tech tuesday

Technology Tuesday: A Wireless Africa

With less than 1% of Africans able to access a broadband connection, Intel's chairman Craig Barrett is advocating for a wireless solution to Africa's long stagnating connectivity problems.

While computer access and Internet connections stagnates in Africa, mobile phone penetration is expanding exponentially. Africa’s mobile phone growth rate has been the highest of any region over the past 5 years, averaging yearly increases of almost 25%.

Mr Barrett, who is in Africa as part of the Intel World Ahead programme, said: "In every African country, except some of the more established economies, cell phones vastly outnumber fixed line phones.

Many African NGOs are now beginning to utilize mobile phones in their campaning work. In Gugulethu a small city near Cape Town, an experimental SMS-based software program called Cell-Life is being used to help administer antiretroviral drugs to people with HIV/AIDS. Two doctors and one nurse keep in contact with one another and their 500 patients via text messages sent from local counselors  "The doctors don't get to see as many patients as they would like," Anand said. "This allows them to pinpoint patients who aren't doing well. And, of course, monitor those patients that are benefiting from drug therapy."  (http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/12/06/wireless06_ed3_.php).

Technology Tuesday: The $400 Laptop

Last week, Nicholas Negroponte, the Founder and Chairman of One Laptop per Child (OLPC) participated in a panel discussion about OLPC in the Least Developed Countries (LDCs). While celebrating many successes of the project, the forum served more as an opportunity for Negroponte to point out flaws in the original distribution plan and to announce the new "Give One Get One," business model.

The so-called, "$100 laptop" was promoted as a key tool to bridge the digital
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