Friday, February 19, 2010

More people living in HDB flats than before

More people living in HDB flats than before
Posted: 18 February 2010 1501 hrs
 
 
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HDB flats (file picture)
   
 


 
SINGAPORE : The number of people living in HDB flats has increased.

According to HDB's latest Sample Household Survey, the number of Singaporeans and PRs who are flat dwellers, increased 2.7 per cent over 5 years to 2.92 million in 2008.

This figure made up 96 per cent of the total population in HDB flats.The remaining 4 per cent were foreigners, which includes maids and tenants.

The average HDB dweller is also now older at 37 years old, compared to 30 years old about 20 years ago.

Longer life expectancy has also resulted in the proportion of elderly residents aged 65 years and above increasing from 5.4 per cent in 1987 to 9.8 per cent in 2008.

Reflecting a better educated workforce, the proportion of HDB residents with tertiary education has increased to about a third.

Proportionately, more residents were in white-collar jobs from 29.5% in 1998 to 34.5% in 2008.

The average HDB household had an income of $4,238 in 2003.

The housing board said this figure climbed to $5,680 in 2008, reflecting the growing affluence of HDB households.

The survey also found that over 95 per cent of households were satisfied with their flats and neighbourhood.

About 80 per cent of homeowners indicated that they are proud of their flats.

About 85 per cent of homeowners felt that their flats were value for money.

Over the next two months, HDB says it will be releasing more findings on the well-being of the elderly and families, as well as residents' sense of social well-being. 



-CNA/ha 


- wong chee tat :)

Change to core router by data center provider brings WordPress down

Change to core router by data center provider brings WordPress down

 
More than 10 million blogs affected
(2/18/2010)
Popular blogging platform WordPress was down for almost two hours on Thursday, following a networking issue at one of the data centers that host its servers.
The outage, depriving about 10.2 million blogs of about 5.5 million page views, was the company’s worst in four years, WordPress founder Matt Mullenweg wrote in a blog post.

Mullenweg was the founding developer of software that runs much of WordPress

“We are still gathering details, but it appears an unscheduled change to a core router by one of our data center providers messed up our network in a way we haven’t experienced before, and broke the site,” he explained. “It also broke all the mechanisms for failover between our locations in San Antonio and Chicago.”
Mullenweg reassured blog owners that all their data was secure during the 110-minute outage and that WordPress would look for ways to “recover more gracefully next time and isolate problems like this so they don’t affect our other locations.”

- wong chee tat :)