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Friday, 10.05.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

AU: Australien / Australia

  • Is Australia ready for mobile health?

    Mobile health can be an effective tool to address Australia’s healthcare challenges, however, adoption is fraught with obstacles and continues to be skewed towards consumer ended offerings, research analyst firm Frost & Sullivan said in a report.

    A key issue is access to timely and, which it says can potentially be addressed by enhancing and improving communication between providers and patients using mobile health (mHealth).

  • Is there an ICT skills shortage in Australia and New Zealand?

    The received wisdom is that Australia is suffering from an ICT skills shortage and the only short-term answer is a mix of sending work offshore and bringing in skilled staff from overseas while we try to attract more school students - especially girls - to ICT careers. But how do we reconcile this with reports of retrenchments resulting from the offshoring of ICT jobs?

    Does the ICT skills shortage exist? As is so often the case, answers to that question tend to start with “it all depends what you mean by …”

    “There is an ongoing strong demand for ICT skills across many industry verticals. The NBN and high-speed broadband applications, mobility convergence, e-health, e-security and other initiatives continue to drive demand for ICT skills,” said Alan Patterson, CEO of the Australian Computer Society.

  • IT could benefit Australian health system: business group

    Improved information technology could significantly reduce the costs of the Australian health system, a business group said on Monday.

    The Business Council of Australia (BCA) said implementation of a national e-health strategy would provide benefits worth 28 billion Australian dollars (26 billion U.S. dollars) in the first eight years.

    Making e-health efficient will require both private and public investment, the group argued.

  • IT industry calls for Government support in 2003

    Australian IT industry leaders are calling on the Federal Government to take a greater role in nurturing the local IT sector in 2003.
  • It’s now time for action on Australia’s Digital Economy: IIA

    The Internet Industry Association (IIA) welcomes the release yesterday of the Coalition’s Plan for the Digital Economy and E-Government and now “calls time” for an incoming government to take action.

    “We are pleased to see that the Coalition has now publicly released its policy and announced the need for immediate action to address Australia’s recent and alarming deterioration in global rankings with regard to our digital competitiveness and innovation,” said Peter Lee, CEO of the IIA.

  • KH: Australia backs Sihanoukville’s smart city development

    Australia has thrown its support behind the smart city development in Preah Sihanouk. This statement was made on a Facebook post of the Australian Embassy on June 30.

    In the recent “Smart City Initiative Prioritisation Workshop” organized by Australia’s flagship AU$ 49 million Investing in Infrastructure (3i) programme, with the Preah Sihanouk provincial administration, the Second Secretary of the Australian Embassy, Mr. Anthony Samson, said, “The smart city project selection is a crucial step in our smart city cooperation, as well as in Australia’s efforts

  • Kiosk for Online Vehicle Registry Installed in Australia

    The Department of Transport, Northern Territory Government in Australia, installed an internet-enabled kiosk at a Motor Vehicle Registry to help citizens conduct transactions online.

    Customers can use the ‘QuickPay Station’ to new vehicle registrations and driver licenses online. The kiosk aims to help citizens who do not have easy access to phone or the internet at home. According to a publication by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, only 79 per cent of the households in Northern Territory had access to the internet at home in 2010-11 (compared to 93 per cent for the entire country).

  • Kooperativ an die Spitze

    Die australischen Behörden stehen bei der Anwendung von Online-Technologien vor den USA, so die (australische) Expertenmeinung.

    Lange Zeit galt Australien als e-Government-Weltmeister - dann liefen die USA und Kanada dem Inselstaat in den internationalen Studien den Rang ab. Zu Unrecht, meinen Australiens IT-Experten und sehen ihr Land wieder an der globalen Spitze, vor allem dank guter Kooperationsideen.
  • KR: KT to build smart community in Australia

    KT will build a smart community in Australia in cooperation with a local partner and Seoul National University using its information technology, Korea's No. 2 mobile carrier announced, Sunday.

    The telecommunication firm said it signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Seoul National University's College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and Australia's Smart Community Consortium (SSC) at KT's headquarters in Gwanghwamun, central Seoul, Thursday.

  • KR: World Smart City Expo: Greater Geelong (AU) and Barcelona (ES) named smart cities of the year

    The cities were recognised in the World Smart City Expo event that took place in Korea, which attracts more than 20,000 visitors from 60 countries and 200 cities.

