The Federal Demonstration Project's January meeting agenda is now available, here.
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The Federal Demonstration Project's January meeting agenda is now available, here.
Posted by Dave on November 26, 2008 at 16:31 in Grants Management | Permalink | Comments (0)
Just a note for your calendars: The next NGMA Training Luncheon is on January 14th. The speaker is to-be-announced but an interesting chat accompanied by great food (Maggiano's, 5333 Wisconsin Ave NW) is hard to turn down. And you can also get the tape-delay webcast if you can't make it to DC. www.ngma.org has all the details.
Posted by Dave on November 26, 2008 at 16:30 in Grants Management | Permalink | Comments (0)
To support a large number of hard drives on our backup machine, we bought a Sabrent SATA 4 port PCI host card (SBT-SRD4). Guess what? It hangs with our 1TB drives. In fact, it will hang with anything larger than 175 GB!
Instead of throwing it out the window, with a bit of googling, we discover that it uses the Silicon Image 3114 controller, which has a bios update and utility at: http://www.siliconimage.com/support/supportsearchresults.aspx?pid=28&cid=15&ctid=2&osid=0& . If you can make a DOS boot disk, by downloading the BIOS Update Utility for DOS and the Si3114 IDE Bios, you can unzip both onto the boot disk, reboot, and run "updflash b5304.bin".
Hmm.... I don't use floppy drives anymore. But all is still not lost! Follow Bart's instructions to make a bootable DOS CD-Rom, and copy updflash.exe and b5304.bin to your bcd\cds\cdroms\files directory before making the ISO. Then you have a nice bootable CD that can be used to flash the Sabrent SATA card. Unfortunately, since it uses Windows 98 drivers, I am unable to upload the ISO for direct download. However, I hope to have saved you some time by pointing you to useful resources.
Posted by rbuccigrossi on November 24, 2008 at 23:38 in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Our friends at KT-Tech have just released KTvid, a really-very-cool mobile video technology aimed at consumers and businesses. Their press release says it best:
KT-Tech has accomplished what no other company in the wireless industry has achieved: enabling real-time, high-quality, person-to-person video chat communication on today's cell phones using mainstream narrowband (2.5G) cellular networks.
KTvid delivers:
- Smooth, two-way videoconferencing in the palm of your hand.
- Patented technology: carrier-independent and network-independent (CDMA or GSM).
- Person-to-person videoconferencing on today's narrow-bandwidth 2.5G cellular networks [No need for 3G].
- True peer-to-peer (no server)
- Video chat on mobile devices and cell phones powered by Windows Mobile Professional (5.0/ 6.0/6.1), and Windows XP/Vista PCs.
This really is "Dick Tracy" type stuff. Rather than texting with your friends, you could see and chat with them on your phone! Some of our folks have helped KT-Tech with this, and we're insanely proud (to paraphrase Steve Jobs) of their collective accomplishment.
The big question is: Who'll be the first to do something way-cool with this technology?
Posted by Dave on November 19, 2008 at 20:48 in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0)
One week, two major grants management meetings. Phewy!
The NGP is holding its bi-monthly meeting on Tuesday from 1.30pm-3.00pm at the Department of Education in Washington, DC. Here's the agenda. E-mail TheNGP@AOL.com by noon on November 17th to register. You can also point your browser to http://tcg.acrobat.com/thengp at 1.30 on Tuesday to join the meeting by webcast (limited to 100 people).
