Hi John,
We don't have a budget right now to add new functionalities to the
website, so any new tools like this would have to be freely available
ac
John Hibbs wrote:
Speaking of "forgotten" technologies, how about fax-on-demand? And
auto-responders?
In this regard, a friendly thought sent
Speaking of "forgotten" technologies, how about fax-on-demand? And
auto-responders?
In this regard, a friendly thought sent with a hug -
on this page
http://www.digitaldivide.net/about/contact.php
Perhaps in each of the categories the viewer could send an email to ???
(media???)@digitaldivide.net
True that the telephone is accessible, but at least in the US, phoning many
government services gets one into a tree (thicket) of recorded menus and canned
answers. Sometimes useful but a simple question can take an age to find the
answer to, and anything more complex becomes an exercise in frustra
Andy -- thanks for posting this. Sometimes we forget how powerful the
"old" technologies (i.e. telephones) can be. I think the thrust of this
report is important -- "which electronic channels work best" I would even
drop the word "electronic". Our goal is access to government information,
From GovTech.net, a UK story on achieving E-Government for All... -ac
Want E-Gov? Pick Up the Phone
In an attempt to find out which electronic channels work best for local
governments -- and what local citizens think of the channels available
for using e-government services -- the United Kingdom'