Cleaning up the neighborhood: A San Francisco case study
0What if you could make litter, graffiti, and other problems in your neighborhood go away just by using your phone
Building data. It’s a small thing, but what if the buildings where we live, work and play were able to show us how they work
In August of 1993, San Francisco officially adopted the Sunshine Ordinance, a law that allowed any citizen to request city documents, records, filings or correspondence, attend meetings of any group that meets with the Mayor or city department heads and make any meeting of the governing bodies of certain local, state, regional and federal agencies attended by City representatives public
It's 9:15 on Friday night, and there are about 100 people milling around the GAAFTA headquarters
2011 SF Mayoral Candidate Dennis Herrera on the role of meetups in civic engagement
2011 SF Mayoral Candidate Joanna Rees on the role of meetups in civic engagement
CityCampSF founder, NationBuilder Chief Organizer and Gov 2.0 Host Adriel Hampton on CityCamp
CityCamp founder Kevin Curry on how CityCamp San Francisco fits in and stands out
City of San Francisco’s Department of Technology Jay Nath on why government should have an innovation officer
Tropo’s Mark Headd discusses the impact of hackathons on the open government movement and how developers can get involved
What if you could make litter, graffiti, and other problems in your neighborhood go away just by using your phone
Building data. It’s a small thing, but what if the buildings where we live, work and play were able to show us how they work
In August of 1993, San Francisco officially adopted the Sunshine Ordinance, a law that allowed any citizen to request city documents, records, filings or correspondence, attend meetings of any group that meets with the Mayor or city department heads and make any meeting of the governing bodies of certain local, state, regional and federal agencies attended by City representatives public
It’s 9:15 on Friday night, and there are about 100 people milling around the GAAFTA headquarters
A wrap-up of SFOpen 2011, the San Francisco mayoral forum on open government, civic technology and public innovation
If there’s one lesson that’s inherent to CityCampSF, it’s that crowdsourcing will save the world
2011 SF Mayoral Candidate Dennis Herrera on the role of meetups in civic engagement
2011 SF Mayoral Candidate Joanna Rees on the role of meetups in civic engagement
CityCampSF founder, NationBuilder Chief Organizer and Gov 2.0 Host Adriel Hampton on CityCamp
CityCamp founder Kevin Curry on how CityCamp San Francisco fits in and stands out