I. Welcome and Opening Remarks
Tony Cavataio, ED, Co-Chair
II. NGP Recommendation to Transition Administration
Eric Brenner, State of Maryland
Cornelia Chebinou, NASACT
III. Transparency Act & Subaward Pilot Update
Andrea Brandon, USDA
IV. Non-Profit Organizations Operating Reserves Initiative
Bill Levis, The Urban Institute
Jim Schmutz, Merrill Lynch
V. Mandatory Grants
Sheldon Edner, Department of Transportation
Posted by Dave on November 13, 2008 at 17:17 in Government Technology, Grants Management | Permalink | Comments (0)
Just a reminder that the NGMA is holding its next training luncheon on Wednesday. Here are the details:
OMB Circular A-102: The "Common Rule" and 2CFR Part 215 -- Uniform Administrative Requirements:
Speaker: Janice Joyce & Jean Feldman, National Science Foundation
Program Description
During this session, the speaker will discuss:
1. The top 5 Most Important “things to know” about Uniform Administrative Requirements for Federal Grants Management
2. Expert Strategies for Increased Compliance with Administrative Requirements
3. Status Update on Progress Toward Moving A-102 to Title 2 of the CFR
Go to www.ngma.org to register!
Posted by Dave on November 13, 2008 at 17:10 in Government Technology, Grants Management | Permalink | Comments (0)
I just saw this page from the GAO's Presidential transition site, which includes the following:
In 2005, GAO recommended that the Director of the Office of Management and Budget ensure that efforts to develop common grant-reporting systems, such as through this initiative, are undertaken on a timely schedule. Some progress has been made; for example, agencies have been selected to lead consortia. However, the Office of Management and Budget will need to urge the remaining agencies to migrate to those systems to benefit from the consolidation themselves, enable grantees to interact with fewer different systems, and reduce the total cost of managing federal grants.
GMLOB is included under the "Major Cost Saving Opportunities" section of the site. Let's hope that the transition team spends some time reviewing the lay of the GMLOB land, and choose to revisit the question of whether the identified centers of excellence are sufficient to meet everyones' needs. And maybe, just maybe, they will look at Butch's recommendations for keeping things on track.
Posted by Dave on November 13, 2008 at 17:06 in Government Technology, Grants Management, Saving the Taxpayer Money | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Here is the fundamental challenge: Each new grant program passed by Congress creates a tiny new fiefdom in a government agency. This fiefdom directly gets funding and has the ability in many cases to set up its own management processes and systems. New grants typically have some unique rules and process steps, so most program managers believe that their processes and systems must be created from scratch, leading to a colossal amount of reinventing the wheel, duplicate systems, and waste.
Since the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) oversees the activities of federal agencies, it is one of the most logical bodies to attempt to curb this rampant duplication. Two major initiatives from OMB are:
I feel that both of these initiatives have shown great value (for example Grants.gov and the FEA Practice Guidance), and that groups and individuals working on them have demonstrated intelligence and drive to reduce waste. However, fundamental decisions by OMB in running these initiatives have put their overall success at great risk. Specifically:
Mistake 1: Centers of Excellence do not have consumer-driven standards and can inadvertently descend into self-centered mediocrity. Once a line of business reaches a level of maturity, OMB picks a small number of agencies to become Centers of Excellence (CoE) or government-wide service centers for that LoB. For example, grants management has three CoEs led by DoEd, HHS, and NSF. These service centers could potentially provide great service, however, since OMB never declared any requirements or gave potential customers any service rights, it is completely up to the service centers to provide quality. Instead OMB forces other agencies to pick a CoE and demonstrate movement toward being a CoE's customer in order to avoid penalties. This model forms a monopoly with all of the associated dangers of mediocrity and overblown cost. CoEs have no real impetus to advertise their capabilities, to entice customer agencies, or even adapt to address customer agency needs. Instead the CoE has earned the luxury to embellish their highly-specialized systems, leaving other agencies to pray that one of the CoE's can actually meet their needs. Due to the incredible efforts of individuals, some CoEs have provided demonstrable value, but it is only because of their efforts, not because of a reasonable market-based drive.
Mistake 2: Most Line of Business service centers are monolithic systems that are difficult for agencies to adopt. In OMB's FEA Practice Guidance, they suggest looking at defining segment architectures not only from vertical core mission processes (like grants management), but also from horizontal enterprise services (modular process steps, like authentication, that are common to multiple organizations or processes). OMB should recognize that adopting systems that implement whole vertical processes is difficult since a vertical system must completely support a customer's process to be used and requires great investment and stakeholder buy-in to develop. However, adopting a well built enterprise service (such as authentication, grant search, or grant apply) is a lot more feasible and cost effective. Therefore enterprise services like grants.gov are dramatically much easier to adopt than the grants CoE's provided by DoEd, HHS, and NSF.
