Last week’s Comprehensive Spending Review has made the challenge critically clear: how can we save money in public services without significant harm to society?
The New York Times published an article recently about an entrepreneur, Seth Priebatsch, and described what it called his 'hypomanic' attributes: an elevated mood, obsession with one idea, little need for sleep, massive self-confidence.
The potential for open-source software to cut public sector costs is an exciting prospect and it's happening now
Over the past few years in the UK there has been a growing sense of disillusionment in the transparency of parliament and its elected officials. Revelations and the resulting scandal over unnecessary expenses claims means that our trust in MPs has never been lower.
How to open up local data: notes, tips and tricks from Warwickshire council
Driving cars can be fun. The personal freedom, the wind in your hair and the stereo switched up to 11 while singing to Gary Numan.
No doubt that in years to come – probably with family and friends over a small glass of wine – someone will ask “Where were you when Gordon Brown left Number 10?”
Going forward into cash-strapped times, there will be increasing pressure to deliver better public services for less.
If people remain marginalised from online conversations and forums, they remain as excluded from the decisions that affect their lives as ever before.
Groups and individuals can spread their ideas and information more widely using video sharing.
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