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Over $1.5 billion is spent on Sales Kickoff and Launch events in Australia each year. (Australian Census and ATD State of Sales data) Your annual sales kickoff is more than just a high-energy get-together — it's a strategic opportunity to align, motivate, and launch your team toward breakout performance. But too often, kickoffs generate short-term excitement with little long-term impact. Here are five proven ways to make sure your sales kickoff delivers lasting value:
Children who live in the outer suburbs of Australia's four biggest cities are twice as likely to have asthma as those living in inner city areas, according to a new study based on health data captured in the last Australian Census. Telethon Kids Institute Associate Professor Ewan Cameron told Millsy and Karl on 6PR Breakfast his team were expecting to see higher numbers in cities, along the lines of what we thought was common knowledge.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
April Long and AP Popbjoy interviews with James McKenzie and new music by HeartAttracks. The Australian Bureau of Statistics has agreed to include LGBTIQ+ specific questions in the 2026 Australian Census, after April Long lodged a complaint at the Human Rights Commission, with the support of Equality Australia. April spoke with James about the case and the path forward. LGBTIQ+ people should live free from discrimination - Equality Australia We feature music from queer artist HeartAttracks: Tungsten and Low Desert Pulse (with Tony Bones). Starts 14:15. HEARTATTRACKS | Facebook Unerased is a 17-part short documentary series made by gender diverse and trans young people. Writer and director AP Popbjoy chats with James about the series that launches on Minus18's Instagram account, Sunday, 20 August. Episodes then drop Mondays and Fridays. The series is also supported by Transgender Victoria, Project Rockit, Screen Australia and VicScreen. Our interview starts 37:10. Minus18 (@minus18youth) • Instagram photos and videos Home | Minus18 3CR broadcasts from the stolen lands of the Kulin Nation.
Adel : Born in Baghdad, spirit in Palestine, living in Tasmania This week we're bringing you another story from the podcast ‘177 Nations of Tasmania'. 177 Nations is the creation of Mark Thompson, who started the project during Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 after reading the Australian Census and discovering that there are 177 different nationalities represented in Tasmania. This story features Adel, son of an Iraqi mother and a Palestinian father. Hear Adel speak of the lasting legacy of colonisation on Palestinian land and his journey first from Iraq to Tasmania and then to visit his father's village in Palestine. Produced by Mark Thompson. Listen to more of 177 Nations of Tasmania here. All The Best credits: Production Manager: Phoebe Adler-Ryan Editorial Manager: Mell Chun Episode Mix and Compile: Phoebe Adler-Ryan Host: Danni Stewart Social Media Producer: Timothy Nguyen Trainee: Madhuraa Prakash Image Credit: Ahmed Abu Hameeda on UnsplashSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week we're bringing you a story from the podcast ‘177 Nations of Tasmania'. 177 Nations is the creation of Mark Thompson, who started the project during Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 after reading the Australian Census and discovering that there are 177 different nationalities represented in Tasmania. We'd like to note that the interview we are featuring was recorded in early 2021. Melika From Iran Melika shares the story of her and her husband's decision to emigrate to Australia and the different ways she has fallen in love with Tasmania. In this episode of the podcast Mark hopes to challenge people's preconceived notions about Iran and its people. Producer: Mark Thomson All The Best Credits Production Manager & Host: Danni Stewart Editorial Manager: Mell Chun Episode Mix and Compile: Danni Stewart Social Media Producer: Timothy Nguyen Community and Events Coordinator: Lidiya JosifovaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The latest national census reveals that Australia is a nation determined to change direction. Generational control is shifting, there is a greater sense of Indigenous identity, and core beliefs that once bound our nation tightly are loosening. China is being usurped by India as our primary source of immigrants, foreign students and overseas workers. There is even evidence of the return of the suburban home. Collectively, such trends will re-shape Australia's economic and cultural landscape and influence the way that practitioners build multi-asset portfolios capable of meeting the long-term financial goals of Australians. - Bernard Salt, Allegra Spender, and Tassos Stassopoulos. Earn 0.75 CE/CPD hrs on Portfolio Construction Forum.
