  3. Encourage your friends and followers to respond, too!

This is a pretty neat way to use the social networking site Twitter to help the country. And you organization could do something similar by polling Facebook friends or Twitter users in your community.

And just so you know this is real, here’s the tweet from @whitehouse:

What Grand Challenge should be on our Nation’s to-do list? Reply w/your idea now! http://bit.ly/dy9fkL #whgc

Government Nominations for Webby Awards

The Webby Awards are awards for internet excellence, and are given out by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.  There is a special category in the Webbys for government websites, and you should take a look.  Nominated are the websites for the Air Force, Census 2010, NASA Home & City Version 2.0, NASA, and San Ramon Valley Fire.

Head over to the Webby Awards site, and you can vote for the People’s Voice Winners in each category (but make sure you vote in the Government category).

Any thoughts on the best site?  Let us know in the comments.

Build That Fiber Yourselves

In the next couple of weeks, Google will announce the winners of the Google Fiber for Communities applications (we covered the initiative previously).  Wired has a good article on what communities that don’t get into the fiber project should do: contact a fiber provider, go out for bonds, and build it yourselves:

Wilson, North Carolina, runs a city-owned network called Greenlight that offers an unbundled 20 Mbps up and 20 Mbps down connection for $60 a month. Cable subscribers can get 10 Mbps up and down for $35 — and those who need even faster connections can go all the way up to 100 Mbps.

But there are lots of ways for cities to start a network without committing to building everything at once — which often requires a bond measure.

Settles points to Santa Monica, California, which started with a fiber-optic line serving the government, then expanded it slowly as the city worked on projects like street renovation and sewer-main installations. In March, it launched the Santa Monica City Net, a 10-Gpbs open-access network that Santa Monica businesses can use — which includes Google and some top hospitals using it for tele-medicine. That network is 10 times faster than what the FCC calls for as a goal in 2020.

We all know that it isn’t as easy as deciding to put broadband in our communities, but this has to be a better option than changing the name of your city (Topeka, aka Google, Kansas) or jumping into a shark tank.

Twitter Case Study of USGS

Twitter recently posted a case study of the U.S. Geological Survey’s use of Twitter for earthquake detection (which we recently covered here).  The brief description:

One of the U.S. Geological Survey’s unique responsibilities is the monitoring and reporting of earthquakes, which affect the daily lives of people around the world. By mining real-time tweets, the USGS expands its suite of seismically derived information and obtains first-hand accounts of shaking seconds after an earthquake occurs.

Drupal for Building Gov 2.0 Sites

GovFresh has a great article on the usefulness of the open source Drupal content management system in creating transparency and government 2.0 websites.

Don’t forget to look at our Goverments Using Open Source CMS for many examples of sites built with Drupal (and other open source solutions).

Smart Phones Helping Us Serve Citizens

Along the same lines as yesterday’s tweet from the Newark Mayor, today we have a great article in Governing from the former Mayor of Indianapolis.  Stephen Goldsmith, director of the Innovations in American Government Program at the Harvard Kennedy School, writes about how “smart phones are revolutionizing how governments serve its citizens — and it’s just the tip of the iceberg.”  The article is titled, “Phone + GPS + Camera = Revolution“.  This is a very good read.

PS- You can follow Stephen Goldsmith on Twitter, he’s @S_Goldsmith.

Newark Mayor Improves City Through Twitter

Newark Mayor Cory Booker tweeted this earlier today:

I’m on it: Thanks RT @pb83 Mayor there’s a MONSTER pothole at Munn & 18th Ave. Sumbody’s gonna lose a piece of there car.

The original tweet from the Newark resident was:

@CoryBooker not sure who 2 address this 2, but there’s a MONSTER pothole at Munn & 18th Ave. Sumbody’s gonna lose a piece of there car.

That’s service for you.