...understanding how changes to GOV.UK content can impact your service what we learned about how to make data more accessible an unconference session for anyone to ask general or technical...
...panel’s response to the steps Digital Marketplace have taken to address the 4 criteria not passed at the original beta assessment. The panel were really encouraged to see how the...
...didn’t recognise. We’ve since implemented a new tracking code, which was easy to do using this tracking code generator from Google. To set up a code, you just need to...
...data analysis and data science to find answers to common questions. This has helped us to go into more detail than we might normally do on government blogs, and to...
...code available as open source. One recommendation for the future is to continue to clearly separate out secure code and patterns from the wider code base to allow more code...
...is a key objective, how will the system ensure this? How will resistance to new technology among solicitors affect their interaction with the product and the process? How should the...
...need to be signed into Google Sheets, and then go to File > Make a copy. To use the ImportJSON function in a spreadsheet cell, enter the API query URL...
...positive to see the collaboration in the team and to hear how all team members understood the value of their work and how it relates to the overall vision, and...
...issues, and the tool then uses s open data to predict how your decisions will affect the city and its future population in 2036. Finally, I was most moved by...
...findings can be made reproducible by writing them in code because, unlike a point-and-click tool, the code can be re-run to confirm a result or to apply the same method...
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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.