humanitarian.info

because information can save lives

Archive for the ‘Intel’ tag

Coming up for a breath of positive

with one comment

Let’s take a break from the more negative posts of the past few days to congratulate the members of NetHope who recently won Intel’s INSPIRE•EMPOWER Challenge.1 Catholic Relief Services’ Great Lakes Cassava Initiative (GLCI):

… a pilot project using laptops to help cassava farmers increase food availability and incomes. Millions of families in East and Central Africa rely on cassava as a primary food source, but two virulent diseases are wiping out fields across the region. GLCI aims to educate 1.15 million farmers in six countries about these diseases and provide them with disease-resistant cassava plants. The laptops will facilitate information exchange among farmers, field agents and project managers; support remote distribution of training modules; and improve disease monitoring through automatic data transfers.

and WinRock International’s2 Rural Livelihood Enhancement:

… to deliver information and communication technology (ICT) services to rural communities in Nepal. To address the lack of grid electricity, the project will utilize renewable power from micro-hydro stations and solar photovoltaic panels. The goal of the project is to bring about economic development and improve access to energy, education, employment and information in remote areas. The ICT service centers will serve as computer labs for students and will be open to the public during off-school hours to provide services to the community.

Both of these projects take the right approach – looking at an existing problem from the perspective of the affected communities and applying technology to solve that problem, rather than taking a technology and trying to find a problem to apply it to. Congratulations to both organisations, and good luck with the projects!

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]
  1. Not strictly humanitarian, but NetHope gets a free ride on this blog. []
  2. Another interesting article about WinRock’s work at Ken’s blog – by Gary Garriot, a legend in the development tech sector. []

Written by Paul Currion

April 9th, 2009 at 6:36 am

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.

[Slashdot] [Digg] [Reddit] [del.icio.us] [Facebook] [Technorati] [Google] [StumbleUpon]