XO Korea/central government/pm/ogpc: Difference between revisions

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{{Translations}}
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{{XO Korea/government server/content overview}}
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{{XO Korea/yawl}}
{{:XO Korea/yawl}}


=[Tier 1] Server No.11 General =
=[Tier 1] Server No.11 General =

Latest revision as of 17:50, 19 May 2007

  Please copy/paste "{{Translationlist | xx | origlang=en | translated={{{translated}}}}}" (where xx is ISO 639 language code for your translation) to XO Korea/central government/pm/ogpc/translations HowTo [ID# 38450]  +/-  

환영합니다 | Portal | XO Korea | Deployment | Content | Hardware | Software | Mesh Network | Ethics | LOS | XO City | Accreditation | Consortium

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The purpose of establishing governmental server architecture as a component of OEA is very simple, establishing common government modules which will;

  • be used by various nations commonly,
  • be made by citizens of various national backgrounds,
  • complement, substitute or replace current governmental functions,
  • show transparent governmental processes to citizens regardless of their nationalities, and,
  • most importantly, provide highly developed governmental systems to developing nations, the same as OLPC


That is, like OLPC's providing children with XO laptops rather than teachers, XO Korea also hopes to provide developing nations with governmental servers and program modules (so called, e-Government), rather than highly educated governmental employees.


How wonderful it is if children and citizens in an African nation participate in writing a governmental module via collaborating with those children and citizens in Korea, and if they use the same modules as Korean governments for their own nations and governments. For this purpose, XO Korea has prepared and is preparing very sophisticated architectures. Briefly;


There will be about 1,000 governmental servers in Korea at the end of year 2008, and their role is to replace human-oriented governmental services with those of system oriented. The governmental servers also are dominated and used by human beings, but not governmental employees but citizens themselves. The Prosumer (producer + consumer, or producer = consumer) is the only guideline of all activities of XO Korea .


Contrary to the Tier 1 ~6 classification of governmental services (functions) written by the Korean government, XO Korea has reclassified them into tier 1~3 by eliminating unnecessary or duplicated governmental functions.

  • About 10~15 Tier 1 servers will provide common modules to Tier 2 servers.
  • About 60~70 Tier 2 servers will provide common modules to Tier 3 servers.
  • About 900~1,000 Tier 3 servers will provide 1~10 governmental functions to Users.


So, the Tire 3 servers will interact with users of governmental services (functions), and XO Korea provides Open Enterprise Architecture about how to write codes using Python etc., how to avoid repetitive works, how to share common modules, and how to localize servers etc. XO Korea hopes those just 1,000+ servers and their administrators (equally 1,000+) shall replace some of current governmental or public organizations by providing the same functions or services. Furthermore, those servers shall be localized into more than 200 nations including not only developing nations but highly developed nations also.

Yawl.png

YAWL is a Workflow/BPM system. Based on a concise and powerful modelling language; YAWL handles complex data, transformations & Web Service integration. Built in Java, it uses XML Schema, XPath/Query, & XForms natively. It is compatible with SOAP & WSDL.

XO Korea uses YAWL to visually diagram workflow of any function or service, including those of governmental business sections.

Before you participate in writing codes for e-Governments or e-Business modules, it is strongly recommended to read three kinds of documents below.

  • YAWL: what is YAWL and how to use it.
  • XO Korea/oea: what is Open Enterprise Architecture and how to use it.
  • XO Korea/workflow description of each target service or function: in-depth description of the module desired to be written.

[Tier 1] Server No.11 General

[Tier 3] Server No.111 Presidential Affairs

[Tier 3] Server No.1113 Coordination of Governmental Policies

[Tier 3] Server No.1114 Evaluating Governmental Performances

[Tier 3] Server No.1115 Regulation Renovation

[Tier 3] Server No.1116 Long-Term Goals

[Tier 3] Server No.1117 Economic, Social, & Human Literature

[Tier 3] Server No.1118 Administration

[Tier 3] Server No.1119 Lottery Fund Operation (General)

[Tier 2] Server No.116 Local Finance

[Tier 3] Server No.1120 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting local governments)

[Tier 1] Server No.14 Social Welfare

[Tier 2] Server No.117 Social Weak

[Tier 3] Server No.1121 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting weak people)

[Tier 2] Server No.118 Veterans Affairs

[Tier 3] Server No.1122 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting veterans etc.)

[Tier 2] Server No.119 Social Welfare

[Tier 3] Server No.1123 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting social welfare)

[Tier 1] Server No.15 Culture, Sports, & Tourism

[Tier 2] Server No.120 Cultural Heritage

[Tier 3] Server No.1124 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting the preservation of cultural heritage)

[Tier 1] Server No.16 Agriculture, Maritime, & Fishery

[Tier 2] Server No.121 Forest

[Tier 3] Server No.1125 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting the preservation of forests and environments)

[Tier 1] Server No.17 Public Order & Safety

[Tier 2] Server No.122 Emergency Plan

[Tier 3] Server No.1126 Lottery Fund Operation (supporting emergency treatment)