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	<title>Intentional Design Inc. &#187; politics</title>
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		<title>XML and the Obama administration</title>
		<link>http://intentionaldesign.ca/2009/01/20/xml-and-the-obama-administration/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2009 23:10:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[This morning, I came to my co-work office, and as I was waiting for my morning latte to be served up by the most efficient and personable Dane, the inauguration played on the super-large Mac flat screen in the background. I got goosebumps (and only a bit of that was because of the draft near [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This morning, I came to my co-work office, and as I was waiting for my morning latte to be served up by the most efficient and personable Dane, the inauguration played on the super-large Mac flat screen in the background. I got goosebumps (and only a bit of that was because of the draft near the desk I’d chosen for the day) as I contemplated the changes afoot. Canadians have a saying that goes something like: When the White House sneezes, the Prime Minister catches a cold. Our economies are so intertwined that everything affecting the south-of-the-49th affects us north-of-the-49th parallel, as well.</p>
<p>So when <a title="The Vancouver Sun" href="http://www.vancouversun.com/">The Vancouver Sun</a>‘s <a title="Gillian Shaw" href="http://twitter.com/gillianshaw">Gillian Shaw</a> pointed her Twitter followers to the <a title="first blog post of the Obama administration" href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/change_has_come_to_whitehouse-gov/">first blog post of the Obama administration</a>, I went there to get an idea of the tone of what I heard on CBC referred to as the New “New Deal”.</p>
<p>About half-way down, I noticed the following sentence: “The President’s executive orders and proclamations will be published for everyone to review, and that’s just the beginning of our efforts to provide a window for all Americans into the business of the government.” Fabulous, of course. Then I started to wonder about how this would happen, the speed of which this information would get published, whether it would be single-sourced from the original source, which other publishing channels the material would be pushed to, and what flavour of XML would be used to accomplish all of this. A few years ago, the <a title="Irish government got their staff working in XML" href="http://www.dclab.com/xml_authoring.asp">Irish government got their staff working in XML</a>, without them even knowing it, in order to get them publishing content faster, more efficiently, and without the potential of degraded accuracy inherent with “cut ‘n paste” methods of multi-channel publishing.</p>
<p>With the new administration appointing its <a title="first CTO" href="http://venturebeat.com/2007/11/13/exclusive-barack-obama-to-name-a-chief-technology-officer/">first CTO</a>, no doubt there will be great changes coming about. No doubt content strategies are way down on the list &#8211; infrastructure and data security is bound to be way higher priorities &#8211; but at some point, this will need to be addressed. I can only hope that whoever gets that gig will be allowed to do the conference circuit to speak about how they made it happen &#8211; I mean, wouldn’t you be awfully curious, too?</p>
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