Providing Access to Info in Developing Countries 102
matt writes "Widernet is a program run at the University of Iowa to provide developing countries access to information. Most of the universities they work with (mainly in Nigeria) have no internet access or have a very expensive, limited one. So Widernet ships hard drives with a data dump of about 100G to place on the local network. Students have access through the eGranery. Some the of the problems they are dealing with are how to provide updates to the already distributed libraries, how to provide the eGranery such that it can be setup with little or no IT knowledge, and how to stretch a limited budget and donations. I sadly had to turn down an internship with them, but would still like to contribute. Surely we can help with time, resources, and/or knowledge." And you thought sneakernet was dead.
Huh (Score:2)
And here i thought this whole time that UI's access to technology was sub-par. Thought they were mostly a medical school. Shows what i know about my state. :/
How hard is installing a HDD? (Score:2)
Re:How hard is installing a HDD? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How hard is installing a HDD? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bandwidth (Score:2)
However, the latency might not be worth it. I.e. what information is being sent? How likely is it to need to be changed?
It seems to me that although this may be adequate as a temporary fix, we need to take a close look at what can be done to help developing countries actually develop the infrastructure that they need (including internet infrastructure) and then this will be obsolete.
Re:How hard is installing a HDD? (Score:1)
Well, probably, but you're assuming that they have access to modern platforms. What if they're still using 286s with MFM drives, or worse? Sure, sending a 200GB drive is great, but what if they have nothing that can read it when it gets there? Of course, I haven't RTFA, but just off the top of my head, these issues come to mind.
It reminds me of just how spoiled and lucky I am!
Sneakernet dead? Definitely not. (Score:5, Informative)
It's the easiest way to get 1.3TB from here to there. [www.sony.ca]
Nigeria has a lot of money (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nigeria has a lot of money (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Nigeria has a lot of money (Score:5, Interesting)
But also very sad, it seems Nigeria has the IP rights (SCO-style) on corruption (and is clearly not able to enforce them).
It is such a rich country in many aspects, diverse cultures, fertile nature and lots of oil and gas.
Yet as long as the western world does not act against these utterly corrupt leaders Nigeria will remain in its present state were even universities have difficulty to, for example, accessing the internet.
It is nice to see projects like this were the needed information still reaches the students.
But knowing Nigeria I wonder for how long these hard disks will remain at the university.
Re:Nigeria has a lot of money (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Nigeria has a lot of money (Score:2)
Yeah, right. Just like Nicaragua. Or Afghanistan. Remember Rambo III, dedicated "to the brave afghan nation?", Talibans funded and equipped with stingers by CIA? And what about Saddam's sources for chemical weapons?
If somebody with large $$$ from the west didn't have some interest in keeping status quo in Nigeria it would have changed a long time ago. But by some correctly placed funding one can change wages of every revolution. Sure -you- might thi
Re:Nigeria has a lot of money (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
TeraScale SneakerNet (Score:5, Informative)
Jim Gray [microsoft.com] (Microsoft researcher, grand Poo Bah of transactions, etc) cowrote an interesting paper 2 years ago entitled TeraScale SneakerNet: Using Inexpensive Disks for Backup, Archiving, and Data Exchange. [microsoft.com] (Word .DOC file) which analyzes the economics of transferring huge amounts of data by shipping hardware.
(Insert obligatory "never understimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of 9-track tapes" reference here.)
Security (Score:2)
Then the recipient has to sweat bullets wondering what kind of viruses are on the system you just shipped.
The Gray paper suggests plugging the sneakernet box into the untrusted side of your firewall or trusting the sender.
I'd suggest booting from Knoppix. But c
Re:Security (Score:3, Funny)
If they want to booby trap it, they could pack one of the "drives" with C4. That would be a REAL Trojan Horse.
