header.gif banner2.gif Anim By: 45Acres
Categories

Charity
www.hrudaya.org
Advertisements
$12.95 Domains $4.95/mo  Hosting
Blog Roll
Archives

What would you do, if you are not afraid?

Visit www.dilt.orgVisit www.dilt.org
Google
 
Web www.ramdhanyk.com
Visit www.deeshaa.net

www.BPODigest.com i-Vortal


November 10, 2004

What the U.S. can learn from India's electronic voting machines

Via: Jayshree Remember the Cold War tale of Soviet and American scientists racing to solve the problem of writing in zero gravity? NASA spent a decade and millions of dollars developing the high-tech Astronaut Pen. The Soviets solved the problem another way: They used a pencil.

The story turns out to be (mostly) urban legend, but the lesson holds true. Sometimes less is more. That seems to be the case as the world's largest democracy, India, and the world's most powerful, the United States, scramble to solve another technological puzzle: How to count votes accurately and transparently.

While we in the United States agonize over touch screens and paper trails, India managed to quietly hold an all-electronic vote. In May, 380 million Indians cast their votes on more than 1 million machines. It was the world's largest experiment in electronic voting to date and, while far from perfect, is widely considered a success. How can an impoverished nation like India, where cows roam the streets of the capital and most people's idea of high-tech is a flush toilet, succeed where we have not?

Read @ The Bombay Ballot - What the U.S. can learn from India's electronic voting machines. By Eric Weiner


Posted by Ramdhan Yadav at November 10, 2004 11:07 PM Perma Link
Comments

big thank

Posted by: acne get inc rid scar at October 13, 2006 06:18 PM
Post a comment









Remember personal info?








Please click the POST button ONLY ONCE, it might take a while to post your comment as a spam checking program is running in the background