Gov 2.0 Radio Hot Links – June 21, 2010

  • June 22nd, 2010

Gov Social Media Wonders and Blunders

  • June 7th, 2010

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OhMyGov!: Gov 2.0 Radio in conversation with Mark Malseed, executive editor of OhMyGov!, a media company and consultancy chronicling the best and worst of the U.S. government and documenting the rise of social media in politics and governance.

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Gov 2.0 Expo: From DC to Russia

  • May 30th, 2010

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From DC to Russia: In this 15-minute show, Russian new media consultant Alena Popova joins us live from DC to share lessons learned at the Gov 2.0 Expo conference. Alena cites presentations by Tim Berners-Lee, Dustin Haisler, Tim O’Reilly and David Hale.

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Armed with Science, and a WSIS e-Gov Update

  • May 24th, 2010

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Armed with Science, and a WSIS e-Gov Update: Before there was Gov 2.0 Radio, there was Armed with Science, the Department of Defense’s BlogTalkRadio podcast highlighting the role of science and technology in the U.S. military. Join us for a discussion with AwS host Dr. John Ohab about how the program is expanding its use of new media tools. Also joining in, Allison Hornery of CivicTech, with an update from the e-Gov’t session from UN World Summit on Information Society. With guest co-host John F. Moore.

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Oklahoma Trailblazes Gov 2.0

  • May 3rd, 2010

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Gov 2.0 in Oklahoma: We talk with Sid Burgess and OK State Rep. Jason Murphey, chair of the Government Modernization Committee,  about the Gov 2.0a conference and open government legislation and practice in Oklahoma.

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Gov 2.0 and the Law

  • April 26th, 2010

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Gov 2.0 and the Law Join us for a conversation with attorneys Christina Gagnier and Lisa Borodkin on the challenges and opportunities in changing government through Web 2.0 and social media, with hosts Adriel Hampton, Steve Ressler and Steve Lunceford.

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OCTA: Putting a New Media Touch on Public Transit

  • April 24th, 2010

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Putting a New Media Touch on Public Transit: The Orange County Transportation Authority uses Twitter, e-newsletters, YouTube and more to inform the public about transit projects, rail safety and more. The team recently won the California Public Information Officers award for new media. Join a conversation with Ryan Mahoney, Sarah Swensson and Ted Nguyen on how new media is working for the agency. With hosts Adriel Hampton and Steve Lunceford.

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The Orange County Transportation Authority uses Twitter, e-newsletters, YouTube and more to inform the public about transit projects, rail safety and more. The team recently won the California Public Information Officers award for new media. Join a conversation with Ryan Mahoney, Sarah Swensson and Ted Nguyen on how new media is working for the agency. With hosts Adriel Hampton and Steve Lunceford.

Space is the Place

  • April 3rd, 2010

If you’re looking for a glimpse into how earthpeople and their governments are evolving, what better way then to check into NASA’s two April appearances on Gov 2.0 Radio. This month, we’ll go coast to coast with conversation with Beth Beck about NASA’s social media initiatives, and Gretchen Curtis on the space agency’s pioneering cloud computing project, Nebula.

April 4, 9 p.m. ET from DC: NASA isn’t just an early adopter of social media, they go BIG. First their astronauts were relaying tweets from space, then they were tweeting live from orbit. NASA has also holds space-themed tweetups for their fans. Tune in for a chat with Beth Beck, NASA’s space operations outreach manager.

April 11, 9 p.m. ET from SF: How does NASA match good government and massive computational needs? By launching the federal governments most aggressive cloud computing pilot project, of course. Join us as we talk with Gretchen Curtis, NASA Nebula’s communications director about infrastructure-as-a-service and the future of public sector cloud.

Public Sector Marketing

  • March 21st, 2010

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Public Sector Marketing: A discussion of public sector marketing and social media adoption in the Canadian public service, with Mike Kujawski, vice president of the Centre of Excellence for Public Sector Marketing.

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Promo: Growing the Gov 2.0 Movement

  • March 7th, 2010

One of the important things to consider in any kind of activism and engagement is pop culture. One of this week’s guests, Sarah Granger, was much more on the ball than me, reminding that the Oscars are Sunday. So, we’ll be moving the live Gov 2.0 Radio tomorrow to 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. I hope you’ll join us as we talk with Sarah and Luke Fretwell of Govfresh!

On this week’s podcast, we’ll be taking a 20,000-foot look at the Gov 2.0 movement. Sarah explains more:

“One thing I’ve been thinking about lately is the whole definition of gov 2.0, the semantics – e-gov, open gov, open data, etc. I was thinking about this before Gov 2.0 Camp LA, but the session with Billy Grundfest where he essentially came up with a summary statement really brought that home for me. We still are such a small movement when you step back and look at the whole of society and where they focus their energies (celebrity watching, reality TV, just making house payments, shuttling kids to and from school). Trying to get more people engaged in the discussion of where they want their government(s) to go in the future may sound obvious to those of us knee deep in it, but for everyone else, I think the novelty of transparency may still be lost.

“As I wrote in my post about breaking gender barriers, there are a lot of practical steps we can take to raise awareness and get more people involved. What are the best strategies for taking the movement itself to the next level in terms of awareness and communication?”