COA – The New RFP to Release This Summer – That’s The Latest News
Whatever Matt Esquibel is working on, I hope it’s good and I hope it meets the expectations of the large community of developers, designers, project managers, businesses, and visionaries who are waiting to put their bids into the ring. Let’s hope they get a better than 3 : 400 ratio of returns on this one.
Mostly, I’d really like Matt, Doug Matthews and Gail Roper to ramp up the AustinGO site they already have. Post updates on the blog! Fix the RSS feed! Use the tool! As it stands what’s happening is still happening behind closed doors with a new team and the community is forced to wait for the release of the new RFP.
In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: a new process, accountable, austin american statesman, austin chronicle, austin website, AustinGO, chief communications director, cignex, city council, city of austin, city of austin website, civic open source, Communications and Public Information, Communications and Technology Management, council members, CPIO, CTM, current website RFP, doug matthews, dreaming in code, existing RFP, flu-related issues, gail roper, gary chapman, gatner group, interactive austin, mitch capor, new RFP, participation, purchasing guidelines, review and recommendations, technology community, whurley
COA Website Public Forum Set for Wednesday June 17, 6:00 – 7:30 (details inside)
City of Austin Website Public Forum, Wednesday June 17, 2009 at the Carver Museum http://tiny.cc/ilqxU from 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. to discuss the AustinGO project moving forward. We hope to provide insight into the direction of the project and listen to the the thoughts and ideas of the community in attendance. We plan to have more public forums in the coming months and will provide more information as dates, times and formats are determined.
In: Uncategorized · Tagged with: a new process, accountable, austin american statesman, austin chronicle, austin website, AustinGO, chief communications director, cignex, city council, city of austin, city of austin website, civic open source, Communications and Public Information, Communications and Technology Management, council members, CPIO, CTM, current website RFP, doug matthews, dreaming in code, existing RFP, flu-related issues, gail roper, gary chapman, interactive austin, mitch capor, new RFP, participation, purchasing guidelines, review and recommendations, technology community, whurley
COA – City of Austin Website Progresses: City Council to Meet June 18, New RFP in July!
City of Austin Web Site NEWS: The city web staff, including Gail Roper and Doug Marshall, will go before City Council June 18 to make the case for rebooting the redesign process. A revised request for proposal will be issued in July.
In: city of austin website · Tagged with: a new process, accountable, austin american statesman, austin chronicle, austin website, AustinGO, chief communications director, cignex, city council, city of austin, city of austin website, civic open source, Communications and Public Information, Communications and Technology Management, council members, CPIO, CTM, current website RFP, doug matthews, dreaming in code, existing RFP, flu-related issues, gail roper, gary chapman, interactive austin, mitch capor, new RFP, participation, purchasing guidelines, review and recommendations, technology community, whurley
TWC – Summary Judgement – People vs Time Warner and Broadband Metering
Meterthis! was launched 4 – 8 – 09. TWC changed the course of their broadband capping and metering plans on 4 – 16 – 09.
In: metered broadband media · Tagged with: austin, austin american statesman, bandwidth hogs, Beaumont, broadband, broadband business, broadband internet, cable provider, cable television service, caps, consumption, controversy, electronista, eric massa, fairness act, freshman congressman, Frontier Communications, gallaga, grassroots protest, grassroots victory, Greensboro, groundswell, hulu, internet sales, internet usage, internet use and abuse, landel hobbs, limiting competition, media coverage, metered broadband, monitor downloads, more money, movies, music downloads, netflix, official statement, omar gallaga, pay for bandwidth, protest, recent article, Rochester, San Antonio, san antonio express news, statesman, stop the cap, test markets, tiered plans, time warner, time warner cable, time warner caps, time warner customer, timewarner, twc, unbelievable speed, viable model, wired, wired magazine
TWC – Ambiguity About Incremental Fees – Not A Good Move By Time Warner Cable
The plan will not impact your Price Lock Guarantee price, but it could mean a small incremental fee that will vary by month depending on how much you exceed the megabit usage that goes with your level of Road Runner service.
In: metered broadband media · Tagged with: ars technica, austin, austin american statesman, bandwidth hogs, Beaumont, broadband, broadband business, consumption, gamers, Greensboro, hulu, landel hobbs, limiting competition, metered broadband, monitor downloads, more money, movies, netflix, official statement, omar gallaga, pay for bandwidth, San Antonio, statesman, stop the cap, streaming media, super tier, tiered plans, time warner customer, timewarner, viable model

