Social Tools Meet Obama's State Of Union Address
By Elena Malykhina
InformationWeek
The President's address will be streamed live on WhiteHouse.gov, in addition to YouTube, Google+, Hulu, Facebook, Ustream and the White House mobile app. An enhanced version of the speech will offer viewers charts, statistics and other information while it's in progress. Last year's enhanced speech received nearly three million views on YouTube.
Viewers can join the discussion during the State of the Union address on Twitter using the hashtag #SOTU. When President Obama finishes speaking, a Citizen Response tool will let viewers highlight a passage from the address and explain how they're connected to the issue.
Another major component of the social media push is #WHSocial, a contest that selected 100 Twitter, Facebook and Google+ users from a pool 2,000 applicants to fly to Washington, D.C. and participate in a panel discussion. That panel will be broadcast after the speech. Others will be able to participate using #WHChat on Twitter, or by posting questions to the White House Facebook and Google+ pages.
[ Looking for new tools to improve your health? See 10 Mobile Health Apps From Uncle Sam. ]
On Thursday, Google+ will host a Fireside Hangout, a virtual conversation between the president and the public about U.S. issues and policies.
The White House has been rigorously marketing the 2013 State of the Union address to get viewers to tune in. A promotional video on YouTube and the official White House website spotlights the social media components and the online-only enhanced version, which the video claims is "the best way" to watch the speech.
The move is part of the White House's Digital Government Strategy, introduced by Obama in May 2012. It calls for building a "21st century platform" to deliver digital services to the public. Federal agencies have been moving in this direction by launching mobile apps, such as the White House app, for Apple iOS, Android and BlackBerry operating systems.
Mobile applications are the new way to extend government information and services to on-the-go citizens and employees. Also in the new, all-digital Anytime, Anywhere issue of InformationWeek Government: A new initiative aims to shift the 17-member Intelligence Community from agency-specific IT silos to an enterprise environment of shared systems and services. (Free registration required.)
Federal agencies must eliminate 800 data centers over the next five years. Find how they plan to do it in the new all-digital issue of InformationWeek Government. Download it now (registration required).
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. |
InformationWeek Reports
Cloud Implementer's Checklist
Once your agency has completed the business case for a private cloud, how do you actually move ahead with your data center transformation? Our report provides a practical set of steps to get you there, including a "to do" list that will be helpful to anyone on your IT team who's involved in the project. By the time you're done, your data center should be home to a more flexible, on-demand IT services.
Cloud Compliance in Government
Compute clouds created for government data centers must adhere to a range of specifications designed to support data and system security, privacy, and governance. FISMA, HIPAA, SOX, and SAS 70 are just some of the requirements that have to be taken into account as federal IT pros deploy a shared-services cloud model. In this report, we identify the key specs that need to be factored into any federal cloud architecture.
Government Cloud Platform Strategy
This report analyzes the key IT infrastructure considerations that must be taken into account for implementing cloud services in federal data centers: software/hardware environment, multi-tenancy, security, virtualization, and management tools. We also explain the key important role that APIs play in supporting hybrid scenarios that tap into public cloud services.
The Business Case for Government Clouds
This report assesses usage scenarios, barriers, and other variables that factor into the decision of whether and how to implement cloud computing in federal environments.




Subscribe to RSS