More Thoughts On How to Wire Senegal 182
An anonymous reader submits "Last month Slashdot published a story on the Peace Corps' plans to wire Senegal. Now Peace Corps Online has published an article by a volunteer who taught computers in West Africa for two years who recommends that the White House's Digital Freedom Initiative abandon the Western paradigm of 'a computer on every desk' and borrow a lesson from telephony in third-world countries. Since a residential telephone line is a luxury item in West Africa, the 'communication center' has flourished as a private business even in the smallest of towns where it generates profits while sharing the high cost of telecommunication among the whole community. This user model coupled with deregulation of VoIP can be the key to implementation of computer technology in poor countries."
No kidding (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No kidding (Score:2)
Re:No kidding (Score:2)
This kind of thinking strikes me as some kind of reverse cargo cult [brocku.ca].
That is, the fallacy that if we give a society the implements of technology, then said society will act like a modernized society, improving conditions, because conditions are better in industrialized, modern societies than non-modern societies.
Re:No kidding (Score:5, Insightful)
And what better way to help them read but to give them the Internet?
Seriously. Do a google search for home-made water filters, see if there is anything they could use. Or on learning to read.
Info can help anyone. They may not use it the way you expect them to. How about using it to work around the corruption in the local school system? Or to just decrese its cost? (A good high school may not even be avalible in some villages.) Let them decide if it is worth using.
Right.... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:No kidding (Score:2, Insightful)
Your point being? I can google for the construction of thermonuclear weapons, does this automagically mean that I can build one from stuff sold in local stores? I can already imagine myself going to the supermarket for some stuff... "Excuse me, where do you people keep the weapons grade plutionium? Do I get bulk rates for orders over 200 kilograms?" I somehow doubt that would work
Re:No kidding (Score:3, Interesting)
Give them both, preferably. I'm just saying the Internet isn't as worthless as you seem to think it is. Sheesh, follow my advice and most of the links you will find will need nothing more complicated than a plastic cup to contain the filter in.
As for learing to read on a written medium: most villiages will probably have at least one person who is mildly literate. Give them access, and they can (and will, since it will be something they can sell to the rest) improve their reading. They may even teach o
Re:No kidding (Score:2)
And where, pray tell, would they get a plastic cup? Mind you, were talking mostly about people who live in mud huts in a country most likely torn by civil war, dictatorships and former colonization. The internet isn't worthless, it's a great place for exchanging
Re:No kidding (Score:2)
That's the most complicated item, and can be subs
Re:No kidding (Score:1)
Re:No kidding (Score:1)
Second, information technology might help people communicate better and share info. They could share ideas on living more sustainably; get together and build businesses.
Re:No kidding (Score:1)
Re:No kidding (Score:5, Insightful)
Putting a computer in every home in the third world is absolutely unnecessary at this point; but putting a computer in every community has benefits far exceeding those which could be obtained by spending a similar amount on a water supply.
Re:No kidding (Score:1)
I read something about this happening in India when cellphones were distributed to villages. The farmers started getting more for their crops because they could check the rates at the market and demand more from the middle-men.
And to the bit about giving them food, water, and literacy firs
Re:No kidding (Score:3, Insightful)
This is such a tired argument. Yes, choosing between water and net access, I'd choose water. But, there is a balance.
Just because there are homeless in the U.S., doesn't mean we should all give up Internet access. (We should find a way to fix that problem, but...)
Guess what, the portion of the population that CAN read can benefit through Inter
Band-aid approaches don't work (Score:4, Insightful)
As much as I applaud foreign aid, the way we've been doing it DOESN'T WORK. When we go in and feed people, guess what happens when we leave (and leave we will!)? They starve again. If anything, they're worse off, because they've gotten used to a steady stream of aid.
This is why we need to educate them, and computers is a good way to provide maximum education/$. Right now, in the third world, there is no meritocracy - so there are, quite likely, very intelligent people who don't have any means of improving themselves. However, they could do very well with some investment in education in these countries.
So, what we need is to educate the populace while we feed them. Give them a chance to learn either a trade skill, or to go to university. Then, the educated can help rebuild the country. Admittedly, computers aren't the sole answer to this, but it would be a part. Those who have the intelligence and literacy would be able to teach themselves, and as other posters have said, Google is a better textbook than nothing for schools that lack resources.
