Can't wait to see the errors this generates...

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http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/techinnovations/2006-04-04-census-mobile_x
.htm

Census to use mobile devices for survey
Updated 4/5/2006 12:34 PM     E-mail | Save | Print | Subscribe to stories
like this
By Allison Linn, The Associated Press
SEATTLE ‹ To compile data for its 2010 survey, the Census Bureau is putting
down pen and paper and picking up handheld computers.

The portable devices are being designed to allow census workers to
immediately record information they gather when going door-to-door to
American households, said Monty Wood, a spokesman for the Census Bureau.

The bureau will still send out a questionnaire and ask people to mail it
back, but Wood said only about 65% of people actually do that. To get a
sense of households who do not respond, the bureau sends workers to conduct
in-person interviews.

Those workers used to write down answers on paper, which were then entered
into a computer. Now, the information will be recorded on a computer and
transmitted directly, increasing accuracy.

The technology will aim to reduce the risk that people are accidentally
counted twice.

The move also is part of the agency's effort to keep costs down. Wood said
the last census cost more than $6 billion, and the 2010 effort is expected
to cost between $11 billion and $12 billion.

"The census is the most expensive peacetime operation that the country
undertakes," he said.

The devices are part of a five-year, nearly $600 million contract that
Melbourne, Fla.-based Harris Corp. won to obtain field census data. Taiwan's
High Tech Computer Corp. will make the devices, which will run a version of
Redmond-based Microsoft's Windows Mobile operating system.

They will be deployed between 2007 and 2009.

Wood said the devices will not be used as cellphones or for other functions
such as sending e-mail, and will not replace bureau employees' BlackBerry
communicators.

"It's not like a BlackBerry," he said. "It's specified designed for the
census 2010 application."

Microsoft is trying to gain ground against Research in Motion's popular
BlackBerry handhelds with its own line of "smart" phones, which also can do
tasks like send e-mail.


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