On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 2:20 PM, McGovern, James wrote:
> I have decided to run for State Representative and often get questions from
> other candidates regarding ways government can be made more efficient. Do
> you think there is merit in technology groups such as Apache holding forums
> to educat
On 07/02/2014 02:20 PM, McGovern, James wrote:
I have decided to run for State Representative and often get questions
from other candidates regarding ways government can be made more
efficient. Do you think there is merit in technology groups such as
Apache holding forums to educate elected
I think that's the wrong question. We're (mostly) a bunch of programmers
and know sod all about governance (much as each/most of us will happily
expound on what we think we know :) ).
I imagine however that many of us would happily offer up some time to hear
about the problems that government face
James,
In my opinion, government is more a management issue than advancing ideals
and personal agendas. If this is possible, which I honestly doubt, things
can get better.
*Héctor M. Arroyo, BSIT/SE*
*(352) 304-9427*
On Wed, Jul 2, 2014 at 3:43 PM, Andrew Musselman wrote:
> Yes, good idea.
>
Yes, good idea.
> On Jul 2, 2014, at 11:20 AM, "McGovern, James" wrote:
>
> I have decided to run for State Representative and often get questions from
> other candidates regarding ways government can be made more efficient. Do you
> think there is merit in technology groups such as Apache hol
I have decided to run for State Representative and often get questions from
other candidates regarding ways government can be made more efficient. Do you
think there is merit in technology groups such as Apache holding forums to
educate elected officials on the value of open source?
http://face