Yes, Africa needs food....but it might need civil engineers even more. That's why we need to work really hard to educate them. If you wait to educate until no one is starving, no one will ever be educated and everyone will starve when we stop spoon-feeding them. That's why it has to be a concerted effort.
Re:Band-aid approaches don't work (Score:4, Informative)
I grew up with my dad in USAID [usaid.gov]. He still works for them. That is what the US does, feed and teach, try to build the infrastructure. Or at least, what we try to do. It doesn't always work of course, but usually it does. At least until the next civil war. It is hard to get critical mass on these types of projects. At least, with the funds we give our forgein aid projects.
Wow! READ PARENT POST (Score:2)
Also, I agree with your solutions, that will definitely help with budding industry. Know of anything that will help from the top-up? I realize that that is where the curruption is rife, but is there anything we can do that isn't "steal-able?" I mean, I would like to build schools, but I know exactly where the building materials and computers are going if we send them.
btw, my favori
Re:Band-aid approaches don't work (Score:3, Insightful)
On the contrary, what I've always been lead to understand is that most starvation is due to temporary, local situations--war, natural disaster, whatever--so most food aid is to communities that can normally feed themselves but that need aid to survive through just a few months.
--Bruce Fields
Some specifics about Senegal (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:No kidding (Score:1)
Along the same lines, any computing provided to the community should be cheap for the community, therefore a multitasking solution with accounts for each person in a central location is a bettr solution than a computer in each home.
Yeah, but... (Score:1, Funny)
erm.. (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd say FEED ME before FRAG ME any day.
Re:erm..OUCH (Score:1)
How about tackling that AIDS thing first... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How about tackling that AIDS thing first... (Score:2)
AIDS is a huge problem in Africa. It's also a very complex social problem that isn't going to fit well into the "spend X dollars and it's fixed" mold. Education is a major key to reducing the problem. The Internet is a conduit for information. QED.
Re:How about tackling that AIDS thing first... (Score:2)
As for the "Let them read first" argument - litteracy rate is higher in Senegal than in the US!
And others have said it here first "In Africa, piped water is often a bigger health risk than a well"
This is why America's assistance is as much of a problem as it is a help - you have no grasp of the prob
How about... (Score:2, Flamebait)
And of course this type of thing begs the question - do they want to be "wired"?
Re:How about... (Score:2)
Re:How about... (Score:1)
Cause we don't take kindly to this techno garbage down 'round here. Heck, we cant even speel or pre-nance half of these big 'ole con-peuder words anyhow. If it don't done help me get the back 40 plowed any none sooner, I'se dont want it!
Re:How about... (Score:1)
That connection is a bit of a stretch.
A similarly preposterous stretch would be that I only drive German cars; Germany is against the war on Iraq; I support the war; therefore my priorities are not in order?? Bullshit.
I dont give a damn where his listeners are mostly from. And I'm a conservative who dislikes rednecks. So what?
Re:How about... (Score:1)
Apparently not. I just wrote a check for more than $3000 to the IRS.
Damn those people who make less money then you, right? I'm not going to be like the other guy and call you a redneck, you're a yuppie through and through. How is Bush going to buy your vote in 2004?
He isn't going to buy it. I'm going to give it to him, because he's the best candidate for the job. I'm terified to think what might have happened to this country if a liberal were in
Re:How about... (Score:1)
This got pegged as flamebait, but the comment is an important issue. We assume that these remote villages want to be wired and sit on eBay looking for Every Time I Die t-shirts. Bullshit. They might just want to be villages. We colonized these places under the pretense of modernizing the "heathens". Guess what? They didn't want our help! Additionally, a lot of them were doing just fine. For example, the empire of Mali had the
Amen (Score:4, Insightful)
A computer on every desk does indeed sound like somebody has warped priorities.
Let's look into getting the infant mortality below 20% first.
Re:Amen (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Amen (Score:1)
Let's look into getting the infant mortality below 20% first.
No, let's look into educating people in methods of preventing unwanted pregnancy, reduce the birth rate to a more manageable level, say about 4 kids per women average or maybe 3.
Then you worry about reducing infant mortality when there's a fair chance the family will be able to feed him/her. With 8-9 childrens, it's almost normal that a few of them die. They rarely have the resource to sustain 8 or 9 kids.