Only Nigeria ? (Score:3, Insightful)
or thats what it seems, what about other developing countries that dont have access at all, surely they would be better served with project like this ?, dont get me wrong im all for charity (if you can call 120$ for a 120gig hard drive and $112 p&p charity) but Nigeria already has quite good network access, (judging by the amount of internet cafes and budding enterprise [scamorama.com]) perhaps we should let them develop with what they already have and concentrate on bringing computing and networks to those who are even less fortunate
120$ for a 120gig hard drive seems rather steep (and 75$ for a demo USB box) as this is more than a complete computer in the local classifieds, (not to mention a shitload of cash in developing countries) is this a charity or a commercial profit making venture ?
i always am suspicious when i see the face of a charity/good cause but then they charge for the service at above-cost especially when other companies are supplying their services for free)
cough*scam*cough ?
Give them info, and teach them to USE it (Score:4, Insightful)
Information is one thing. Using it is something else entirely.
Re:Give them info, and teach them to USE it (Score:5, Insightful)
I know someone who went to Nigeria (and other nearby countries) as part of setup for an Africa-wide online learning university (computer science components). It was a miserable failure because none of the Nigerian universities were able to meet the requirements for computing, most notably steady electricity supply.
Rather then shipping developing countries information, it is much more important to get them set up with infrastructure so that they will eventually have the access required to retrieve the information themselves.
Part of using information effectively is learning how to get it properly, and extract effective information from it. That's what we do every time we use Google: filter the wheat from the chaff, if you will.
Re:Give them info, and teach them to USE it (Score:4, Insightful)
How exactly do you get a national power grid to a country of 130 million people with extremely overcrowded cities and a rainy season that wipes out most of the roads and above ground power lines every year?
I can tell you one thing, the University of Iowa and the U.S. government and the World Bank aren't going to give it to them. Perhaps the best way to move toward and infrastructure in Nigeria is to educate Nigerians the best you can so that you can create demand for these services and find creative solutions.
Yes, there are problems with electricity provision. Power goes out several times a day. But Nigerians are very creative people (as all the forms of 419 attest), and they find ways around it. Most businesses and universities run off generators much of the day. A UPS is part of any computer purchase.
Without knowing anything about your friend's project, I'd say that he/she wasn't trying hard enough. There are Internet cafes all over the major cities. There are some extremely talented computer technicians in the major universities. Setting up and maintaining a computer network is more *interesting* than in the developed world, but certainly not impossible.
Re:Give them info, and teach them to USE it (Score:2)
That and higher effeciency computers (Small LCD Screens?) could provide free electricity and access to information.
Why does every computer user have to have a full screen full color experience.
A monocolor non-lit LCD screen is adequate - even if it isn't executive quality.
AIK
Fsck computers, send them brooms and shovels. (Score:3, Insightful)
Countries do not evolve, grow, or progress because an extra 2% of them get dial up access to the Internet. Countries evolve, grow, and progress because every single person in the country gets involved and does some work. Look at the conditions of America circa 1650 or 1800. Those poor fuckers worked 16 hours a day to build farms, hom
Brooms and shovels haven't been working (Score:2)
Un(der)developed countries aren't that way because they aren't working their asses off. Hell, I've seen women older than my grandma carrying their weight in firewood on their heads. The problem isn't that they are aren't willing to work, the problem is that given the infrastructure, corruption, undereducation, etc. that they deal with, one reasonably earnest person in the West can still outproduce ten Nigerians w
Re:Brooms and shovels haven't been working (Score:2)
Easy analogy : giving one of us nerds a 3 megabit connection to the Internet and a list of web sites full of porn isn't going to get anybody laid. The only way to get laid is to go outside, meet a woman and do all of the actual courting related work that leads to sex.
There are some things you can't fix by throwing tech at it, and I
Re:Give them info, and teach them to USE it (Score:3)
Or, to rephrase what you said, "People who disagree with me do so because they're ignorant, uninformed, and/or stupid." And a comment like that is what passes for insightful these days.
I'm just about ready to dump this place and come back after the election is over, when the mods - both left and right - will hopefully stop feeling compelled to ratchet up posts they happen
Broadcasting data. (Score:5, Interesting)
As most of the issues that make one way satalite data delivery problematic for consumers don't exist for this type of application, it would seem like satalite technology is a good answer to the data delivery problem.
Time could be leased on commercial communications satalites, or maybe some sort of agreement to use idle capacity at reduced rates could be reached.
The reciever hardware for one way satalite systems is relatively inexpensive, in the $200-$500 range, so it would seem financially feasable as well...
