State government
27 TopicsThe City Leader's Dilemma: How AI Is turning urban strain into strategic advantage
Ready to transform how your city plans and operates? Download the Trend Report 2025: Planning and operating thriving cities – innovation for smarter urban living to access the complete playbook on AI-powered urban innovation, complete with case studies from Bangkok, Singapore, Barcelona, and Manchester. Urban challenges aren’t slowing down. Populations are growing, climate pressures are intensifying, and residents expect seamless services, while budgets remain flat and workforces stretch thin. Traditional approaches can’t keep pace. The good news? Cities worldwide are showing that AI and digital innovation can drive meaningful improvements. Recent studies indicate that more than half of surveyed cities are already using AI to upgrade operations, and most plan to expand adoption in the next three years. For many leaders, the question is less about whether to act and more about how to act responsibly and effectively. After studying the latest research and real-world deployments, three strategic shifts stand out, each offering a different lens on how forward-thinking city leaders are turning pressure into progress. Shift One: From Fragmented services to unified citizen experiences Residents expect seamless problem-solving, not organizational complexity. Yet many cities operate in silos, transit systems, permitting offices, 311 reporting, and community engagement often run on separate platforms. The result? Multiple apps for residents, duplicated effort for staff, and missed insights locked in departmental databases. Leading cities are breaking this pattern through unified digital platforms powered by AI. Bangkok’s Traffy Fondue: Citizens report issues like broken streetlights or flooding via a mobile interface. AI categorizes each report and routes it to the right department. By mid-2025, the platform handled nearly one million citizen reports, improving engagement and reducing administrative overhead. The outcome? Reduced administrative overhead, and something harder to measure but equally important: residents who believe their government actually listens. Buenos Aires took a similar path with "Boti," a WhatsApp chatbot that evolved from a COVID-era tool into a citywide digital assistant. Citizens report issues, ask questions, and access services through the messaging app they already use daily. Technology that meets residents where they are improves efficiency and strengthens trust, when guided by principles of transparency and fairness. Shift Two: From reactive planning to predictive foresight Traditional urban planning relies on static models: masterplans, zoning maps, historical growth trends. These tools served their purpose. But they cannot capture the complexity of future risks, extreme weather, evolving mobility patterns, or the cascading effects of a single development decision. Digital twins complement human expertise by integrating geospatial data, climate models, and policy scenarios, helping cities make smarter decisions with limited budgets. Singapore's Digital Urban Climate Twin integrates geospatial data with climate models to simulate how different policies would affect temperature and thermal comfort across neighborhoods. These tools support informed decision-making while maintaining human oversight and accountability. The result? Strategic adaptation rather than reactive firefighting. Sydney built an urban digital twin that correlates environmental conditions with traffic accidents, using machine learning to predict crash risk on specific road segments. City planners can now test interventions virtually, what happens if we lower speed limits here? Add a bike lane there? Before committing resources. Even smaller cities are finding value. Imola, Italy uses a microclimate digital twin to model heat distribution street by street, guiding decisions about where to plant trees or specify cool pavement materials. The paradigm shift is profound: instead of planning based on what happened, cities can now plan based on what's likely to happen. This is how you make smart bets with limited budgets. Shift Three: From tech adoption to governance architecture Here's where many cities stumble. They invest in flashy pilots without building the institutional structures to sustain them. The cities getting this right treat governance as a strategic asset, not a compliance burden. Singapore's Model AI Governance Framework provides practical guidelines for transparency, fairness, and human-centric design. Its AI Verify toolkit lets organizations test their systems for resilience, accountability, and bias before deployment. Barcelona takes a different but equally rigorous approach, treating municipal data as a public asset under its Data Commons program. The city's procurement strategy favors open-source solutions, preventing vendor lock-in while supporting local innovation ecosystems. Both models share a common insight: rapid innovation doesn't automatically produce equitable outcomes. Governance creates the guardrails that allow experimentation without derailment. For city leaders, this means building cross-sector governance councils, adopting clear data strategies, creating ethical AI frameworks, and investing in workforce capability. These aren't obstacles to innovation; they're the foundation that makes sustained innovation possible. The Path Forward Cities that thrive in combine strategic vision with disciplined, responsible technology use. They embed digital capabilities into decision-making, supported by robust policies and cross-department collaboration. Learn how Microsoft helps governments build tech-empowered cities and resilient infrastructure at Microsoft for government. The Smart Cities World 2025 Trend Report provides the detailed case studies, governance frameworks, and implementation roadmaps to make this real. Download your copy now and start building the city your residents deserve.90Views0likes0CommentsWindows Server CAL rights M365 G3