Alex
Re:Amen (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh for the reli
Re:Amen (Score:1)
Careful at what depth you address things, many societies have addressed infant mortality with larger sized families. A strong immunization program is much easier to implement than is a family planning initiative. The former can occur in a generation, the latter may take generations. What may result is a population boom with limited food sources. Environmental equilibrium can be subtle, but it is there.
Ring Around Africa? (Score:3, Interesting)
Does anyone remember this (or is it just my imagination), and if so, what became of it?
Re:Ring Around Africa? (Score:3, Informative)
I believe they were calling it the "Ring of Fire" and it was Lucent who was putting most of it up. But I haven't heard anything on that in a couple of years.
Re:Ring Around Africa? (Score:2)
Article Text -- preemptive post (Score:1, Informative)
By Trevor Harmon
April 6, 2003
Since 1961, the Peace Corps has been sending volunteers to Ghana, West Africa, to work in education, business development, and environmental protection projects. Most of these volunteers work in remote areas where poverty is extreme and the small rural communities have the greatest need for teachers, engineers, and other skilled professionals. I was surprised, then, when I learned that the Peace Corp
Re:Article Text -- preemptive post (Score:2)
The Ghanaian Ministry of Education contracted a British company, Philip Harris International, to set up a network of Science Resource Centres (SRC) in Ghana at a cost of some GBP19.75 million. The project involved the provision of science equipment, chemicals, PCs and even datalogging equipment to about 20% of Ghana's seondary schools.
Each SRC was supplied with a 45-seater school bus to transpor
Real reason for internet.. (Score:1, Redundant)
Was This Story from the Internet Bubble Era? (Score:1)
My vision: (Score:5, Funny)
Priorities (Score:2, Insightful)
rus
Re:Priorities (Score:1)
In first world countries, putting on your CV "I learned it on the internet" won't hold much water, but in Ghana where the average person is less science-savvy than your 6 year old kid, it will bring them forward in leaps and bounds.
There are endless
Re:Priorities (Score:2)
I heartily agree with your overall point, but I think you got a bit carried away here in your metaphor there. I mean what does a 6-year old know? All I remember was something about dinosaurs being really huge, big deal.
Also I think you underestimate the knowledge of the average Ghanian. They may not know the theory of Mendelian genetics or whatever, but you bet they know h
Not just in West Africa, but worldwide... (Score:5, Informative)
I told folks I'd keep in touch via e-mail, but was careful to always caveat that with "as long as I can find internet access". Next time, I'll drop the caveat. Places with phones have an "internet cafe". And they're often full.
In my constant pursuit of fluent spanish, I thought I'd have to find another bilingual computer professional to learn the spanish translation of computer-centric terms like e-mail, web, internet, scanner, mouse, instant messaging and the like. If you find yourself in the same situation, ask a kid on the bus. The older generations aren't there yet, but the kids have it down. I was amazed.
The Economist did a good article recently on [somewhat] related issues of access, business and money. Instead of working to deliver telephones, they give an account of the beer man. It's a good read. Trucking in Cameroon [economist.com]
Cheers,
J.J.
Re:Not just in West Africa, but worldwide... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not just in West Africa, but worldwide... (Score:2)
So give them a water filter - what happens when the filter expires? Given them another? What have you accomplished?
Give them access to knowledge and markets and you open up export driven grow
Re:Not just in West Africa, but worldwide... (Score:2)
A better idea would be to give them a cow [heifer.org]
Computers in Africa (Score:4, Insightful)
To repeat some of the previous posts, they need clean water, food, medical supplies, and other basic humanitarian goods.
This is not to say that they have no use for computers. For this is certainly not the case. Something along the lines of an internet cafe (but not so trendy) is what they would benefit from. Just as the article says, the people can share the cost of an inexpensive comm link. Combine this with a few donated PC's running Linux and bingo - the towns people will begin to become computer literate.
These people have a genuine desire to learn, but things like this must fit within the economic and humanitarian reality of their locale. A "community" net enabled PC would fit the bill nicely.
Re:Computers in Africa (Score:2)
Perhaps there might be some Africans who need one thing, and others who need something else?
There is one piece of this equation missing.... (Score:1)
Third world countries + Computers + Electricty(X) = Not posible
stop patronizing Africans (Score:5, Insightful)
Done right, technology will provide the information that will allow people to help themselves - much better than the normal aid dependency syndrome.