Re:Broadcasting data. (Score:2)
Re:Broadcasting data - Digital Radio Modiale (Score:2)
Re:Broadcasting data - Digital (AM) Radio Modiale (Score:3, Informative)
Useful links:
Re:Broadcasting data. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Broadcasting data. (Score:1)
Optical drives!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Optical drives!!! (Score:1, Insightful)
I work on a similar project in Nicaragua. Optical drives are too fragile for the tropics/ third world. There usually isn't as clear a border between inside and outside as there is in north america.
In one case a CD drive failed 2 days after we installed it. Opened it up and it had an enormous spider laying eggs inside. High humidity also takes a toll & causes drives to stick. Since it takes a lot of energy to seal and air condition a room, we've switched to compact flash & hard drives for everythin
120$ for a 120gig hard drive ? (Score:1, Insightful)
so much for charity egh when pricewatch want $64 for 120Gb EIDE drive, 100% markup seems rather greedy ?
120$ for 120gb HD
250$ just to set up a server ?
112$ for postage
75$ for USB drive case
be cheaper to buy them a brand new computer from wallmart than go with this deal, seems like this is a buisness venture aimed at cashing in on less fortunate people, but then thats what western companies do in Africa right ?
"developing countries" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"developing countries" (Score:3, Insightful)
In fact in palces like India, China, Education is highly coveted and scholars are respected and honoured as against being picked on as Nerds.
But if developing means, better infra structure , better public safety measures, better health care, or in general high value of human life, then places like India and china lag far behind the wester world
Re:"developing countries" (Score:2)
How romantic; how untrue.
In modern China, businessmen are gods. University teachers have trouble pauying the rent, and are under constant suspicion from the government for not toeing the line.
Re:"developing countries" (Score:3, Insightful)
Choose your euphemism:
the South;
Third World (or Fourth for places like Bangladesh);
Less developed...
Like racial terms, or words for the place where you shit, after a while every euphemism starts to seem pejorative and you have to come up with a new one.
DVD anyone? (Score:1)
With compression could hold much more...
Re:DVD anyone? (Score:1)
Unfortunate souls... (Score:2, Interesting)
Considering the difficulty of updating the dumped pages (eg: possibility of bad links, etc) and the high costs of hard-drives and shipping costs, I would have thought that it would be more practical to HAVE a satellite connection at the eGranery and have a LARGE proxy-cache (eg: 1TB?).
Because, by deploying internet to those unfortunate fews using data-dump methods would mean that services that we take for gra
Nigeria is a rich nation (Score:3, Interesting)
According to this DOE fact sheet article, until recently they were flaring off almost all the natural gas, yet local villages had little electricity. I think I see the problem here. Looks like government payola, ripping off the people, various ill will, begats violence, more bad vibes, back and forth.
Just perhaps if they hadn't been ripped off for a long time maybe the people there wouldn't be so poor. Flaring off the gas for years instead of putting in generators to use the gas seems a scosh lame to me. I imagine this fact was not lost on the locals either. Who would be blamed then, the oil producers, the government doofus who gave them the contract? I have no idea, but right there you can see just one instance on how they got shafted.
I also just read a few pretty current news articles when I was looking for that reference link. Your typical back and forth warfare,massacres, people tapping into pipelines to get fuel, oil spills and fires and explosions then, etc. Chaos and anarchy mixed with huge international money and corruption and fascism. I have no idea how to help those people there, tribalism and warfare and serious government/oil industry corruption look like the major problems. I think perhaps if they just scrap the oil contracts and renotiate and require some actual infrastructure be put in instead of just arranging more cash to whatever local warlord du juor happens to be there with his hands out might work better. The actual hardware for electricity and normal communications, make the oil companies put it in. I would bet in one day some millionaire trader sitting in an office far away from nigeria, making a bundle off the nigerian oil, swapping oil futures commodites around could pay for this localised internet deal and then some, a lot of "then some". It's this whole system that causes the problems, so it's the whole system that needs to change. There's no excuse for a nation that wealthy to have such poor people and lack of the basics.
