Census hailed a big success
- 10 August, 2011 12:09
- Comments
Around the nation on Tuesday night, Australians sat down to fill out their census forms but among those who opted for the internet option there's been a problem.
Paul Lowe, head of the Population Census Program, said many people completed all the questions on the online census forms but neglected to hit the all important send button.
"We have got over 670,000 households that have logged on but haven't hit that submit button," he told reporters in Canberra.
"I encourage people to log back on and hit that submit button."
In all other areas, the census people are billing this five-yearly gathering of national data from 9.8 million households a rousing success.
Lowe said more than two million households logged onto the online census form with more than 100 census submissions arriving every second at peak time.
Despite apprehensions that the online census system would be overwhelmed, Lowe said it never went anywhere near capacity.
He said there was still plenty of time for people to either complete a paper or online form.
"I am expecting we will see over eight per cent of households in the next few days logging back on," he said.
"Our collectors will be starting to go back out there and pick up the paper forms but they'll be out in the field until the end of August."
Lowe said the census aimed for 30 per cent online submission of forms.
"I am confident we are going to reach that and exceed it," he said.
Lowe said the first data would be released in June next year, revealing, among much else, the contentious issue about who does the most housework.
"It always attracts some interest — the unpaid work and who in the household does the most unpaid," he said.
Jill Charker, first assistant statistician with the Australian Bureau of Statistics, said the census data was widely used across all levels of government in planning infrastructure and schools.
"Things like schools, planning for hospitals, medical services, even things like parks and community facilities are really underpinned by census data," she said.
"We know that community and non-government not for profit organisations also use census data in a range of ways to underpin what they do."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Apple aims iPads at High Schools
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Google Jumps Into Social Bookmarks Game
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
How to Choose an SMB - Unified Communications as a Service (UCAAS) Solution
The on-premise deployment of Unified Communications (UC) continues to be a source of considerable corporate angst especially for the Small to Medium Business (SMB) sector. IT research firm Gartner believes UCaaS will be adopted as an adjunct service by large enterprises and as a core service by SMBs before 2015. To help SMBs choose the best offering and develop a suitable roadmap Computerworld has prepared this special feature profiling the major offerings in the Australian market. -
BPM Basics for Dummies
This book helps you understand what BPM is really all about. We wrote it because BPM is so useful and so powerful — and because it is also very accessible. We wrote this book for you — the individual. You may be a business manager, or an Information Technology practitioner, or maybe an ambitious career individual who wants to know what BPM is all about and how to apply it. -
Case Study: NZ Bus Develops Applications 60% Faster, Improves Database Performance by up to 35%
Key Benefits: Developed applications 60% faster, Created development and test environments in minutes compared to days and weeks previously, Reduced server costs by 30% with server virtualisation, Saved NZ$40,000 in database administrator training costs, Provided high availability features that keep the database and core applications up and running in the event of a server failure, Introduced compression capabilities that improved database performance by 30% to 35%. Read on.
-
Creating Web Pages with HTML Simplified, 3rd Edition
-
Maya
-
Master Visually Windows XP Service Pack 2 Editio N
-
Digital Photography Bible
-
VBscript Programmer's Reference, Second Edition
-
Windows 2000 Server for Dummies
-
Programming Java 2 Micro Edition on Symbian OS - a Developer's Guide to Midp 2.0
-
Security Patterns - Integrating Security and Systems Engineering
-
Salesforce.com for Dummies, 4th Edition








Comments
Post new comment