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Alan Lewis - SASPAC Project Officer with Hugh Neffendorf on the Crystal Ball

Alan Lewis - SASPAC Project Officer with Hugh Neffendorf on the Crystal Ball 2011 Census Data Distributor Workshop – 20th March 2007. Presentation structure: What is SASPAC? SASPAC’s uses and users SASPAC in 2001 2011 preparation and vision Our wishes Crystal Ball. What is SASPAC?

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Alan Lewis - SASPAC Project Officer with Hugh Neffendorf on the Crystal Ball

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  1. Alan Lewis - SASPAC Project Officer with Hugh Neffendorf on the Crystal Ball 2011 Census Data Distributor Workshop – 20th March 2007

  2. Presentation structure: • What is SASPAC? • SASPAC’s uses and users • SASPAC in 2001 • 2011 preparation and vision • Our wishes • Crystal Ball

  3. What is SASPAC? • mall rea tatistics kage • Conceived in 1978 to access 1981 Census (Mainframe to Windows-based PC environment). 1991 and 2001 versions. • IDeA (local gov’t) owns the Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) • Managed/developed on behalf of IDeA and its users by GLA • Owned and managed by the Public Sector and is “Not for Profit” • Funded purely through user annual subscriptions

  4. SASPAC, its Uses and its Users • Data Searching – Querying – Analysis – Manipulation – Export - Presentation • All 2001 datasets for the UK (inc. SMS/SWS/TVS), 1991/81 Census, Specially Commissioned Tables, other non-Census data e.g. NeSS/OAC/user’s local data • Users oversee and inform development through SASPAC Advisory Panel (SAP), helpdesk, website, roadshows and training • Currently approx. 300 member organisations in the scheme (inc. local, central and regional gov’t, health sector, academia, Census Offices, private sector)

  5. Access to 1981/1991/2001 + SCT Build new areas using text listings or maps Output Area Classification Table row/column headings with footnotes Export files in a variety of formats for analysis in other packages All datasets are searchable Publish interactive SVG Web pages Mapshore – integrated GIS • SASPAC in 2001: • Windows-based software distributed on CD and updates via Web • Designed to run on users’ local PCs, networks and thin clients • Data distributed to our users by CD/DVD/Web • Strengths: - export - datasets - searchable - GIS - metadata - Web Publisher - new zones creation - flexible

  6. SASPAC in 2001: • On the whole we think we got things about right, met our user needs for 2001 and continue to do so • SASPAC represents a large and important user group • SASPAC’s user spectrum: • SASPAC keeps changing to reflect the needs of this major user group

  7. Preparing for 2011: • Early days but started thinking and planning for 2011 already • Programme of consultation and planning between now and 2011 • includes: - consulting with SASPAC Advisory Panel (SAP) • - user questionnaires • - roadshows/conferences (with Census Offices) • - funding plan • More Web-based but retain the strengths/power of desktop version • Understanding the balance of roles between Census and Intermediaries

  8. Vision for 2011: • Build a culture of trust and partnership between Intermediaries and Census Offices • Work with Census Offices to help improve delivery of the Census data to user spectrum through an appropriate output strategy • Working closer with Academic Sector (who are also SASPAC Users), possible joint development but definitely collaboration and sharing of experience • Deliver accurate data to our users on time

  9. SASPAC’s 4 wishes: • Bulk delivery in popular formats (CSV/SASPAC) – Web is unlikely to meet all re-suppliers demands • Controlled early release of data to re-suppliers for pre-processing and to trusted/experienced users for QA (rehearsal of 2011 output streams using 2001 data) • Agreement in advance of nationally comparable standard tables • Improved error tracking/management systems

  10. SASPAC’s Crystal Ball…

  11. Crystal Ball 1 • We need to think about 2013, not 2011 • We can’t really imagine all the technology yet • The Web won’t be quite like today (e.g. Web 2.0) • There will be no (significant) bandwidth, speed or size constraints • Web and desktop will be indistinguishable • More use of online data – data filter tool

  12. Crystal Ball 2 • Probably .NET base. Search engine style • We will avoid proprietary approaches • Very new look and feel but still portable, open, efficient • More user features – e.g. publishing, analysis, help, wizards • Work programme established, including consultation and academic liaison • We will produce first release in 2011 with 2001 data

  13. Hugh’s 4 wishes: • There should be NO differences between E, S, W, NI censuses except in cases where the need is overwhelmingly clear. • OS data embedded in boundaries should be available on consistent terms to ONS data. • Imputation should involve modelling where data is sparse, rather than donor records (e.g. matrix data). Similarly, disclosure control should be clever instead of just adjusting numbers. Tables about the same things should add up to the same numbers. • Output planning should be weighted toward real, serious Census users and not to casual ones that just want a number.

  14. Alan Lewis - SASPAC Project Officer with Hugh Neffendorf on the Crystal Ball

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