- Obama Pushes Citizen Service Out of the Nest
- SoapBlox Burnout Points to Vulnerability in Left's Infrastructure
- PdF's 2009 Top 50 Political Blogs
- Daily Digest: CTO Watch -- The Rising Stock of California PhDs
- CES and Tech Politics
- Small Tents vs. Big Networks: Recreating the GOP
- Daily Digest: Party Hopefuls Vying for Tech Cred
- Inside the Bailout: The Public Servants Our Hopes Are Riding On
- Candidates For RNC Chair Duke It Out (Sort of) Online
- Daily Digest: For Open Government, It's Put Up (Online) Time
This afternoon, Team Obama ported the day-of-service feature from the Presidential Inaugural Committee site to its own stand-alone domain, USAservice.org. For some background on what they're up to when it comes to citizen service, see here. What still isn't so clear where this effort slots into things after inauguration weekend. I suspect those details will simply shake out elegantly (enough) in the next few weeks. But I'm a process geek, and so I can't help but obsess about how all the working pieces -- Obama-Biden Transition Project, Presidential Inaugural Committee, Obama Administration-to-be -- fit together.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...Some of the most popular state, local, and general-interest blogs in the progressive blogosphere were brought low this morning, when the lone developer behind the hosted community-blogging service SoapBlox threw in the towel. Well-regarded sites like Pam's House Blend, Blue Jersey, Michigan Liberal, Swing State Project, and MN Progressive Project found earlier today that they couldn't access either the public-facing front ends of the site or their sites' content-management backend. As of this afternoon, the sites are (mostly) back up, but that hasn't eased fears that a core part of the left's online infrastructure isn't all that sustainable.
1 comment | Read more ...We've been doing some housecleaning (in preparation for rolling out a site upgrade) and it's been some time since I dug in and updated our list of top political blogs. Indeed, an embarrassingly long time. Sorry!
Anyway, here's a fully revised and up-to-date list of the top 50 political blogs, along with two top 20 lists for the top liberal and conservative blogs. All three lists are based on Technorati's measure of "authority," which is the number of incoming links to the blog for the last six months. Let me be the first to emphasize that this is hardly a perfect metric. The number of incoming links shown by Technorati sometimes varies, which is a quirk of how their databases work. And not all incoming links are created equal, but Technorati has no way of saying so. In other words, please don't obsess about a blog's exact position on these lists, as bloggers like to say, your mileage may vary.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...As we keep up the vigil on Barack Obama's naming of a Chief Technology Officer, let's have a look at both what some close watchers want from the first federal CTO and what the gossip on the street says about what the incoming administration has in mind for the job...In congressional meetings on Obama's proposed stimulus package, House Republican Whip Eric Cantor pushed the President-elect to "put the entire contents of the legislation online in a user-friendly way to see how the money is being spent"...There's an interesting under-the-radar online tussle happening around the future of American agriculture and the future of Tom Vilsack...and more.
1 comment | Read more ...I'm off to Las Vegas tomorrow to spend three days perusing the latest and greatest tech gadgets at the annual Consumer Electronics Show. While much of that is geared toward another endeavor, I'll be keeping an eye out for tools and technologies that could be used for political purposes.
If I see anything that looks like it has potential for attracting, communicating with, or mobilizing voters/activists, I'll snap some pics, write up a blurb, and let you know about it.
In the meantime, if you've got anything you'd like me to look for, or something I must see, leave me a comment.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...Let's take a bite at one of the bigger questions floating around the technology and politics world at the moment. The subject: the future of the Republican Party. Does the redemption of the GOP rest with mastering the field, communications, and fundraising technologies that Barack Obama used to good effect in his presidential win? Or do conservatives need to take this moment, when they control not one of the branches of government, to re-figure out just what it is the party stands for, what political need it fills in the hearts and minds of American voters? The real answer, of course, isn't one or the other -- not wholeheartedly, at least. But implicit in the question is a compelling debate over just what technology is good for when it comes to politics, from winning elections to governing in a way that gives you a shot at getting re-elected.
2 comments | Read more ...The half dozen contenders for the post of RNC chairman gathered yesterday for an event that was threaded through with what might fairly be called an obsession with technology...When we discussed a report in the New York Times yesterday that Barack Obama would finally (cue whiny voice) be naming a Chief Technology Officer this Wednesday, we commented, "we'll see." Well, looks like we won't...The Obama transition has gone down a somewhat different road than Bill Clinton in revealing its donors -- though, of course, the motivations and expectations are entirely different...and more.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...With the American economy showing about as much useful forward momentum as as a stripped-down Chevy up on cinder blocks in the front yard, people are naturally starting to get a bit curious as to whether the $700 billion Congress put to bailing out banks' troubled assets was a smart use of the peoples' dollars. Elizabeth Warren is wondering that too. Warren, a professor at Harvard Law, was Harry Reid's appointment to the Congressional Oversight Panel that was created under the same Emergency Economic Stabilization Act that launched the TARP program. "It's tough out there and it's scary, and frankly I'm worried," she admits in a recent YouTube video -- which is either endearingly forthright or downright terrifying, depending on how you look at it.
2 comments | Read more ...As the battle for the RNC Chairman gig heats up, Americans for Tax Reform is hosting a debate among the half dozen candidates vying for the job. The debate is happening now at http://rncdebate.org/. The live webcast by ATR is a step in the right direction for the GOP.
It's not specifically a tech-politics related event, but it's good to see the right opening up and broadcasting the debate publicly. ATR also opened up the discussion to the public and took questions online.
I'll recap the event afterward with thoughts. (UPDATED)
login or register to post comments | Read more ...With the 111th session of Congress kicking off tomorrow and a mere 15 days until President-elect Barack Obama takes the oath of office, getting his desired $700 billion (or so) stimulus package signed, sealed, and delivered before inauguration day would take a feat of super-human legislating. What could complicate that goal: a proposal promoted by top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell to put the stimulus plan online for a full week...Is it our turn yet? Pressure is building for Obama to finally name a Chief Technology Officer, the nation's first...The first round of Change.org's Ideas for Change in America contest, to which techPresident is a partner, has wrapped...and a good deal more.
2 comments | Read more ...
Recent comments
3 hours 9 min ago
18 hours 14 min ago
18 hours 20 min ago
22 hours 55 sec ago
1 day 8 hours ago
1 day 8 hours ago
1 day 13 hours ago
1 day 19 hours ago
1 day 22 hours ago
2 days 12 hours ago