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Oregon To Lets Citizens Vote By iPad


By WebGuild at November 08, 2011 0 Comments    Share  

A voter receives help from a member of a voter assistance team while voting on a iPad, in Beaverton, Ore. | AP Photo

The State of Oregon will allow disabled voters to cast votes at the upcoming elections via iPad. Election officials will be equipped with an iPad to visit disabled voters in nursing homes, parks, and various other places so they can cast their votes easier. The preloaded app on the iPad will allow the user to tap the screen to select a candidate, and then the ballot will be printed out by an Election official.

For the disabled that can’t do it themselves, Election officials will touch the iPad for them. And for the voters with poor vision, the app allows them to change the font size and color to their satisfaction.

Apple has donated five iPads to Oregon to test out the program, but the Oregon state government had to spend $72,000 on the software that runs on the iPads. To deploy the iPad statewide, if the pilot program is successful, the state would need to buy 72 iPads (2 per county) for a total of $36,000. If successful, this program will most likely spread country wide.

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