Search FCW


Subscribe Now!
Table of Contents
Sprint
Business
BPM
CXOs
Columns
Columnists
Defense
E-Government
Elections 2008
Enterprise Architecture
Funding
Homeland Security
Health IT
IPv6
LOB
Management
Procurement
Privacy
Policy
Program Management
State and Local
Security
Technology
Telework
Training and Certification
Workforce

More Topics
resourcecenter
Home
Letters to the Editor
Current Issue/Download
Print/Online Archives
Editorial Calendar
researchstore
resourcecenter
Communications for Continuity Operations

Oracle Resource Center
NEW! Transforming Data Center
Managed Services
Service Oriented Architecture
Training & Simulation
Networking Communications
Security Directives and Compliance
Data Center Virtualization
Air Force ELSG Contract Guide

More >>



Latest News
ADVERTISEMENT





 

WebGov still suffers delays

By DOUG BROWN
Published on August 15, 1999

Comment

Click here to comment on this article


Newsletters

You might also be interested in these FCW newsletters:

Daily

To learn more, click here.


After more than a year of work, a project to organize and centralize all federal government information on the Internet is still at least months away from completion.

But the government's intentions to some day launch the mega-site called WebGov has not stopped private companies from moving in, organizing the information themselves and starting their own World Wide Web sites dedicated to smoothing people's Internet dealings with the federal government.

Thomas Freebairn, the director of the General Services Administration's WebGov project, agreed that the project was taking longer than expected. WebGov has "been bouncing around for a long time," Freebairn said in an interview last month.

Vice President Al Gore's National Partnership for Reinventing Government has become involved with the project, said Katie Hirning, head of information technology for NPR and the organization's deputy director. WebGov will be more than a catalog of links to federal Web sites, she said. The idea is to structure the site by topic and service so that if a user needs to find out how, for example, to find a description of Social Security retirement benefits, WebGov will lead the person to the site easily and quickly.

Many existing federal Web sites that organize information from agencies, such as the White House site (www.whitehouse.gov) and the Commerce Department's FedWorld Information Network (www.fedworld.gov), focus more on offering links to agencies than on providing services and topics. From these Web sites, users wanting to find information about Social Security need to know to click on the link to the Social Security Administration and then navigate SSA's Web site. WebGov will streamline access to federal information, Hirning said.

WebGov, which Hirning considers a federal home page instead of an information portal, plans to work with commercial enterprises offering federal Web portals to explore ways that the commercial portals and WebGov could complement one another. At the very least, she said, the portals could direct users to WebGov as a government service.

Freebairn, who took over the WebGov project about four months ago, said the site may be ready for a preview in September. "We need to be careful about when and how we roll out a preview and the full system. We just want to make sure that we are ready to handle the load, and we want to have a good system up when there is a public opening."


upcoming event

Green Computing Summit, Ronald Reagan Building, Washington, DC
December 2 - December 3, 2008

Trusted Internet Connection and the Comprehensive National Cyber Security Initiative, The Willard Intercontinental Hotel, Washington, DC
December 4, 2008


 

head
fcw
issue
First Name State
Last Name Zip
Title Email