What does the 2021 census say about the Armenian community in Australia? - 2021 թուականի մարդահամարի տուեալները ինչ՞ պատկեր կը ներկայացնեն Աւստրալիոյ հայ գաղութին համար: Բացի հայախօս հայերէն որոնց թիւը 10,978 հոգի է կան նաեւ 22,520 ծագումով հայեր: Օրինակի համար՝ թրքերէն, արաբերէն, յունարէն, ֆրանսերէն կամ պարսկերէն խօսող համայնքներուն մէջ, ծագումով քանի՞ հայեր կան: Տուեալները բաւական հետաքրքրական են:
Listen to ideas from the members of Sri Lankan community in Australia talking about the How Australia's future change will affect the Sri Lankan community, according to Australian Census data analysis results - ඕස්ට්රේලියානු සංගණනයේ විශ්ලේෂණ දත්ත වාර්තා ප්රථිපල වලට අනුව, ඕස්ට්රේලියාවේ අනාගත වෙනස් වීම ශ්රී ලංකික ප්රජාවට බලපාන අයුරු සහ ශ්රී ලාංකිකයින් ට ඕස්ට්රේලියාවේ අනාගතයට දායක විය හැකි අයුරු පිළිබඳව වන අදහස් වලට සවන් දෙන්න මෙම අගෝස්තු මාසයේ SBS සිංහල ගුවන් විදුලියේ 'විනිවිද' ජනතා මත විමසුම තුලින්
Today: Thursday 7 June 2022 CT0902 Looking in to the results of the 2021 Australian Census and some interesting facts, and on the subject of religion in Australia, I've made a link so I can play some incredibly freaky audio of a preacher elevating well known American Republican gun toting clan mom, Marjorie Taylor Greene to almost God status with no consequences for her actions. For what the Aussie Census reveals... https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-07-05/what-australias-2021-census-reveals-about-our-neighbourhoods/101201644 With the US at odds again with TikTok, an Australian politician has concerns for the privacy of Australian users data. Scams are money spinners in Australia. Stats to remember the next time you get a phone call, text message or email. My must see TV show would not be considered normal, but I don't care, I am so in to it. Resources in the podcast can include, The Daily Aus (https://linktr.ee/thedailyaus), ABC News Australia (https://abc.net.au/news), The Guardian Australia (https://www.theguardian.com/au), Morning Brew (https://morningbrew.com) Subscribe and turn notifications on so you can be alerted when new editions become available. The “Cory Talks Podcast” feed can be found on - on Anchor, Apple, Google, Spotify and other platforms. Thanks for listening! CORY O'CONNOR https://anchor.fm/corytalkspodcast https://corymedia.au --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/corytalkspodcast/message
Government Pride has been on display at NATO with Airbus AnAl joining in. The end of Roe vs Wade and the Jan 6th hearings have made Ardern expand NZ's terror list. We'll talk about that and the pillage and plunder of the Labor and Labour governments tonight. Join Tim Wilms and Dieuwe de Boer live tonight at 6pm Melbourne time and 8pm Auckland time on Trad Tasman Talk. In covid news we are told cases will rise again with an Omicron BA4 and BA5 wave. Baby MRNA vaccines and Omicron tailored vaccines coming soon. Monkeypox curve could flatten after pride month. Safe monkeypox sex has been promoted. There is now a painful drug-resistant super gonorrhea that an Austrian tourist caught from a Cambodian sex worker. A bee lockdown has been implemented in NSW due to the varroa mite parasite found in hives at the port of Newcastle which is 50% owned by CCP. 6 million bees have been exterminated in an effort to eradicate the mite. The overturning of Roe vs Wade in the US returning legislative authority on abortion to the states saw condemnation from Jacinda Ardern and senior MPs from the Labor Government and Liberal Opposition. National leader Chris Luxon forced pro-life MP Simon O'Connor to delete his post saying “today is a good day” and forcing him to apologize to the partyroom. Dieuwe himself has been in the NZ media for his pro-life traditional views in an effort to smear his New Conservative Party. The Roe vs Wade decision has seen many know the definition of a woman again. However Professor Brendan Murphy AC Head of the Australian Health Department provided a complicated definition of woman to Liberal Senator Alex Antic 3 months after he was asked at Senate Estimates. The American Proud Boys and The Base have been designated terrorist entities by the NZ Police. The justification for listing the American Proud Boys is based on what is being claimed at the January 6 hearings which is low threshold for “terror”. Is the NZ govt worried about a freedom movement repeat? Will they list the Mongrel Mob as terrorists given one of their members was convicted of threatening to kill a National MP? Blockade Australia a climate