NASA Making Government More Accessible With Cutting-Edge Use Of New Media

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Dec. 09, 2009

David E. Steitz 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1730 
david.steitz@xxxxxxxx 

Ed Campion 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-0697 
edward.s.campion@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 09-283

NASA MAKING GOVERNMENT MORE ACCESSIBLE WITH CUTTING-EDGE USE OF NEW MEDIA

WASHINGTON -- NASA is supporting the White House's Open Government 
Directive with a number of Internet-based programs designed to make 
the agency more accessible and create a dialog with the American 
people about their space program. 

NASA is one of six departments and agencies working to spur innovation 
by making it easier for high-tech companies to identify 
collaborative, entrepreneurial opportunities. Government agencies are 
home to treasure troves of data and information, too much of which is 
underutilized by the private sector because it is either not easily 
found or exists in cumbersome formats. NASA and the National 
Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration in the 
Department of Health and Human Services, the Agricultural Research 
Service in the Department of Agriculture, the National Institute of 
Standards and Technology in the Department of Commerce and the 
Department of Energy are working together to increase access to 
information on publicly-funded technologies that are available for 
license, opportunities for federal funding and partnerships, and 
potential private-sector partners. 

NASA's Innovative Partnerships Programs Office is working to establish 
an RSS feed to publicize technologies available for public licensing. 
By making information from multiple agencies available in RSS and XML 
feeds on Data.gov, the government empowers innovators to find the 
information they need and receive real-time updates, which can fuel 
entrepreneurial momentum, create new jobs, and strengthen economic 
growth. NASA's RSS feed will make these opportunities more visible to 
the commercial and research communities. NASA plans on having the 
feed operational by Dec. 31. 

NASA also has undertaken an extensive effort to use the Internet and 
social media tools to engage the public on agency activities. NASA's 
home page on the Internet, www.nasa.gov, offers information on all of 
the agency's missions, research and discoveries. 

In January 2009, nasa.gov capitalized on the agency's growing social 
media efforts by rolling out a new "Connect and Collaborate with 
NASA" page, at www.nasa.gov/connect.  This provides the public with 
quick connections to the agency's pages on Twitter, Facebook, 
UStream, YouTube, Flickr and MySpace, as well as NASA podcasts and 
vodcasts on iTunes. The page also provides links to agency chats, 
Tweetup events, RSS feeds and the agency's official blog. 

The agency's social media presence was further expanded in November 
with the addition of NASA's Twitter feed to the homepage. The website 
offers links to NASA-related desktop "widgets" and opportunities for 
the public to collaborate directly with the agency through art 
contests, engineering challenges and imagery and data analysis. 

Another new communication tool is Spacebook, a NASA internal expert 
networking utility. Spacebook has been used to improve collaboration 
across NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. The Spacebook site allows 
new and established NASA staff to get to know the agency's diverse 
community of scientists, engineers, project managers and support 
personnel. 

"Space doesn't explore itself. Science doesn't discover itself. People 
do that, and to do that they have to talk," said Emma Antunes, the 
project manager who also manages Goddard's Web site. "They have to 
trade questions and ideas. They have to connect. And, the more 
diverse the group, the more likely connections and conversations will 
lead to new ideas and innovation. Spacebook will enhance NASA's 
capacity to do just that." 

For more information about NASA's use of the Internet and social media 
to interact with America, visit: 


http//www.nasa.gov/connect  


For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov     

	
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