Reply to another comment: I don't think Quake is so exciting for Maasai who have to kill a lion with a sharp stick before being allowed to marry.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:1)
George Washington (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:5, Insightful)
I am from West Africa (Nigeria in particular) and it irks me every time I see one of these morons talk about the place like it's a hapless mass of poor, depraved and illiterate morons fighting with each other all the time. It is for the same reason I refused to go see Bruce Willis' Tears of the Sun.
You only need to get to some areas of Lagos where there are approximately 5 to 10 cybercafes PER BLOCK to understand what the hell is going on. Since the launch of mobile telecoms in Nigeria, the country has had by far the fastest cellphone industry growth rate ever recorded, injecting $1 billion into the economy within the first year alone, and leaving the 2 or 3 providers struggling under demand.
The point is people need to communicate. Africans are a very smart set of people (just compare the average knowledge/IQ of an american high-schooler to that of a Nigerian high-schooler and you'll see what I'm talking about). And even the illiterate ones still frequent cybercafes to send email and use VoIP phones to communicate all over the world.
I could slap the face of anyone who makes retarded comments as "let's teach them to READ first" or rubbish like that.
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:1)
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:1)
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:2)
I was in Tanzania last December, and like you said EVERYONE seemed to have a cellphone. Many more people than have a landline even.
It is interesting to speculate how these technologies will play out in less developed countries(i.e will dialup ever become popular or will they "leapfrog" to another form of access)?
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:1)
Someone will pay dearly for this...
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:2)
I only stayed in Dar Es Salaam, but it seemed every other block I went there was an internet cafe. The price was about 1$ for an hour of access and they always seemed to be packed.
Of course the connection was a bit slow to say the least, but perfectly sufficient if you primarily wanted to e-mail.
There are many misconceptions on the state of contemporary Africa.
Re:stop patronizing Africans (Score:1)
Wire Maine (Score:1)
Joko Clubs (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Joko Clubs (Score:2, Insightful)
It is perfectly reasonable to give them what resources we can; just because
they are short on food doesn't mean that they can't use the internet to
perhaps announce what's happening to food shipments (bandits, floods, bad
roads or any other reason) or to request what's needed most or even to try
to up revenue (such as tourism) or improve financial communications.
The funny thing: most food shortages in Africa
The comunity "Computer & Comunications" idea.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Food IS more important, but ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Contrary to what many of you believe, Senegal is not one of the most impoverished nations in Africa (try Sierra Leone)...
Until ... (Score:2, Funny)
Well, maybe Microsoft can save them.
for a secong there (Score:4, Funny)
Just say no to Pox Americana (Score:2, Insightful)
Who is regulating VoIP? To what specific problems does this phrase apply?
I don't see where the Digital Freedom Initiative wants to put a computer on every desk. In fact, their agenda sounds pretty much the same as the proposed alternative, namely to leverage the Internet cafes already there.
When you're talking about computers in Africa, every city is a village.
This is a nice li
Re:Just say no to Pox Americana (Score:1)
The governments of the countries concerned are, quite often, regulating voice over IP, in many cases along with things like internet through satellite connections.
I was down there (Uganda, Kenya) a few months ago looking at some projects, and government regulation is a significant limitation on the spread of new technologies. In many African countries, the government phone companies have a monopol
Regulation (Score:2)
Regulating standards, prices, services, etc.. is crucial to build, and sustain, technological services in a third-world country.
Regulation is also important to prevent any companies from monopolizing. It may not be necessarily a problem in the beginning, but nonetheless thi
Why a computer on every desk? (Score:1)
So
Inductive Nigerian Scam? (Score:1)
Screw medicine and clean water (Score:2)
Senegal is not Liberia (Score:1)
"communications:
general assessment: good system
domestic: above-average urban system; microwave radio relay, coaxial cable and fiber-optic cable in trunk system
international: 4 submarine cables; satellite earth station - 1
Wire? (Score:2)
I smell oil... (Score:1)
Technology, not toilets! (Score:5, Interesting)
Folks who say "let's get infant mortality below 20% first [slashdot.org]" may think they're being hard-headed (Senegal has an infant mortality of 62/1000, just to clear up that point), but the truth is that they're woefully behind the times in development economics.
Developing nations are hardly the hellholes we often think them to be: life there isn't as pleasant as our own upper-middle-class lives, but it's not a constant struggle for survival in most nations. (Places like Sierra Leone excepted, of course.) People in developing nations may not have every modern convenience known to Americans, but -- thanks in no small part to the Peace Corps and other NGOs -- they at least have acceptable levels of sanitation available to them. (And am I the only one who hears the faint strains of "Rule Britannia" in those statements -- a kind of disdain for those poor savage souls who can't even be relied upon to clean themselves properly?)
