Videos of Newest Technologies
and Recent ITC Conference Videos
Critical Thinking and Judgment
Stephen Gerras
Professor of Behavioral Sciences
in the Department of Command, Leadership & Management
U.S. Army War College
Web 2.0: How will this new technology evolution affect city and county governments?
Dr. Alan R. Shark
Executive Director, CEO
Public Technology Institute Washington DC and Assistant Professor
Rutgers University School for Public Affairs & Administration
Mobile Computing Applications for Government
Jason Smith
Principal, PA Dept. of Revenue
Bureau of Lottery
How to Improve Government Procurement
Timothy Fulkerson
Manager, COSTARS Marketing & Constituent Relations
Department of General Services
Bruce Beardsley
Department of General Services
Designing Your Cost Effective, Reliable and Highly Citizen-Focused 311 Center
Teresa Richardson
State & Local Government and Education Leader
Avaya
PA-Starnet State Wide Radio
Network Update
Charles Brennan
Deputy Secretary, PA Office of Administration
Public Safety Radio
Governor's Office of Administration
Commonwealth of PA
Microsoft Surface
Product
Videos
About
PhotoSynth
Explore Synths
How does it work:
Photosynth allows you to take a bunch of photos of the same scene or object and automagically stitch them all together into one big interactive 3D viewing experience that you can share with anyone on the web. Photosynth is a potent mixture of two independent breakthroughs: the ability to reconstruct the scene or object from a bunch of flat photographs, and the technology to bring that experience to virtually anyone over the Internet.
Energy Loans Video - Agency Pushing Innovation
Energy loans
By Kevin Bullis - Friday, June 26, 2009
At a recent conference at the United Nations, the person in charge of the Department of Energy's finances told Technology Review how his agency is pushing innovation.
Video by Technology Review Published by MIT - Read the Article
David Merrill, inventor of Siftables, interactive electronic building blocks, demonstrates his technology at the 2009 TED conference
Building Blocks of a New Interface
By Erica Naone
Siftables look a lot like a set of children's blocks. They're small, they're easy to stack and shuffle, and their colorful screens (based on organic light-emitting diodes, or OLEDs) even display letters and numbers sometimes. But while they're intended to be fun, the little devices, developed at the Fluid Interfaces Group in the Media Lab, are actually cookie-size computers that reflect cutting-edge technology and new ideas in interface design.
Video by TED Published by MIT Read the Article
Nick McKeown believes that remotely controlling network hardware with software can bring the Internet up to speed.
Building Blocks of a New Interface
Video by Kate Greene, Brandon Heller, Yiannis Yiakoumis, Guido Appenzeler, Nick McKeown - Read the Article Published by MIT Read the Article
SoundSense captures known and new sounds to create a real-time log of a user's activities.
Video by Dartmouth College - Read the Article Read the Article
Conference Sponsors:
Last year over 4,500 technology professionals from 34 states and the District of Columbia attended our government technology conference. Our conference is intergovernmental in nature and is held annually with conference attendance fees waived, for state AND, city, county, Federal government employees. This ITC wavier includes all elements of the conference including, educational sessions, keynotes and the exhibit hall. Over 65% of attendees were senior level or above. ITC is a conference and exposition for state, city, county and federal government professionals. This solutions oriented, information technology conference is designed by government for government. Supported by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, ITC continues to build on the tradition of excellence and has gained great recognition as the premier technology conference in the mid-Atlantic region. ITC features outstanding demonstrations of the latest technologies on the exhibit floor and provides key government decision-makers and potential business partners with an excellent opportunity to showcase products and/or services to key agency decision-makers, prospective clients and potential business partners all in one convenient location.
ITC attracts major vendors as well as local companies to provide government an opportunity to see and experience the latest technological solutions. Companies such as Deloitte, IBM, Unisys, Oracle, Dell, Sprint and Cisco are typical vendors you will find on our exhibition floor. Our exhibitors represent manufacturers/suppliers of computer hardware and software, networking products and services, systems integrators, optical technology, GIS security products, teleconferencing products, GPS, multimedia products and services, imaging products, storage products, computer training, financial services and more.ITC works closely with top government officials, educational communities, and industry leaders to insure that the ITC Conference reflects cutting edge technology solutions. Through our large exposition floor and topical educational agenda, current solutions are reflected and attendees are prepared for current and future technology challenges. We are proud to announce that beginning with the 2007 Conference, ITC offers on-site training. Attendees are able to pre-register and receive training right on conference site.ITC will continue to build on the tradition of excellence and has gained recognition as the premier technology conference in the Mid-Atlantic region. ITC will feature outstanding demonstrations of the latest technologies on the exhibit floor and content-rich educational tracks.