POWER USER
I've been using the latest version of the Rocket eBook [<a href="http://www.gcn.com/vol18_no27/reviews/419-1.html"><i>GCN</i>, Aug. 23, 1999, Page 31</a>] in the office and on the road, but not for buying books online. I carry it around to look up large amounts of custom reference data, especially downloaded Web sites.
Notebook PC doesn't live up to its rugged image
The Panasonic ToughBook CF-37 might not be a superspeedy multimedia notebook, but it's no slouch. Its light weight suits it to a crowd other than macho road warriors.
Dreamweaver, Fireworks create a Web design powerhouse
Macromedia Inc. has bundled its Dreamweaver 3 and Fireworks 3 applications as one complete package for Web development. The two programs, though hardly seamless, are tightly integrated for easy movement back and forth.
LAB NOTES
CD terminator. CD ROM Inc. has obtained patent No. 6,039,637 for the DX-CDT, the Edina, Minn., company's portable, manually operated CD destruction device. CD-ROMs and recordable or rewritable CDs go into the $2,500 device and emerge with their polycarbonate data layers ground into dust. Their media identification rings, however, remain intact to certify disk destruction. The useless plastic can then be recycled.
This flexible database application leads the charge on Mac software
A few years back, when Apple Computer Inc. was struggling, Microsoft Corp. extended a hand, committing to publish Mac software for at least the immediate future.
Katzen holds her ground against creating a governmentwide CIO
APRIL 19—While government officials mull the potential benefits of having a governmentwide chief information officer, Sally Katzen, counselor to the director of the Office of Management and Budget, has again stated her opposition to creating the job.
Reno, GTSI's Young win Azimuth Awards
APRIL 19—Attorney General Janet Reno and Dendy Young, the chairman and chief executive officer of Government Technology Services Inc. of Chantilly, Va., have won the Chief Information Officer Council's Azimuth Awards for 2000. Reno received her award after her keynote speech at the FOSE trade show this week in Washington. Young received his award last night at a dinner hosted by FOSE.
FileMaker Pro is logical database pick
The makers of the four leading desktop databases all make the same claim: Our product is the best and the easiest to use.
Security looms large in network management plans
With security at the top of everybody's information systems priority list these days, it is not surprising that security should also be foremost on the minds of feds who use network management software.
GCN selects Exchange Server 2000 as top product at FOSE 2000
APRIL 18—Microsoft Exchange Server 2000 received the Best of Show award today from Government Computer News during the fifth annual Best New Product Awards at FOSE 2000.
Making IT available to disabled helps everyone, Reno says
APRIL 18—Agencies have a way to go to make information technology available to the disabled as required under Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1998, Attorney General Janet Reno said today.
Ballmer pledges software accessibility at FOSE 2000
APRIL 18—In this morning's keynote speech at the FOSE trade show in Washington, Microsoft Corp. president and chief executive officer Steve Ballmer stressed his company's partnership with the federal government and pledged to make software more accessible to disabled users.
OMB updates A-130 guidance for IT
APRIL 17—The Office of Management and Budget has revised the regulation that tells agencies how to manage their information technology systems.
Falling prices, transition delays squeeze FTS 2001 revenue predictions
APRIL 17—Expected revenue from the General Services Administration's FTS 2001 long-haul telecommunications program-$5 billion when the contracts were awarded more than a year ago-has dropped by half to $2.3 billion, according to a General Accounting Office report released today.
Air Force awaits OK on personnel records systems upgrade
APRIL 17—The Air Force Personnel Center is awaiting approval from the Defense Department to replace the service's legacy civilian and military personnel systems.The center wants to retire the old systems by next March, but the transition will be a challenge, said officials of the center at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas.
Agencies need to speed up shift to FTS 2001, Bates says
DALLAS'As the clock ticks toward a Dec. 6 drop-dead date for FTS 2000 bridge contracts, only about a third of government agencies have moved to the nonmandatory FTS 2001 contracts.
Facing worker shortage, VBA turns to IT tools
The Veterans Benefits Administration is expecting a mass staff exodus in three years, just as its workload is likely to increase, placing a heavy load on the systems staff.
It's a bumpy ride, but Dell takes Linux on the road
Putting Linux on a long-established brand of notebook PC is like making a 5-year-old boy wear size-12 men's boots. It doesn't fit right.
Agencies fear Sect. 508 costs
A draft of a new regulation calls for federal agencies to begin making their technology as accessible to disabled users as their buildings.
Do CIOs have enough power to do their jobs?
Most federal agencies have chief information officers, and CIO is a common acronym along Washington's halls of power. But some in government say federal CIOs need more authority. What is needed, several government oversight officials and CIOs have said, is the authority to make top-level decisions'power equivalent to that of their private-sector counterparts.
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