...website runs on minimal technology, using inexpensive cloud hosting. Supported by established open source tools and developing code in the open. This is the right way to allow iteration and...
...the Digital-by-Default Service Standard, Service Design Manual and the Technology Code of Practice. After some short training on service assessment, I joined the BIS family of assessors and scheduled my...
...Performance Platform team to agree extra KPIs to measure success. Start work on a public dashboard to display service performance (see Measurement). Open up code as a default. Look again...
...to the service. Open source Code in the open; nothing is stopping the team from opening up the source, so they should do so at earliest available opportunity. Design Update...
...such as RTextTools and RCurl, in just 13 lines of code, David was able to segregate the comments in to two groups: 1) those against and 2) those in favour...
...team should ensure that the code for the service has been released prior to launch The service team should engage with the cross-government design community to gain advice and contribute...
...needs of the service. Have used appropriate tools to build, host and operate the service and also put code in the open. Have capacity and flexibility to update and improve...
...to tidy principles, as is often the case on code-challenge websites. The students enjoyed this difference in working and commented: This was our first time dealing with messy real-world textual...
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About this blog
This is a cross government blog about our work with data and the way we’re using performance analysis and data science techniques to improve service delivery and policy outcomes, and our work to find, access and use open government data.