I think the practical benefit is mainly about.... I'm going to try to describe this in a couple of different ways.
One is the opportunity that open data provides to help people be successful in the things that they want to do themselves. For example, in my case of the education application that I told you about, the Minister of Education published open data and then used that data to create a service for parents that helps them understand the data profile of various schools. That allowed me and my wife to look, in a really logical and effective way, at the different kinds of performance measures, quality indicators, student satisfaction surveys, test results, and other kinds of things about schools in our areas.
My kids are four and two. We were going to buy a house and we wanted to make sure that we were close to a school that we felt would be good. We had limited opportunity to go and see and visit those different schools. It was the best information that we could get our hands on that would allow us to understand what those schools are like. That's, I think, a really practical benefit of open data.
It really allows governments to be able to take data.... When we publish our data openly it means we can consume it ourselves and apply our own creativity and use it in different service capacities, in ways that really make it relevant to people.
It just gets easier for us to do that when the data is published openly in a consumable way. We spend less time trying to organize it, find it, manipulate it, pull it out of reports. We can just go get it and we can start to do things with it. There are real benefits in that.