    The Australian City of Greater Geelong and the Spanish city of Barcelona have been jointly crowned smart city of the year at the World Smart City Expo in Korea, which took place last week.

    Goyang Special City, Daegu Metropolitan City, Busan, Bucheon, Incheon Free Economic Zine Authority, Incheon Metropolitan City and the Jeju Special Self-Governing Province were featured in the Korean smart city winners’ showcas

  • Labor backs open source software for e-government projects

    Open source software can provide greater security and innovation in the delivery of e-Government services, and should be investigated immediately by Government agencies and departments, the Shadow Minister for Information Technology, Senator Kate Lundy said today.
  • Laying the groundwork for G-cloud in Australia

    With an annual budget of US$2 billion, the State Government of New South Wales is taking the first steps towards implementing a state cloud. A new private cloud pilot is underway to test the waters before full-scale migration.

    The Government of New South Wales is moving towards managing the cost of running ICT infrastructure while delivering agency-wide savings.

  • Links to the government

    More than half of Australia's smallest businesses have used the Internet to gain access to Federal Government services, a study for the government has found.
  • Mandatory biometrics collection for Australia visa applicants

    The Federal Government has announced it will begin collecting biometric identification from people applying for visas.

    Chris Bowen, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, announced today that a digital photograph and fingerprint scans will be collected from everyone applying for a protection visa within Australia.

    "This initiative will assist in establishing the identity of protection visa applicants who arrive in Australia but are often unable to provide sufficient documentation to prove their identity, and strengthen our ability to detect inconsistent immigration claims," he said.

  • Microsoft plans to pilot e-health system in Australia

    Software giant Microsoft hopes to pilot its Health Vault system in Australia within the next year to 18 months and is seeking partners to launch the service locally– and in turn hand the Government a get-out-of jail-free card as far as big bang spending on e-health systems is concerned.

    Health Vault, which is a cloud based service, is being offered to patients by some clinics such as the Virginia Mason Clinic in Seattle and Denver Health in the US. It allows patients to use the cloud to store and access their health related information – and also allow their medical providers access to the content.

  • Microsoft: Australiens Pro-Linux-Gesetz ''wettbewerbsfeindlich''

    Microsoft findet Open-Source-Empfehlung "schädlich für die Software-Industrie" | Abgeordneter: "Sind auf dem richtigen Weg"
  • Millions across Australia to lose Telehealth rebates from New Year

    The cost of specialist healthcare will soar for millions of Australians from Tuesday under cost-cutting changes to the Federal Government's beleaguered Telehealth scheme.

    And doctors will have to mothball millions of dollars worth of new computer equipment as another fallout of the troubled Telehealth scheme.

    From January 1, more than eight million people in outer urban and semi-regional areas will be stripped of their Medicare rebate for internet video consultations with medical specialists, as their suburbs and towns are reclassified as "major cities".

  • Most Australians want doctors to access their eHealth information: Infosys

    Recent study discovers that are ready for the digital healthcare system

    A study by Infosys has found nearly all Australians are comfortable with sharing personal information with medical practitioners.

    The business and IT consulting firm discovered that 94 per cent of people would be fine with sharing the information at a regular doctor’s office and 92 per cent at a local hospital.

  • National Australia Bank to customers: you're the voice on security

    National Australia Bank will begin using voice recognition technology to identify its phone customers in the latest move towards the use of biometric security among the big banks.

    The company said that the technology, which identifies a person by their speech, will cut waiting times for users and boost security. NAB said up to 40 per cent of customers forget their phone banking passwords.

    It comes a month after ANZ announced it was looking into retina and fingerprint scanning as part of a $1.5 billion investment to upgrade customer services.

  • National Australian Bank moves to ‘infrastructure on demand’

    The bank is retiring about 100 legacy systems.

    The National Australian Bank (NAB) is undergoing a “total environment transformation” with IT, the bank’s officials told media at a recent lunch in Sydney. A central part of the initiative is a move to “infrastructure on demand”.

    NAB seeks to reduce risk by moving to industry standard IT approaches, create economic value by lowering the cost of delivery and creating new revenue streams, and become more responsive to change, said NAB group executive, Gavin Slater

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