Just over two months into his career as Mayor of Boston, Marty Walsh has made good on a bevy of bountiful promises. He’s shaken up the BRA while adding more transparency, he’s engaged with Boston’s tech an innovation crowd via social media, and he’s helped to bring late night MBTA service to us all. But most recently, he’s succeeded in upgrading City Hall’s technology.

We all have to start somewhere. For the Walsh administration, that means incorporating video conferencing in the headquarters of municipal government which, by the way, didn’t even have voicemail.

Check out increasingly tech-savvy Mayor Walsh’s announcement below, as he dials in to Chief of Staff Dan Koh.

“We now have video conferencing in City Hall,” says the mayor bluntly while using City Hall’s new technology.

Mayor Walsh has made a concerted effort to become more tech literate, hosting Facebook and Twitter Q&As while conveying announcements like this one using video sharing app Vine.

While blazing the campaign trail back in October, then state Rep. Marty Walsh and mayoral challenger John Connolly joined BostInno at District Hall to discuss their respective plans to further cultivate Boston’s innovation community.

Though he didn’t offer up any real specifics at that time, he did note that City Hall decisions are collaborative and that his administration would work with all applicable agencies and organizations to not only step up City Hall’s tech game, but also to retain and foster young.

It appears he’s well on his way in doing exactly that. Mayor Walsh has made it abundantly clear that he wants to turn Boston into the premiere hub of international innovation, and certainly the late night MBTA component will help with those who burn the midnight oil, but it all starts with him and his constituents. He understands more than anything that in order for Boston to succeed on the worldwide stage, he must first put his own house in order.