3. Challenge: Government must be more productive “ Why should the government pay for and build infrastructure that is available at a low cost? ” “ In these tough economic times, the government must buy smarter. ” “ If in our lives we can go online and provision e-mail in a matter of minutes...why must the government spend millions on information that's not sensitive? ”
5. Government has to deliver services not only within our own geographical boundaries but to a globally dispersed citizenry which require convenient access to government services. Challenge: Serving the Public Citizens are putting more demands on their governments, not only in regard to how services are provided, but in how efficiently government operations are run.
7. A “ government cloud ” mirrors the system used by Google and other large companies, which put cheap “ server ” computers into huge data centers to provide computing power on demand which is delivered where it is needed via the internet. That would be provided to government departments and local government, replacing the aging and inefficient systems used in many of the hundreds of data centers presently used and frequently run at far below their capacity because they are dedicated to one department.
8. Cloud Computing Explained Characteristics of Cloud Services Little or No Capital Expense Elastic and Scalable Consumption based Pricing Rapid acquisition and deployment Lower ongoing operating costs Cloud computing has been referred to as the democratization of Information Technology. Give your users the tools to solve their IT problems instead of making them dependent on a limited pool of IT “experts”. Privileged and Confidential. NDA Required for External Disclosure. Characteristics of Cloud Services
9. October 2009 - http://apps.gov launched! Federal CIO Vivek Kundra launched the government-sponsored cloud computing services website Apps.Gov in October 2009 to showcase cloud and Software as a Service options preapproved for use by federal agencies. said Kundra , can s implify acquisition, budgeting, policy planning, and architecture . Cloud computing ,
11. UK government creates G-Cloud The UK government has unveiled a sweeping strategy to create its own internal "cloud computing" system as part of a radical plan that it claims could save up to £3.2bn a year from an annual bill of at least £16bn. The key part of the new strategy, outlined by the Cabinet Office minister Angela Smith, will be the concentration of government computing power into a series of about a dozen highly secure data centres, each costing up to £250m to build, which will replace more than 500 presently used by central government, police forces and local authorities.
15. ePLDT Company Profile Established in 2000, ePLDT, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of PLDT. ePLDT is one of Philippines’ leading provider of ICT Solutions. ePLDT operates Vitro Data Center, the country’s first purpose built Data Center. Vitro Data Center is ISO 9001, ISO 27001 and PEZA certified. ePLDT notable public-sector projects: BIR – Managed Contact Center using CosmoCall Universe Platform DPWH – Managed Network Connectivity to 54 Sites Nationwide NPC – Managed Network Connectivity to 103 Sites Nationwide (for implementation) PAGASA – Integrated High Performance Computing (for implementation) PPA – Supply and Delivery of Microsoft Licenses DTI – Design, Development, Maintenance and Collocation of DTI Portal Pag-IBIG Fund – Supply, Delivery and Installation of Enterprise Anti-Virus Solution DBM – Disaster Recovery Services
16. Thank You For inquiries: [email_address] [email_address] Corporate Hotline: 885-0000 www.epldt.com