What developing nations need is capital for their domestic entrepreneurs, and telecommunications is a critical part of that. One of the great success stories in development economics is the Grameen Bank [grameen-info.org], a microcredit bank that lends to impoverished rural dwellers. One of their success stories was a loan to a group of women who created a cell cooperative: they would rent celltime to other villagers, allowing the locals access to telecommunications without having to purchase unnecessary private lines.
For another example, in the West African nation of Mali, the Peace Corps has helped set up a trading cooperative for artisans across the nation -- artists ship their goods to a store that caters to both walk-in trade (mostly from French tourists) and international dealers. They even have a website (which, of course, I don't have the URL to ATT) that you can order from. Imagine how much more effective such networks could be if locals could communicate immediately across the region.
Furthermore, telecommunications give developing nations access to services not easily available -- local businesspeople could not only use Excel to keep track of their cash flows (as opposed to having to hand-rule ledger books in many rural areas), but they could get immediate access to groups and individuals to help them with their businesses. Instead of PCVs spending their two years giving lectures on basic accounting principles, small businesspeople could get that information over the Web, leaving the Peace Corps to stay hands-on.
Finally, anytime you can expand opportunities for people in the villages, you're doing a service. The traditional Harris-Todaro migration model [augustana.edu] effectively demonstrates how unemployed underclasses and grey markets develop in urban areas within developing nations. If you can increase educational and economic opportunities for people in rural areas, you decrease the wage disparity between the two sectors, and lower the explosive demographic pressure that characterizes so many developing-world cities. Arguably, technology can also have a feedback effect: as literacy and basic education is necessary to take advantage of the benefits of the telecommunications centers, the incentive to obtain that education grows.
So, there you go: some perfectly rational, hard-headed, economically-grounded reasons to give the developing world computers. It comes down to simply giving these people the power to effect change in their own lives: they're as capable and able as any of us, they just need the infrastructure to take advantage of it.
Only liberals do this (Score:1)
How to Wire Senegal in One Easy Step: (Score:2)
Work done in Dakar (Score:1)
Which, too bad they, the Senagalese(sp?), couldn't somehow tap into that network...matter fact, The whole Sita network that connected all the world's major airports was sort of a "secret" access to the Internet. In theory, at say Bejing's airport, or even Riyahd (or pick any country that controls internet access), one could get unres
How to Wire Senegal? (Score:2)
Oh come on. Just go to Western Union and be done with it.
Putting computers in every home? (Score:1)
what, my checking acct number not enough? (Score:1)
System of Mirrors (Score:2)
Public Libraries in the US do it, why not (Score:2)
Re:Cool (Score:1, Offtopic)
WASHINGTON (AFP) Apr 10, 2003
The US Air Force is moving several 21,000-pound MOAB bombs, the largest US conventional bomb, to the Gulf region, a US defense official said Wednesday.
It was not clear what the air force intends to do with the bombs, which are most effective against troops or tanks in open areas.
"What we were told today is that they are on the way," said the defense official, who asked not to be identified.
He said several were being
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Based on recent events, the US has gotten pretty damn good at attacking specific tagets, and using force in a very precise mannor.
Yes, there were mistakes, and civillian casualties, but compare those number to what they where using in WWII or vietnam.
Re:Who cares about these savages?? (Score:1)
Look everyone, another dumb redneck bought a pc and found slashdot!
Re:Who cares about these savages?? (Score:2)
Re:Uhm... (Score:1)
Re:Uhm... (Score:1)
If they survived lack of clean water and lack of sewers long enough to get to use a computer, they'll survive a bit of grime on a communal keyboard. Diseases are having lots more fun in the Western world growing antibiotic resistant (from antibiotic overuse - I'm sure you're using antimicrobial cleaner in your kitchen) and bumping off people with low immune systems in hospitals.
The worst thing that could happen is all the porn found on the internet may inspire these people to have more sex and thus incr
Re:Why bother? (Score:1)
Re:Why bother? (Score:2)
If you are going to judge a country on a few jackasses, then you are in for a suprise.
I know its not hard when there is a jackass in the whitehouse, but he won't be there very long.