Mistake 3: The FEA Practice Guidance skips a fundamental goal: creating an Enterprise Architecture. The FEA Practice Guidance looks like an incredible cost-saving tool that helps agencies define and implement enterprise-wide services and coordinate the IT efforts across multiple programs. The guidance covers defining segment architectures, conducting EA transition, and using performance metrics to analyze the efficacy of an EA program.Yet, it does not cover developing an EA since "there is already a broad body of knowledge on these topics". The closest compatible document is the Practical Guide to the FEA that was written in 2001, and most of which is superseded by the Practice Guidance. The absence of a compatible plan to develop an EA makes the Practice Guidance extremely difficult to implement.
All is not lost. Through LoBs and the FEA OMB has a brilliant infrastructure from which it can still radically reduce redundant systems. It has galvanized a great number of people driven to provide better services and reduce cost. What does it need to do?
Fix 1: Create a market-driven set of Line of Business Enterprise Services. Grants.gov is a wonderful example of a multi-agency enterprise service. However, usage is mandatory and is in some cases customer agencies are being driven to use it for formula grants, which is just plain silly.
Fix 2: OMB needs to create a single reference for FEA implementation in agencies. The FEA Practice Guidance needs to include a section that defines a light-weight process for creating an organization-wide enterprise architecture model. The Practical Guide to the FEA delves too far into organization-wide to-be architectures as well as implementation strategies, which are not needed when using the segment architecture approach of the FEA Practice Guidance. With one more section, the FEA Practice Guidance could be the go-to document for enterprise planning.
Fix 3: The OMB 300 needs to check for enterprise planning within an agency. Why should any grant program require a new system? What about services that can be shared across programs or processes? These questions should be directly asked by having applicants research nearest neighbors within an agency (and within LoB service implementations) and describe how a new IT initiative uses those nearest neighbors, or provide compelling reasons why they cannot use them. The application should include evidence of enterprise planning including a segment architecture diagram and an enterprise sequence plan. If enterprise planning is occurring at an agency, then these one-page diagrams would be easy to generate.
Right now, agencies are holding their breath to determine if Lines of Business will survive into the new administration. Formed with the best of intentions, LoBs have languished under its implementation as huge monopolistic SaaS deployments with customer agencies being dragged into their use. It is time for reform and allow LoBs and the FEA to truly save taxpayer money.
I wish to remind readers that the opinions expressed in this article are my own, and do not necessarily reflect those of TCG or its employees.
Robert W. Buccigrossi, Ph.D.
Posted by rbuccigrossi on November 11, 2008 at 16:09 in Grants Management, Saving the Taxpayer Money | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Clamav is an excellent open source multi-platform antivirus program that we use on our systems and projects. While clamav comes with utilities to update the antivirus definitions, there isn't a utility to update the engine (instead the antivirus update gives a warning).
The following is a shell script that uses the wget to grab the latest version from Sourceforge, compile, and install it. (The original is at Mac OS X Hints, but needed an update to get the latest clamav version.)
#!/bin/sh
############################################
## Documentation:
## Please modify the url variable to the mirror closest to you.
############################################
url="http://easynews.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/clamav/clamav-"
latest=`lynx -dump "http://www.clamav.net/download/sources" \
| grep "Latest stable release:" | awk '{print $5}' | head -1`
wget $url$latest.tar.gz && \
printf "The latest version of clamav or %s has been downloaded!\n" $latest && \
tar zxvf clamav-$latest.tar.gz && \
cd clamav-$latest
./configure &&
make && \
make install && \
printf "Ok I am updating to the latest virus definitions for \
version %s by running freshclam.", $latest && \
freshclam && \
cd ..
Enjoy!
Posted by rbuccigrossi on November 04, 2008 at 18:26 in Technology | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)