Overview

April 15

Watch Now

Making the move to Windows 11 was the easy part. Now comes the real challenge: managing and securing a diverse fleet of upgraded devices across your agency. Whether you’ve completed the migration or are deep in the planning stages, there’s a growing gap in guidance for what comes next. This 30-minute session is built to fill that void.

Join Government Technology, HP and AMD for a practical discussion on how public sector security leaders can maintain control, visibility and compliance across their IT environment post-upgrade. You’ll get straight answers on what works, what to watch out for and where your blind spots might be hiding.

We’ll dive into:

  • What "modern device management" actually looks like in the post-Windows 11 landscape — from firmware to fleet-wide updates.
  • How to extend device lifecycle value without compromising on security, even as patching cycles accelerate and hardware requirements tighten.

Speakers

Dan Gohl headshot

Dan Gohl

Chief Technology & Strategy Officer for US SLED, HP Inc.

Daniel Gohl joined HP Inc. as Head of US Education Strategy in September 2022. He brings three decades of partnering for success through innovation with students and educators from pre-kindergarten through post-graduate studies. Daniel has deep knowledge and extensive experience in teaching, education management, and educational policy at the local, state, and national level. He is committed to helping communities, and the institutions serving them, ensure that education is contemporary, challenging, and continuous. Dan was raised in the Mid-Hudson Valley region of New York and currently lives in Fort Lauderdale, Florida with his wife and three children.

Sean McSpaden headshot

Sean McSpaden — Moderator

Senior Fellow, Center for Digital Government

Sean McSpaden is an executive level information technology professional with over 30 years of experience in the private, non-profit, and public sectors. His background includes the start-up and management of several small businesses and he has served on the Board of Directors or in Executive Director positions for several 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations. Sean’s public service experience includes progressively responsible positions as an IT analyst, and in statewide coordination, management and leadership positions within the Executive and Legislative branches of Oregon state government. From June 2008 to September 2013, served as the state of Oregon’s Deputy State Chief Information Officer.