Improving your average: using R to beef up Average Time on Page

...alone would be worse than useless Imagine having an average time on page of 60 seconds. That’s not too crazy; nothing to worry about, right? But what if the data...
...alone would be worse than useless Imagine having an average time on page of 60 seconds. That’s not too crazy; nothing to worry about, right? But what if the data...
...minutes comparing “do nothing”, “do minimum” and “write code”. Quick calculations (using common sense where you don’t have all the data) mean that valuable developer time can be used more...
...non-sensitive source code into a public repository. The team is building a cross-government platform for address lookups which will be very useful. There are multiple environments, and have tested across...
...Credits Renewals service should not be given approval to launch on the service.gov.uk domain as a Public Beta service. Summary of reasons The current service does not meet the pre...
...the design and design changes (as a result of feedback/data analysis) can be delivered quickly. 2. Implement plan to separate secret code separate from platform and publish non-sensitive code as...
...12 Yes 13 Yes 14 Yes 15 Yes 16 No 17 Yes 18 Yes 19 No 20 Yes 21 No 22 No 23 No 24 No 25 Yes 26 Yes...
...for delegation to non-professionals. It is important to highlight that the service team are not merely digitising the existing process but instead they are building a digital by default service...
...etc. Open Source Code The panel were encouraged to hear HMRC are making progress in this area, but we are still yet to see any service code published. Publishing source...
...sets some third party cookies (several from google.com when maps are displayed and one from stats.matraxis.net) which are not clearly documented on the cookies page. Consider whether allowing third parties...
...of the need for assisted digital support for around 400,000 pensioners as non-digital channels are phased out. It is refreshing to see assisted digital user needs being considered so equally...