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In their quest to better infuse operations with data analytics, two agencies are at adjacent stages of this new discipline.
Read moreWhen it comes to appointing chief data officers, federal agencies have always been behind the curve of the private sector.
Alan Jacobson, chief data and analytics officer at Alteryx, recently joined Federal News Network to discuss how to provide more data access to more people.
According to Nick Hart, CEO of the Data Coalition, the new Federal Data Strategy “will fundamentally change the way government uses data.”
NIH and CMS have several ongoing initiatives to ensure employees and their customers understand the data they are providing as AI and other tools gain traction.
The U.S. Transportation Command will kick off a three-year effort to make it easier for users to access data anywhere, anytime, its transformation chief says.
The CDAO’s minimum viable capability for the Pentagon’s Combined Joint All-Domain Command and Control initiative is up and running.
The general public is talking more about and understanding the possibilities with AI. This buzz is also present inside federal agencies.
Steve Wallace, the director of emerging technology at DISA, said a new tool, called Concierge AI, will reduce the friction to the user to find and analyze data.
Why is geospatial data performance (fast query time) such an obstacle? Various types of geospatial data are often kept in purpose-built data silos.
The Air Force collects a lot of valuable data that will “never see the light of day,” and the service’s new vice chief of staff is looking for solutions.
Businesses are faced with a situation where, if they want to grow in this new era of “big data,” they must invest in data storage.