PATRONIZING FREE MOBILE APPS
PATRONIZING FREE MOBILE APPS
Dear Mr. President: I am writing you about the fact
that many National Government Agencies (NGAs) and Local Government Units (LGUs)
have been unable to comply with your orders to digitalize the delivery of their
public services, in line with your administration’s goal of achieving the so
called “ease of doing business”.
I think that the problem is two-pronged. Either the NGAs
and LGUs do not have enough budgets for digitalization, or they are burdened by
the complexities of public bidding rules, which could take months or even years
to process. In the meantime, the public is suffering from the travails brought
about by the “difficulties of doing business” with the government.
I found the courage to write you directly, because I
believe that I have found the solution to the two-pronged problem. Firstly, the
solution is very cheap and very affordable, and therefore solves the problem of
not having enough budgets. Secondly, the cost of the solution is way below one
million pesos, which means that a public bidding is no longer required to
procure it. And since the solution does not require the procurement of goods, it
may not even require the canvassing process at all.
Mr. President, I am referring to several offerings of
free mobile apps that are already available for the use of the NGAs and LGUs,
should you accept the offers of the developers behind them. I have been
coordinating with these developers, such that I know who they are, and how to
contact them. When necessary, these developers are also willing to conduct the
training for their actual users at the national and local levels on a batch-by-batch
basis to make it more affordable and economical. The educational content of
these training modules is proprietary, which is the reason why these are
exempted from the usual procurement rules.
Mr. President, I also heard you say several times that
you would like the online services of the NGAs and LGUs to be fully interoperable,
aside from being digitalized, based on my many years of experience as a manager
of Information and Communications Technology (ICT) systems and projects, that
would be very difficult to do if the backend systems are written in
incompatible codes. Of course, Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) could
be used, but the compatibility is always a challenge. Often, inexact data
conversion would affect data conversion.
One advantage of mobile apps is that the codes are
written in the same “environment” such that APIs are not needed. What is important
is that the data at the backend or the back office is readable by any browser. This
is not very difficult to do, because most data files are now browser-friendly, and
if they are not, data conversion technologies are now very reliable. The most
common format for this is Comma-Separated Values (CSVs).
Mr. President, technically, these developers are offering web apps
and not mobile apps, but the differences between these two have practically disappeared.
The web apps that are being offered could run on any device, using any browser,
meaning that they are already 100% mobile friendly. The main difference between
the two is that mobile apps are “native” to the device (meaning installed on
the phone), and web apps are not. That is a disadvantage, because it takes up
too much of the phone’s space and memory. By the way Mr. President, there are many
other ICT practitioners who are willing to help the government improve its
public services via internet and mobile solutions. We are just waiting for your
call. IKE SENERES/09-21-2024
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