extremist group terrorising Sydney blocking peak morning traffic. Mali Cooper who blocked the Sydney Harbour tunnel got an interview on The Project. Another blockade member Harley McDonald-Eckersall complained about vegan food not being available in prison. Family First NZ has been deregistered as a charity with the NZ Supreme Court ruling that advocating for family and tradition is not in the public interest. A Christian school Bethlehem College was forced to remove a statement about marriage by the Ministry of Education or they would lose government funding Anthony Albanese is in Madrid for the NATO summit. Indo-Pacific Partners Australia, NZ, Japan and South Korea were all invited. Foreign Minister Penny Wong is visiting her place of birth in Malaysia. She refused to answer questions about her lifestyle being illegal there. Deputy Prime Minister and Defence Minister Richard Marles was at the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting 2022 in Rwanda/ Environment and Water Minister Tanya Plibersek was praised by Emmanuel Macron at the Oceans summit in Portugal for Australia's recommitment to climate change. Australia's Ambassador for Women and Girls claims Climate Change action will stop domestic violence. Nobody is sure who is back here running Australia. The new Parliament doesn't open until the end of July. The 2021 Australian Census was released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. No religion has become the second most common faith after Christianity. The most common countries of birth not in Australia were England, China, NZ, India and the Philippines. There are more childless couples and millennials overtake boomers as the most populus generation. In state government news fees and fines are increasing for Victorians from today but Dan is giving away a $250 electricity bill subsidy per household. Victoria's Ambulance ramping crisis has proven to predate the pandemic attributed to 70 deaths in 2018. NSW teachers and train drivers striked this week, NSW healthcare have workers already striked. A further political headache for NSW Government this week was former Deputy Premier John Barilio trying to get a plum trade commissioner job in New York he created paying $500,000 per year. The Unshackled Links:Website: https://www.theunshackled.netFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/TUnshackledTwitter: https://twitter.com/Un_shackledGab: https://gab.com/theunshackledMinds: https://www.minds.com/The_Unshackled/Telegram: https://t.me/theunshackledMeWe: https://mewe.com/p/theunshackledBitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/theunshackled/Free eBook: http://theunshackledbattlefield.net/ Support Our Work: Membership: http://www.theunshackled.net/membershipDonate: https://www.theunshackled.net/donate/Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/TheUnshackledStore: https://www.theunshackled.net/store/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Christianity is losing its lustre across the Tasman.The first numbers from the Australian 2021 census are out and it shows that for the first time, less than 50 percent of the population identify as Christian.52 percent down to 44 percent.And the non-religious numbers are increasing – 39 percent compared to 30 percent in 2016.Professor Emeritus of Religion at Massey University Dr Peter Lineham joined Mike Hosking.LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Mark Harding, Program Manager of the 2021 Census Data Operations Branch from the Australian Bureau of Statistics, joined Heidi Murphy on Tuesday. Tom Elliott is hosting 3AW Mornings this week. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
To celebrate International Women's Day on 8 March, Michelle Price sits down with three leading women in cyber and technology. Joining us on episode 19 of OzCyber Unlocked is Kate Pounder, Chief Executive Officer of The Technology Council of Australia, Professor Lesley Seebeck, Honorary Professor at the ANU and in our spotlight, we're joined by Melinda Cilento, CEO of CEDA. Despite the clear business case for gender parity, women are still significantly underrepresented in senior executive teams across the nation's top public companies, as well as being underrepresented in the pipeline for these roles. In this episode, Michelle Price asks our panel about how we can get more women in to positions of power and why only there are only 18 women leading companies in Australia's top 300 listed ASX companies. We're also discussing some