Ferramentas Pessoais

Missão

O Instituto de Informática  tem por missão apoiar a definição das políticas e estratégias das tecnologias de informação e comunicação (TIC) do Ministério das Finanças e da Administração Pública (MFAP) e garantir o planeamento, concepção, execução e avaliação das iniciativas de informatização e actualização tecnológica dos respectivos serviços e organismos, assegurando uma gestão eficaz e racional dos recursos disponíveis.

A Entidade de Serviços Partilhados da Administração Pública, I.P. (eSPap), cuja criação foi concretizada através do Decreto-Lei n.º 117-A/2012, de 14 de junho, assume a missão e atribuições do anterior Instituto de Informática, extinto por fusão. www.espap.pt

 

Gestão de dados e Informação

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The Business Case for Information Management: An Oracle Thought Leadership White Paper - Dez. 2008 File 144.2 kB
 
Data Handling Procedures in Government: Final Report - Jun. 2008 File 277.7 kB
Com este relatório o Governo britânico pretendeu definir alguns príncipios e medidas para melhorar a segurança dos dados que detém, para evitar fugas ou roubos, como tem acontecido recentemente no país.
Management of Research Data in ETD Systems - 2008 File 219.2 kB
To establish the research data management practices in institutions which have ETD programmes. These may include the systems in place (software and hardware), and the integration of data and text.
Report on the 9 th International Workshop on Web Information and Data Management (WIDM 2007) - 2007 File 271.7 kB
 
Model for the Future of the e-GMS - Mar. 2005 File 50.0 kB
This document has been produced by the Cabinet Office e-Government Unit’s Metadata Technical Working Group (MTWG) to provide a formal1 statement of its recommendations for the future development of e-GMS2. The Model has been approved by the Metadata Working Group. Comments on the Model should be sent to govtalk@cabinet-office.x.si.gov.uk. It describes a model for the development of the e-GMS. The model is intended to provide a framework within which the following requirements can be met: • Clear expression of the scope and usage of the e-GMS; • Clarification of the internal consistency of the e-GMS; • Clarification of the e-GMS's relationship with other standards (notably Dublin Core); • Continuity with e-GMS 3.0 (to the extent that this is coherent with the above). The intention is that this model will be used for versions of e-GMS from version 4 onwards. This will require further detailed guidance, which will be developed by the MTWG.
Metadata and interoperability presentations - Fev. 2005 File 2.0 MB
 
Government of Canada Metadata Implementation Guide for Web Resources - 3rd edition - Jul. 2004 File 894.3 kB
 
A Guide to ICT Sourcing for Australian Government Agencies - Mai. 2004 File 932.2 kB
This is a guide to effective practices for Australian Government agencies that are dealing with information and communication technology (ICT) sourcing issues. It was developed in response to a demand from agencies, recognised by the Information Management Strategy Committee (IMSC) and the Chief Information Officer Committee (CIOC), for clear and objective information about ICT sourcing. This is not a policy document or rule book. It is a guide that provides options and strategies for decision-making about ICT sourcing. It describes how agencies might manage ICT sourcing based on a four-phase lifecycle, which starts with a decision about whether to change the current sourcing strategy and concludes with an approach for transitioning to, and managing, a new sourcing solution.
e-Government Metadata Standard - Version 3.0 - Abr. 2004 File 628.8 kB
Joined-up government needs joined-up information systems. The e-Government Metadata Standard (e-GMS) lays down the elements, refinements and encoding schemes to be used by government officers when creating metadata for their information resources or designing search interfaces for information systems. The e-GMS is needed to ensure maximum consistency of metadata across public sector organisations.
NZGLS Metadata Element Set - Version 2.1 - Mar. 2004 File 172.6 kB
The New Zealand Government Locator Service (NZGLS) Metadata Element Set provides a set of metadata elements designed to improve the discovery, visibility, accessibility and interoperability of online information and services. The development objective of the NZGLS working group was to define a set of metadata elements that would improve the discovery of New Zealand government information and services. The elements would be accessible through standard web-based resource descriptions that would enable users to locate the information or service that they require.
Freedom of Information - Dez. 2002 File 1002.7 kB
The Council provides a wide range of services including housing, social services, education, libraries, roads, consumer protection, trading standards, waste management and community regeneration and support for the local economy, for nearly 180,000 people.
Freedom of Information (Scotland Act 2002) - Code of Practice on Records Management - Nov. 2002 File 143.4 kB
Part One of this Code of Practice (‘the Code’) provides guidance to all Scottish public authorities (as defined in section 3(1) of the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002 (‘the Act’)) as to the practice which it would, in the opinion of the Scottish Ministers, be desirable for them to follow in connection with the keeping, management and destruction of their records. Part Two of the Code describes the particular arrangements which apply to those authorities which transfer records to the Keeper of the Records of Scotland at the National Archives of Scotland (NAS) and Part Three describes the arrangements for those authorities which transfer records to public archives other than NAS.
SWEBOK - Guide to the Software Engineering Body of Knowledge - Mai. 2001 File 1.3 MB
 
A UK e-Government Metadata Framework - Abr. 2000 File 101.8 kB
Metadata is structured data about data. In the context of the development of UK e-government portal services, metadata is crucial. Metadata will underpin much of the functionality that a portal will deliver. Portal-type services effectively bring descriptions of documents, collections, services, people, organisations and other resources together with the particular needs of an end-user and use that information to broker access to a subset of the network services available to that user in the government sphere.
Selection Criteria for the Catalogue of Data Sources - 1998 File 220.0 kB
Metainformation1 for the EEA metadatabase (hereinafter CDS2), discussed in this report, are descriptions of written reports, magazine articles, CD-ROMs, maps, data files, databases, WEB pages and the EIONET directory. The objective for the CDS is to provide the European environmental community with relevant metainformation at European level. A common understanding that there should be a core set of metainformation available on the CDS may be discerned among the actors on the EIONET3scene. This report presents criteria on how to select that metainformation.

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