This resource shows that Windows Server CAL rights are included in M365 E3 licenses. https://www.microsoft.com/licensing/terms/product/CALandMLEquivalencyLicenses/ Is it safe to say that the M365 G3 license includes the Server CAL rights as well? We have reviewed the government plan service descriptions as well as the Product Terms (but there is no entry for GCC). Could someone please direct me to a resource? Thank you.Microsoft Reseller Authorization Number
We are Partners with Microsoft, we have MPN ID, CSP, MAP, everything. We need a Microsoft authorization number to resell the Microsoft products in Government-E-Marketplace. From Where and how can we get the code? We tried connecting with Microsoft Support through ticket, calls, mails, and partner support through mail, not helpful at all. Any Leads/Microsoft Partner Support Contact Number would be helpful. Thank you.VDA Rights in a Microsoft G3 License via a CSP Subscription
If a customer has Microsoft G3 licenses in a GCC (government tenant) sold through a CSP Agreement, do they have on-premises VDA rights? The Windows Enterprise component of the Microsoft G3 is not available today when purchased through CSP, however I am wondering if they would still get on-premises VDA rights since they are paying for this functionality. In the commercial equivalent (the Microsoft E3), the VDA rights are included for onprem.App to host and rate FAQ information
Hi All, I work as a Trainer and i am trying to find an app that allows me to post FAQs easily and as officers use the information they can click a button to say they have used it. The more clicks it gets the higher up the list it will rise. I also need them to be able to make multiple clicks if they access the information more that once over the time it is posted. Does such an app exist?Admin submissions portal in Microsoft Defender for Office 365 GCC
I'm having a hard time understanding why Microsoft doesn't rescan emails submitted through the Admin Submissions page in the Microsoft 365 Security portal. I also don't understand why URL and File submissions are disabled for Administrators. Why should a tenant admin need to open a support ticket to submit a phishing/malicious email in order for Microsoft to actually review it? How does this protect tenants from phishing emails that specifically target US/State/Local employees? Accounts assigned Security/Organization/Global admin roles should be able to submit emails, urls, and files to Microsoft directly through the Admin submissions page. Microsoft should acknowledge when a privileged account is submitting a missed malware/phishing/spam email, rescan the submission and use the submission to improve threat intelligence filters.Join us Oct. 27: Key strategies + tech to improve the nation’s cybersecurity
RSVP and join us to see demos and hear speakers from government and industry discuss top strategies and tech to agencies improve their cybersecurity on Oct. 27 from 6-7 p.m. ET during a virtual Azure Government user community meetup. Featured speakers: Joseph (Tommy) Doyle, CISM, PMP, CSM, ITIL, Chief, Security Operations, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) John Nicely, Principal Program Manager, Azure Global, Microsoft Emily Cummins, Director of Cloud Security, Anitian TJ Banasik, CISSP-ISSEP, ISSAP, ISSMP, Senior Program Manager, Cloud & AI Security, Microsoft Lili Davoudian, Program Manager II, Cloud & AI Security, Microsoft Vishal Amin, Managing Director, Security Compliance & Identity, Microsoft Federal This event is free and open to the public. Be sure to check out the agenda and RSVP todayApps not showing on iOS PowerApps app
For GCC folks deploying PowerApps for use on mobile platform, on the Login screen for the app, at the bottom right corner, there's a settings gear. You must set your Region for your environment. The default is "Global" and had to set ours to "US Government GCC" for the apps to appear. Took me a while to find this as I was searching PowerApps docs instead of GCC-specific PowerApps docs. As soon as the Region was set correctly, the apps were there. Perhaps this should be in the troubleshooting document?Invitation to join government & industry speakers Dec. 2 at the #AzureGovMeetup
Join our Azure Government user community Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 6:30pm ET for a virtual #AzureGovMeetup. We have an excellent lineup of government & industry speakers sharing tools, tech and best practices to help agencies achieve speed to capability. Featured speakers from White House Presidential Innovation Fellows, IRS, CloudBees, Red Hat, SAIC & Microsoft. Check out the agenda and RSVP here: www.meetup.com/DCAzureGov