sobering statistics found by the 2021 Australian Census that it will take 65 years for women to hold 40 percent of executive leadership positions in Australia and whether gender quotas are helping women or hindering them. Kate and Lesley reflect on their careers, offer some fantastic advice and talk about why stereotypes and discrimination have no place in our modern society. For the special edition of our spotlight, Melinda Cilento speaks about the economic cost of a lack of diversity and what benefits diversity and inclusion can bring to not only the financial side of a business, but day-to-day operations. In fact, Melinda points us to research out of Canada that shows organisations that had three or more female board members, managed cyber security risks better than those with fewer. “The more diversity and inclusion – the better” Useful links:Australia's gender equality scorecard: https://www.wgea.gov.au/publications/australias-gender-equality-scorecard CEW Census: https://cew.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/CEW-Census-2021-Media-Release-210908.pdfhttps://apo.org.au/node/313941#:~:text=Key%202021%20findings%20include%3A,%2Dlisted%20companies%20(6.2%25)
Angry Brothers Cafe is urging the public to use dating apps to find the thieves targeting their store PLUS Ozzy Man Reviews takes on the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, Bernie asked someone on a date, we take a look at the newest app game My Own Little Landfill, Olden Paso are kindly giving away a variety of Hard, Soft and Hard Stand-Up Taco Kits to lucky RML listeners AND should we be worried about hackers attacking the latest Australian Census…? Playlist: Metronomy - The Ballad of the 17 Year Old Giant Claw - Mir-Cam Online Bhad Bhabie - Gucci Flip Flops (feat. Lil Yachty) Varg - Thirst (Dressed in Nothing But UV Paint and Biodegradable Glitter) Martha Argerich - Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 (Liszt) Bill Withers - Lean On Me See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hugh Mackay on the Golden Rule and the Positivity Trap (Rebroadcast). Note that this episode contains some discussion of the share of people reporting 'No religion' in the Australian Census. The correct figures were 22.3% in the 2011 Census (which listed 'No religion' last), and 30.1% in the 2016 Census (which listed 'No religion' first).
Joe Ball, Brian Greig & Melanie Rowland interviews with James McKenzie. Joe Ball advocated in 2019 and 2020 for LGBTIQ specific questions in the Australian Census as part of the LGBTI Health Alliance's campaign. They reflect on this week's Census and its deficiencies and discuss why the Census is so important for the community. Switchboard Victoria Former Senator for Western Australia Brian Greig, now a member of activist organisation Just Equal, discusses current political issues in Australia, including the Census, the Religious Discrimination Bill and how the WA Government is tracking on LGBTIQ issues. just.equal Filmmaker Melanie Rowland from Lilydale Films discusses new lesbian teen drama Flunk The Exchange and making YouTube films for its market and genre. Flunk Series - YouTube 3CR broadcasts from the stolen lands of the Kulin Nation. Sovereignty was never ceded.
Tuesday, August 10 is the census night this year. Why should everyone take part in census? Why is it important? Listen to this report to know this... - ഓഗസ്റ്റ് 10 ചൊവ്വാഴ്ച നടക്കുന്ന സെൻസസിൽ എന്തുകൊണ്ട് നിങ്ങൾ പങ്കെടുക്കണം എന്നറിയാം...
When kids birthday parties go wrong... Plus what farmers can expect this spring when it comes to mice after a terrible autumn, and we talk Australian Census and the changes this year. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This year's Census will be especially significant because it will give a snapshot of the nation in the grip of a global pandemic. The results are expected to look quite different as Australia experiences its lowest levels of migration in years. - Ne daten 10 Gusht behet regjistrimi i popullsise ne Australi.Pjesemarrja ne regjistrim eshte e detyrueshme.
It helps not only to estimate the changes in the population in the country at a specific time, but to also evaluate other crucial changes in the country's demographics. - Ne daten 10 Gusht, gjate regjistrimit te popullsise, shqiptaret ne Australi kane mundesi qe te regjistrojne te dhenat e tyre. Mes detajeve qe do te plotesohen, shqiptaret kane mundesine qe te deklarojne gjuhen qe flitet ne shtepi, prejardhjen e tyre dhe vendlindjen.
