GeoConnexion
 
Home
 
Geo: International
 
This month's issue Online News Online Articles
 
GeoConnexionUK
 
This month's issue Online News Online Articles
 
GEOlympics
 
GeoResources
 
Recruitment Directory Events Education Subscription Contact Details Media Pack ISPRS - Information From Imagery FIG - International Federation of Serveyors
 
Login
Email: Password:

 

Forgotten your details?
Click here
 
 
Click here to download Adobe Acrobat Reader

Geo: International > News > News Item

ArcPad Gets Top Marks in Census Dress Rehearsals

Redlands, California—Initial reports indicate that the dress rehearsals currently being conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau for its new field data collection automation (FDCA) program are going well.

ESRI's ArcPad technology is being deployed as part of the FDCA program for the 2010 Census by Harris Corporation (HRS), the systems integrator and prime contractor for the project. ArcPad will serve as the geographic information system (GIS) used to support the field personnel (enumerators) in their collection of data with handheld devices.

The testing of the new FDCA equipment and automated procedures has been successful, according to sources at the U.S. Census Bureau. "The field test and dress rehearsals have gone very well thus far," says Rick Ayers, ESRI's manager for federal partner business development. "Harris Corporation has done a terrific job at streamlining ArcPad functions to perform exactly what enumerators need the handheld device to do. With the simplified user interface that Harris has created, it is fairly easy to learn and use the handheld GIS software, which is a huge benefit since the Census Bureau will be recruiting more than 500,000 temporary enumerators to conduct the follow-up surveys."

It is anticipated that FDCA will not only dramatically reduce the amount of paper that was used in 2000 but will also make the data collection process quicker, easier, and more accurate. Cost savings are expected to exceed $1 billion.

This significant GIS implementation extends a longtime working relationship that ESRI has enjoyed with the U.S. Census Bureau. The bureau's initial agreement with ESRI to "investigate new technology that would enable the Census Bureau to update its digital map database and develop new products to enhance the display of its socioeconomic data on maps" led to a blanket purchase agreement (BPA) for ESRI technology about five years ago.

Comments Rich Leadbeater, ESRI's state government industry manager, "The BPA effectively made ESRI's software the de facto GIS platform at the U.S. Census Bureau. Because of this business relationship and the flexible architecture of ArcPad, it just made sense for Harris Corporation, and in turn the U.S. Census Bureau, to select ESRI GIS technology to support the 2010 Census."


For more information visit:

www.esri.com


Geo: International

 

Past Issues - Archive
International Conference on Earth Remote Sensing… More…
20 November 2008, 8:58pm
NAVTEQ to acquire T-Systems Traffic GmbH… More…
20 November 2008, 8:55pm
Microsoft, ESRI to Help Improve Homeland Security … More…
20 November 2008, 8:54pm
Small GEO Programme moves forward with contracts… More…
20 November 2008, 8:41pm
NASA tests deep space internet… More…
18 November 2008, 10:52am
NEXTMap® Europe National Datasets in March 2009… More…
11 November 2008, 9:00pm
GSDI 11 World Conference - call for papers… More…
10 November 2008, 11:29am
Bentley V8i Software Portfolio for Infrastructure… More…
07 November 2008, 11:47am
Business Applications in Virtualisation Strategy… More…
15 October 2008, 9:44am
This Month's Burning Issue...
Each month we select a hot topic and a leading figure in the industry to write about it.
This month's burning issue:

What message are we sending to senior level decision makers about the importance and value of Spatial Data Infrastructure - SDI - if we keep misrepresenting what SDI is or is all about?

In previous editorials in this magazine I have touched on various SDI issues, especially now that the pan-European SDI has achieved a legally mandated status within the European Union's 27 Member States. Yet I fear that the Geographic Information community - or communities, for there are many - continue to… More…


Website content & images remain the intellectual property of GeoConnexion Ltd. All rights reserved