Listening in on Twitter
This is days past the deadline, completely open and written by a non-profit, and has no revenue model associated with it so it isn't intended to be taken seriously as a response to the recent YCombinator Request for Startups. But RFS 3: Building Things on Twitter got me thinking about what I'd like to build on Twitter. Here's the idea:
Continue readingAnnouncing the Great American Hackathon
Now that there's about 1000 of us, we think its time we got a little social-- started hanging out, getting together and solving some of the problems we're running into. There's been over 100 apps created over the past year, a lot of fun projects, and a community created. Now's the time for us to have a national hackathon
We've partnered up with Google, RedHat, Fedora, and Mozilla, Open Source for America and Code for America to get the Open Source community involved in Open Government projects on December 12-13th, what's come to be known as the Great American Hackathon. We're hoping that you'll join us. What we want to build is a set of open, distributed events across the country, all working on solving problems or building out projects that make our government more open, accountable, participatory and transparent.
Where the events happen are entirely up to you. The content of those events are entirely up to you as well. The Great American Hackathon is an open event and is what you make it. Have a great idea you've been meaning to get around to? Now's your chance to get it done. Want to meet some people in your area that are interested in opening the government with technology? Organizing an event in your area is the best way to do it.
So in getting this project off the ground, we're going to need some help-- we've only got a few weeks to get it done. This is an experiment-- what happens when like-minded developers all work together on a weekend? What it looks like is largely up to you.
What we need right now
is for you to create events across America-- hold one in your home, office, or wherever else you'd like to do it, and get developers together to work on the ideas and projects of our community. Or if there's nothing in there that you think you can contribute to, you can always add your own into the mix.
The point is, let's get together in our local communities and see what happens.
Continue readingVictory! FEC Launches Data Catalog
Earlier this year, I was invited to testify in front of the FEC on how they could improve their web presence. Together, we as a community built my testimony that I in turn, delivered to them. Whether it was our Redesigning the Government piece on the FEC, or the crowdsourced testimony, we delivered it fully(start on page 25 of that pdf file).
I'm pretty excited to see this note from Bob Biersack floating around the intertubes announcing the launch of fec.gov/data and fec.gov/blog -- the commission is calling their blog the "Disclosure Data Blog" where they'll be posting information and plans about the files they're producing and taking a more proactive approach towards disclosure.
Continue readingAdobe is Bad for Open Government
So next week, Adobe's having a conference here to tell Federal employees why they ought to be using "Adobe PDF, and Adobe® Flash® technology" to make government more open. They've spent what seems to be millions of dollars wrapping buses in DC with Adobe marketing materials all designed to tell us how necessary Adobe products are to Obama's Open Government Initiative. They've even got a beautiful website set up to tout the government's use of Flash and PDF, and are holding a conference here next week to talk about how Government should use ubiquitous and secure technologies to make government more open and interactive.
Here at the Sunlight Foundation, we spend a lot of time with Adobe's products-- mainly trying to reverse the damage that these technologies create when government discloses information. The PDF file format, for instance, isn't particularly easily parsed. As ubiquitous as a PDF file is, often times they're non-parsable by software, unfindable by search engines, and unreliable if text is extracted.
Continue readingRecovery.gov Augmented Reality Mashup
As of today Android and iPhone users can see recovery.gov contract data on their phones via the Layar augmented reality application. Layar is an application that overlays your view of the real world with waypoints representing your favorite coffee place, the movie theatre you're trying to find, or in this case, where some of that $787 billion from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is going.
Continue readingReinventing the Wheel
A couple of days ago I was pointed to a slideshare presentation that was done as a Webmanager University New Media Talk on user centered design. Yes, there is actually a University for the people who manage federal, state and local government websites. While making my way through the slides I discovered that the Government has two separate resources dedicated to how their employees should implement user centered websites; usability.gov and usa.gov/webcontent. These sites are filled with content written by knowledgeable phd's, which is great, but when government websites seem to be falling further behind in web design and usability, it begs the question of why they're creating their own resources and not just using the myriad ones that exist in the private sector.
Continue readingEntering digital age an expensive proposition for GOP
The Republican National Committee shelled out $1.4 million dollars over the last six months for Web sites and services, much of which was spent on GOP.com, the party's major Web presence that was unveiled this month, new Federal Election Commission expense reports show.
The figure is far higher than what experts estimate it should have cost, and five times the amount its Democratic counterpart spent to host and maintain Democrats.org.
The biggest disparity seems to be bandwidth costs--the RNC paid Smartech Corp., a Republican-focused hosting firm, more than a million dollars, plus $22,000 to Eloqua, compared to the DNC's $203,000 to Sprint, Switch and Data and Servint Corp.--despite the fact that the two sites' traffic, which determines bandwidth usage and, largely, hosting costs, was the same.
But the design of the site itself was costly, too. In the months prior to the October 13 launch of GOP.com, the committee paid $328,000 to 11 firms for Web development. (The Democrats, which did not completely overhaul their site during that time period, spent $45,000 on Web development.)
Read the rest at Sunlight's Real Time Investigations
Continue readingDevelopers Wanted for Knight News Challenge
The message below is a message from our friends at the Knight Foundation who've given us a grant here at the Sunlight Foundation to build tools to put more political data on the web
You're part of a community doing amazing work on some hugely important issues
of government transparency, especially at the state and national level. We're
partnering with the Sunlight Foundation and Sunlight Labs in hopes of engaging
you in a complementary challenge: bringing your great ideas to cities and other
local communities.
The FCC Redesign Epilogue
The day after the reveal of our conceptual FCC comps, the FCC invited Daniel and I over to discuss the redesign. They were very receptive to our suggestions, and indicated a strong desire to implement some significant changes to the site in the relatively near future. We haven't seen anything with our own eyes – yet – but they asked smart questions and gave good answers to our questions. We're hopeful that there's some good work to be seen in the near future.
Continue reading