Every five years, the Australian Bureau of Statistics conducts a national Census. In this episode, we explore what's new with this year's Census, how COVID is impacting it, and what's being done to avoid a repeat of what happened on Census night in 2016. The Random Sample is a podcast by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Mathematical and Statistical Frontiers. In this show, we share stories about mathematics, statistics and the people involved. To learn more about ACEMS, visit https://acems.org.au.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this interview with the Executive Director of Kurdish National Committee of Australia, Mayda Zebari we discuss the information campaign that they have launched regarding the upcoming 2021 census in Australia, which is on the night of 10th of August. We ask Ms Zebari about the importance of filling out the form, the questions that are most important for Australian Kurdish community, privacy concerns, and where people can get help. - Le em lêdwane da le gell Meyda Zêbarî (Mayda Zebari) Berêwberî Giştî Komîtey Niştimanî Kurdî (KNC) le Australya, bas le kempînî zaniyarî û wişyarkirdinewey ewan dekey derbarey serjimêrî sallî 2021 le Australya ke le 10y mangî August (8) berêwe deçêt. Pêsîyarîyan lê deken sebaret be ew pirsîyaraney ke gringin bo hejmar kirdinî danîştuwanî Kurd le Australya, kêşey taybetmendî/prîvisî, û le kwê detwanin zanîyarî bedest bihênin.
What language do you speak at home? What was your job last week? Do you have diabetes or kidney disease? 26 million Australians will have to answer these and other questions on August 10th. - Welche Sprache sprechen Sie zuhause? Welchen Beruf haben sie letzte Woche ausgeübt? Haben Sie Diabetes oder ein Nierenleiden? 26 Millionen Australier werden diese und andere Fragen am 10. August beantworten müssen.
ਹਰ ਪੰਜ ਸਾਲਾਂ ਬਾਅਦ, ਆਸਟ੍ਰੇਲੀਅਨ ਬਿਊਰੋ ਆਫ ਸਟੈਟਿਸਟਿਕਸ, ਆਸਟ੍ਰੇਲੀਆ ਵਿੱਚ ਹਰੇਕ ਵਿਅਕਤੀ ਅਤੇ ਘਰ ਨੂੰ ਗਿਣਦਾ ਹੈ। ਇਸ ਨੂੰ ਮਰਦਮਸ਼ੁਮਾਰੀ ਕਿਹਾ ਜਾਂਦਾ ਹੈ। ਇਹ ਤੁਹਾਡੀ ਉਮਰ, ਜਨਮ ਦਾ ਦੇਸ਼, ਧਰਮ, ਵੰਸ਼, ਘਰ ਵਿੱਚ ਵਰਤੀ ਜਾਂਦੀ ਭਾਸ਼ਾ, ਕੰਮ ਅਤੇ ਸਿੱਖਿਆ ਵਰਗੀਆਂ ਚੀਜ਼ਾਂ ਬਾਰੇ ਸਵਾਲ ਪੁੱਛਦੀ ਹੈ। ਹਰ ਉਸ ਵਿਅਕਤੀ ਨੂੰ ਸ਼ਾਮਲ ਕੀਤਾ ਜਾਣਾ ਚਾਹੀਦਾ ਹੈ ਜੋ 10 ਅਗਸਤ 2021 ਨੂੰ ਤੁਹਾਡੇ ਘਰ ਵਿੱਚ ਰਹਿ ਰਿਹਾ ਹੈ। ਇਸ ਵਿੱਚ ਅੰਤਰਰਾਸ਼ਟਰੀ ਸੈਲਾਨੀ ਅਤੇ ਬੱਚੇ ਸ਼ਾਮਲ ਹਨ।
Universal COVID vaccines, As good as a COVID cure, QLD vaccine lives, US granted leave to appeal for extradition of Julian Assange, Australian Census on 10th August 2021 to violate privacy principles again? Hosted and produced by Ian Woolf Support Diffusion by making a contribution Support Diffusion by buying through affiliate links
Anna's story highlights how complicated defining "nationality" can be sometimes, and though I'm trying to use a standard based on the Australian Census's "Country of Birth", there is a category "Eastern Europe, not fully defined", showing that many people in Eastern Europe throughout the 20th century were displaced or found themselves within changed borders. Anna was born in the 1920s in what was then Yugoslavia ( today it is Croatia), but only a few years before it had been part of the Hungarian area of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In fact, as a result of being on the wrong side in WW1, Hungary lost 60% of its territory, leaving many Hungarians living within the borders of different countries. In Anna's case, she would grow up in Burgenland, Austria, on the border with Hungary, and the majority were Hungarian speakers and her early schooling wasin Hungarian. Of course, WW2 and the German annexation brought some shocking changes and Anna suddenly found herself at high school where instruction was suddenly only in German. The Nazi occupation was a hard time, but after the war, she met a Hungarian emigre in a refugee camp and married him two weeks later. They emigrated to Australia in 1950 and settled down for a time in country Victoria. Later they moved to Sydney. After her husband died, she would visit her son, who had moved to Tasmania, initially to pick apples...and eventually she moved here. But this is the briefest of summaries of a long life. Listen to the episode to hear about life in rural Austria in the 1930s and 40s and more about the migrant experience from a member of a generation of which fewer and fewer remain.
