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Federal government loosens its grip on the BlackBerry, Laptops (for iPhones and iPads)

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onehandle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-31-11 11:33 AM
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Federal government loosens its grip on the BlackBerry, Laptops (for iPhones and iPads)
Somewhere in America, perhaps at this very moment, a bad guy is under video surveillance. He is being watched, every movement, every step — but not on a little TV. That’s so 2009. Instead, a special agent from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is keeping tabs on an iPad.

This is not a movie. This is not a Steve Jobs dream. This is the federal government 2.0, where technology upgrades no longer come at a “Little House on the Prairie” pace. Even President Obama, a BlackBerry devotee, has upgraded. He now owns an iPad, and it has been seen on his desk and under his arm.

The flashy consumer products that have been adopted in the corporate workforce — upending BlackBerrys for iPhones, Microsoft Outlook for Gmail, and lately laptops for iPads — are now invading the federal government. The State Department. The Army. The Department of Veterans Affairs. NASA. The General Services Administration is in the process of moving 17,000 employees onto Gmail.

The stakes are huge. The change may damage companies long associated with Washington work culture, but officials say the shift will make workers more productive while slashing billions from the $80 billion spent annually on information technology. The government is trying to keep up with federal workers’ interest in the new gadgets.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/federal-government-loosens-its-grip-on-the-blackberry/2011/05/27/AG7wW1EH_story.html



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pimpbot Donating Member (770 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-31-11 03:40 PM
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1. Just as long as they dont get bamboozled into buying useless technology
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/sec-broke-law-with-apple-equipment-purchase/2011/05/26/AG1qWNCH_story.html



The SEC violated procurement law in 2008 when, without proper testing, it spent about $1 million buying computer equipment from Apple that “immediately failed” to work as intended, the agency’s inspector general said in a report released this week.

The agency violated federal regulations by awarding the contract without competitive bidding and by telling Apple its budget for one of the orders, the report said.

Apple used that information to tailor its offer precisely to the budgeted amount, the report said. But Apple left out “essential equipment that the SEC was subsequently forced to purchase” at additional cost, the report said.

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boppers Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue May-31-11 06:13 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. That story is wrong.
Cloverleaf doesn't sell equipment. They sell storage, in datacenters. The SEC couldn't figure out how to make that work, because they wanted to keep all their data on-site.

...but go ahead and keep flogging the "SEC should lose funding" line, while billions are wasted in defense.
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