Chris Gonsalves

Lexmark Targets Lawyers

Continuing its drive to deliver targeted solutions in select verticals through the channel, Lexmark International this week is rolling out a multifunction printer customized for law offices. Available only through reseller partners, the Lexmark Legal Partner is an X646dte monochrome laser MFP (multifunction printer) with specialized workflow, file management and print tracking features. “This solution […]

Collaboration, Reporting Highlight Level Platforms Release

Level Platforms is readying changes to its flagship managed services platform—including bolstering reporting tools and adding support for Microsoft Vista—that will enhance usability, security and performance, especially for MSPs looking to join forces on customer engagements, according to officials. The Ottawa-based vendor will announce on August 7 version 6.0 of its Managed Workplace MSP (managed […]

App Development Has a Serious Side

When it comes to developing applications for the government, the return on investment can sometimes be life or death. Such was the sobering task facing application developer and systems integrator Science Applications International, or SAIC, as it went to upgrade the IBM Rational development tools used to support one of its most sensitive clients, the […]

eCopy Helps Torrance Leave a Paperless Trail

Torrance, Calif., is a bright spot in Los Angeles Countys already-sunny South Bay. A short hop from surf-trendy Redondo Beach, the place is famous for many things, not the least of which is the sight of its unique high school facade on TV shows such as “Beverly Hills, 90210” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” Torrance […]

USDA Keeps Up with the Flow

At its heart, predicting the supply of water is a math problem—an extremely complicated math problem. Algorithms are created to gauge the effects of melting snow, precipitation, daily temperatures and the flow of rivers and streams. The payoff for all these dry formulas is a set of predictive models that can help municipalities ensure that […]

ITs Tumultuous Year in Review

If 2004 was the year of merger mania, then 2005 will be remembered as the year a great many things were rent asunder. Mired in a bogged-down technology economy, the industry continued to struggle for purchase, and so began the year with major executive shake-ups that would eventually rock the corner offices of Hewlett-Packard Co., […]

Muni Wi-Fi Flap Nixes Deal in New Orleans

In the medley of things going wrong in New Orleans of late, the BellSouth hissy fit over municipal Wi-Fi service hardly rises above the din. But at the heart of the story, which, admittedly, is getting more traction in the blogosphere than it is in the mainstream press, lies a fundamental debate pitting business ethics […]

No Thanks for Patriot Act

I was thumbing through the report card on President Bushs Management Agenda initiatives last week, wondering how much an administration racked with problems here and abroad really cares about e-government activities at places such as the U.S. Agency for International Development. Probably not much. Fact is, USAID isnt the only agency having trouble with the […]

Remembering Windows in History

Ill never forget where I was when I heard Windows 1.0 had been released. OK, thats a crock. I have no earthly idea where I was on Nov. 20, 1985. Most likely I was working the night shift at the Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth, swapping crypto cards for the war-game scenarios […]

Blogging Is Indeed Here to Stay

It was nearly a year and a half ago in this very space that my colleague Scot Petersen declared blogs “simultaneously mainstream and subversive” and, most assuredly, here to stay. Though he wrote that “blogs have enabled the true democratization of the information age,” I doubt that even he could have imagined how prophetic those […]