“The first colonial census (was) 1828…. who needed food, who’d done a runner. It was literally that sort of thing.”
Australia’s next national Census will be held on Tuesday 10 August 2021.The census tells us about who we are and how Australia’s demographics are changing.
Dr Noah Riseman from the Australian Catholic University discusses his research about the emergence of transgender identity in Australia. Equality Australia's Community Engagement Officer Paige Burton discusses LGBTIQ exclusion issues in the 2021 Australian Census. https://equalityaustralia.org.au/countusin2021/
The census runs every five years, the census identifies key characteristics of the population to help plan for the country's future. So, what do you need to know? - Australia ah milu relnak hi kumnga dan ah voikhat tiin tuah lengmang mi a si. Aluancia kum 2016 ahkhan an rak tuah cang, a hung changmi milu relnak cu 2021 ah tuahthan a si lai. Chinmi zong Australia ah a ummi, khuasami kan tam. Australia rammi sinak a ngeimi zong kan um, umthainak nawl a ngeimi zong kan tam; khual le ramdang siangakchia sinak in a ummi zong kan um. Cutikah, Australia milu relnak konghi Chinmi nih kan hngalh a herh ngaimi pakhat a si ve. Milu relnak kong ah na hngalh a herhmi pahra ka hun chim lai.
The census runs every five years, the census identifies key characteristics of the population to help plan for the country’s future. So, what do you need to know? - Australia ah milu relnak hi kumnga dan ah voikhat tiin tuah lengmang mi a si. Aluancia kum 2016 ahkhan an rak tuah cang, a hung changmi milu relnak cu 2021 ah tuahthan a si lai. Chinmi zong Australia ah a ummi, khuasami kan tam. Australia rammi sinak a ngeimi zong kan um, umthainak nawl a ngeimi zong kan tam; khual le ramdang siangakchia sinak in a ummi zong kan um. Cutikah, Australia milu relnak konghi Chinmi nih kan hngalh a herh ngaimi pakhat a si ve. Milu relnak kong ah na hngalh a herhmi pahra ka hun chim lai.
According to the 2016 Australian Census, Australia is one of the least religious nations in the developed world. 7 million Australians identify as having ‘No Religion'. So how do you start ‘talking religion' to someone whose core belief system is built on the idea that religion doesn't matter? Join Derek and Scott as they quiz special guest Matt Varcoe on designing missions that target this vital demographic. SHOW NOTES Evangelism: How the Whole Church Speaks of Jesus, by Mack Stiles Apologetics Canada Grace City's Conversations That Matter resources Evangelism in a Skeptical World: How to Make the Unbelievable News about Jesus More Believable, by Sam Chan
Hugh Mackay on the Golden Rule and the Positivity Trap. Note that this episode contains some discussion of the share of people reporting 'No religion' in the Australian Census. The correct figures were 22.3% in the 2011 Census (which listed 'No religion' last), and 30.1% in the 2016 Census (which listed 'No religion' first).
Why is SBS Radio reviewing its services?SBS has committed to regularly reviewing and updating its services every five years in conjunction with new Census data being available, to ensure it continues to reflect the needs of communities in Australia today. Regularly updating the schedule enables SBS to better service the largest communities with culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds, and offer services to emerging and high-needs communities. The result from this Review will serve audiences from late 2017 until the next Australian Census in 2021 prompts the next review in 2022.Go here to give feedback: http://www.sbs.com.au/radio/consultation - Den 14 november öppnade SBS Radio upp sina portar till ett offentligt samråd gällande de nya urvalskriterierna som kanalen föreslår inför 2017. SBS uppmanar nu intressegrupper, organisationer, föreningar, radiolyssnare att ge återkoppling på de nya urvalskriterierna fram till söndag 11 december. Om du vill se närmare på utkastet på urvalskriterier och lämna återkoppling, gå till sbs.com.au/consultation.