Re:Nigeria is a rich nation (Score:2, Informative)
According to this DOE fact sheet article, until recently they were flaring off almost all the natural gas
Flaring is a method used in the oil and gas industry to get rid of the portion of flammable gas that is produced during oil recovery, and which is uneconomical to recover. Safety issues are also sometimes a driver for flaring - you don't generally want a lot of flammable gas just hanging around your well site. Blowing up is bad. If you sum over the well sites in a geographical area, there may be a
I repeat, nigeria is a rich nation (Score:1)
WTF-spelling! (Score:1)
1979 World Book Encyclopedia (Score:2)
Seriously, information can still be shared without a computer. Books are easier to get to places without Wifi, Broadband, or even electricity
100G? That seems like an awful lot. (Score:3, Insightful)
It seems like they could spread the wealth a lot more widely if they just burned a bunch of CDs and sent them out. They could even send updates more quickly and easily than sending more disks.
Before the obvious comment comes back saying "but CD-ROM drives don't exist everywhere" please remember that CD-ROM drives became the standard way of distributing bulk data a few years before ATA controllers that can grok disks larger than 32G appeared. So I'm guessing that a computer in some remote area is at least as likely to have a CD drive as a controller that can take a huge disk.
Re:100G? That seems like an awful lot. (Score:1)
Re:100G? That seems like an awful lot. (Score:2)
The reading list for a very sound K-12 education would probably fit in a few Megs (compressed). Even a fairly complete encylopedia (i.e. Brittanica) fits in a few Gigs.
I suspect that if they're really filling these disks, they're not being very choosy and they're giving people tons of stuff they don't want.
Similar programs already in progress.. (Score:1)
competition? (Score:1)
Re:competition? (Score:2, Insightful)
Some other people see affairs in wider context as "Do we really want to sponsor american lifestyle?"
nigeria (Score:1, Funny)
Judging from my mailbox, it strikes me that Nigeria's problem is that they have too much internet access.
LTSP? (Score:1)
Enough of the cliches and racism... (Score:2)
This is a serious story about how to get information to people who desperately need it but who are disconnected from the world in a way most of you can't even start to imagine.
The Internet has ignored most of Africa, with several attempts to lay fibre-optic cable around the continent abandoned due to politics and war. For most people, "internet" means shared access to a VSAT link, which is a $50,000 investment and expensive charges
Nigeria has a GINORMOUS internet link going unused (Score:1)
Sadly, Nigeria has had a direct link to a huge amount of bandwidth since 2001 that is pretty much completely unused, thanks to the rampant corruption in the area.
And here is direct link to the pretty map of the optical cable ringing Africa. [ieee.org]
Similar project in Afghanistan (Score:3, Informative)
Here are some suggestions... (Score:2)
Then send diffs with the updates on the new dual-layer CDs that can take up to 8.5 GB HDs. The first time, you may need to include a DVD drive -external would be preferable- along with the DVD. They can then copy the information either through a LAN or by using sneakernet and taking the external DVD drive around.
Small spelling error (Score:1)
Do gooders are misguided (Score:1)
Here's a tip: save the money on the hard disks, put it together and install a new water source (called a stand pipe in Africa - pipe with a faucet on the end).
It will do more good, help more people and improve the quality of life far far more than a fat hard disk. Puleez!
Re:Don't these (Score:4, Insightful)
Guess what ? The Western world and lots of Asian countries didn't get those necessities by some nice person donating them a 100 gallon container of fresh water, some cheap pills and some old school books. They got there by educating their people to a point where they become able to take their fate into their own hands. To do this, you need more than just basic schooling, you need something a project like this might provide.
So what's the alternative... (Score:1)
Re:Don't these (Score:1)
When you ask rhetorical questions, it's a good idea to make sure that what you're implying is correct. Otherwise, you insult our intelligence.
It's very simple to figure out how to get cheap crops without cheap labor. You use techniques that require less labor. That's how Americans are able to grow cheap corn and wheat. I suppose when robots start farming, things will get even cheaper. I won't mind
Sooooo??? (Score:1)
Re:Don't these (Score:1)
_yawn_ world isn't just skyscrapers OR mud huts... (Score:3, Insightful)
some aspects are very useful (Score:2)