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Quickbits May 2008

with 2 comments

  • MapAction and BrightEarth both feature in an article in the Independent entitled “Mapping the disaster zones” - how they think up the intensely creative titles for these articles, I just don’t know. Interesting enough, but these articles always leave me with a sense that the writer just doesn’t get it - apparently “Within 48 hours: The latest field information is combined with accurate 1:5,000,000 “base maps” to form the first complete maps of disaster-zone data”, which is news to me.
  • Jon Thompson sends me links to two initiatives which mainly force me to ask the question “Why?” NGO Post and Commkit are both well-intended, but both seem to be hell-bent on reinventing the wheel. If Digg works, why not just create an NGO channel on it rather than build an entirely new NGO version of it? If you need “a humanitarian communications platform that is autonomous (works with very little infrastructure) and accessible (anyone can use it)”, then why not use the internet with Sahana running on it? OTOH, it’s standard NGO practice to reinvent the wheel, so maybe I shouldn’t be surprised - however if anybody can shed any light on either of these, I’ll be more than happy to revise my opinion.
  • The OLPC XO2 is announced. Quoth OLPC news:
  • On top of that it seems as though a new UN Millennium Development Goal is in the works. The press-release quotes Nirj Deva, Member of the European Parliament, as saying: “One Laptop per Child and the XO laptop are crucial to the fulfillment of the proposed UN Ninth Millennium Goal: to ensure that every child between the ages of 6 and 12 has immediate access to a personal laptop computer by 2015.”

    Somebody shoot me. Or better still, send me more news for this section.

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2 Responses to 'Quickbits May 2008'

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  1. The big problem with I see with initiatives like NGO Post and Commkit is that they are competing with hundreds (if not thousands) of well funded Web 2.0/social media startups. Who wants to settle for an under-funded closed system that will be constantly struggling to keep up with private sector initiatives?

    Kevin Toomer

    25 May 08 at 3:21

  2. I guess that’s a problem for the initiatives themselves, but the question for me is where the ideas for these initiatives come from if not from the end users?

    Paul Currion

    29 May 08 at 9:21

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