After a week in which Rio Olympics diving pool turning green, the Australian Census website crashed and Donald Trump suggested the Second Amendment might provide a way to deal with Hillary Clinton, the Brand Newsroom team takes deep dive into PR disasters. You can view the show notes here: lushdigital.com/bnr101-dealing-with-pr-disasters/
Three experts discuss the concerns around the Australian Census, how the data is used by researchers, and why the census website went offline on its big night. At 7.30pm, on the night of 9 August, as the government was urging people to login and complete the census online, the website specifically designed to collect data directly from Australia’s 24 million strong population, was taken offline following a series of what is being called denial of service incidents. These incidents, caused by parties as yet unknown, involved the routing of huge volumes of data through servers in the US to essentially crash the website. The incident has become a source of embarrassment for the agency responsible for delivering the census, the Australian Bureau of Statistics, and by extension the Australian Government. It has generated widespread concern, not to mention inconvenience, for pretty much the entire Australian population, and raises serious questions about trust, privacy and the cyber security of government agencies. But even before the night of 9 August this year’s census was in trouble. Changes to the information collected, as well as the length of time the information would be retained and how the information would be used, had led to significant concerns. On Twitter, users highlighted and discussed these under the hashtag #censusfail. Discussing what went wrong, why, and what comes next are: Dr Liz Allen - a demographer at The Australian National University. Dr Cassandra Cross - Senior Lecturer at the School of Justice, Queensland University of Technology Michelle Price - cybersecurity advisor at the ANU National Security College. Read Michelle Price's piece on this issue at http://www.policyforum.net/census2016s-slim-silver-lining/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Delta, Australian Census, Bus Stops, etc...
The Australian Census crashed and burned, but what will that mean for the data captured? What really happened (and will anyone admit it?) Should we trust any future online census attempts? Plus, Netflix's fast app puts pressure on broadband speeds, and Facebook takes the ad blocking war to the ad blockers! Vertical Hold is brought to you by Alcatel Vertical Hold - Australian technology journalists Alex Kidman and Adam Turner channel-surf through the headlines in search of the big picture. Follow us on Twitter: @verticalholdau, @adam_turner, @alexkidman Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/VerticalHoldAU Subscribe: YouTube: youtube.com/VerticalHoldAU/ https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/vertical-hold-audio/id971993513?mt=2 RSS: http://verticalholdauaudio.libsyn.com/
Our big Suicide Squad review – first spoiler-free and then full of spoilers. Apple buys another AI startup, Australian Census warning, and China’s investment in Silicon Valley. Episode 70. Recorded Monday 8 August 2016. Contact: iTunes | subscribe | email | twitter | web | youtube 00:00 – Intro Kelvin watches Jason Bourne Geoff watches The Good, The Bad and The Ugly IMDb’s […] The post 70: Suicide Squad Special appeared first on Naked Tech Podcast.
Census or privacy? Why can't we have both? by Ian Woolf Dr Bernard Robertson-Dunn from the Australian Privacy Foundation talks about the Australian Census. Honest Australian Census advert by The Juice media Production checked by Charles Willock, Produced and hosted by Ian Woolf Support Diffusion by making a contribution
Mapping and other mashups have taken the web world by storm - driving innovation in business and government alike. While much of the focus has been on the actual mashup applications, without the data to mashup, we have no mashups. Government, from local to Federal level, collect and manage a significant amount of data, across a very broad range of areas. But giving access to this data to web application developers has technical, policy and legal challenges. In this presentation, Jenny Telford of the ABS looks at these issues from their experience of opening up data from the Australian Census. Jenny Telford is currently the Director of Census Products and Services at the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS). Jenny has worked in the government sector for over ten years in roles focused on the delivery of data and information through the internet and other channels. The ABS is one of the largest information providers in the country and freely provides data through the website on a range of social, economic and environmental issues. Licensed as Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/).