Video Michigan State Professor Helps Bring Broadband Internet To Rural Africa (Video) 86
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Roblimo writes "Assistant Professor Kurt DeMaagd, of Michigan State's Department of Telecommunication, Information Studies, and Media, runs a program that brings broadband Internet to villages in Tanzania that have never known connectivity better than what they get with non-smart cell phones. Lots of students are involved, and Kurt (who was one of Slashdot's co-founders many years ago) believes the students get as much out of the project as the people in Tanzania who are its primary beneficiaries. Setting up not only computer networks but also satellite communications and solar arrays in areas where you can't zip on down to the local computer or hardware store for parts you forgot teaches how to work under adverse conditions, and how to plan in advance instead of winging everything at the last minute. But we'll let Kurt DeMaagd, who is an engaging speaker, tell the story himself in this long (8:12) video."
Just keep in mind that these are real people (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm all for these sorts of projects, just keep in mind that the idealistic do-gooder mentality of "They're all going to use this wonderful internet for education and uplift" needs to be tempered with a realization that these are real people you're dealing with, not characters in some fairy tale narrative you've created in your own head. Understand that some of them are going to use it for education. But some are also going to use it to scam, surf porn, download shitty Nicolas Cage movies, and play games. So don't throw a hissy-fit and abandon the project the second you find out that you're dealing with real human beings who aren't always going to use your wonderful gift to do what YOU want them to.
Remember that these are real autonomous human beings just like you, and don't idealize them as some abstraction.
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Rural Michigan? (Score:5, Insightful)
How about bringing broadband to rural Michigan?!
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I have it in Pinckney! Woo!
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you really thing Brighton is rural? Try going north of Gaylord and you will quickly find entire counties that don't have basic telephone service, let alone cellular or broadband services...
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Your Merrykin religion of 'Free Market Forces' takes care of that.
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To be fair, payback times for rural deployments can stretch into decades. Usually, county government uses a big-city contract to ensure the connection for the outlying areas. However many rural areas have no big city nearby to balance it out. If there is no payout for the company, then they cannot be expected to do it.
In these cases, a government owned company can deploy it using state and federal grants.
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In these cases, a government owned company can deploy it using state and federal grants.
Except that those same service providers that refuse to service that market have, in other similar instances, and very likely would again, scream bloody murder about government's "unfair competition" and promptly tie up any such proposal in endless lawsuits.
Google for "municipal broadband lawsuits".
Strat
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How about bringing broadband to rural Michigan?!
Obviously, you have to ask the Faculty of Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering at the University of Dar es Salaam.
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How about bringing broadband to rural Michigan?!
We have stuff going on in rural Michigan too, but that's a different project.
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The TISM department at MSU has had a long-standing program to build out rural networks in Michigan. They've spawned a few companies (AllBand, to name one that I did some work with) that are CLECs or ILECs in the upper-lower peninsula. The biggest problem MSU/TISM runs into is that a lot of areas are already locked up by AT&T / Verizon / Centrytel / etc. who make sure that non-profits and psudo-government agencies can't provide internet access without a long, drawn-out legal fight.
Good for Tanzania (Score:1)
But what about Rural Michigan ?
If they want to impress me they will improve their own back yards before pond skipping.
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I'm pretty sure impressing you isn't high on their list.
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True, but me being a pain in their ass wasn't a priority for me until this morning.
Kurt (Score:1)
>> Kurt (who was one of Slashdot's co-founders many years ago)
AKA Commander Fajita
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Ah Hah! (Score:2)
Rural Africa? (Score:2)
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Which problem should be addressed first the access or the cost?
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Because,,, (Score:1)
...ll the villagers will read the news on their iPad 2 while milking the goats and gathering honey.
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I don't know if I should laugh at your enthusiasm or cry because of your ignorance. Corrupt leaders that you talk about are not going to let locals read that kind of information on the internet. Hell, I doubt they will even let them have elections.
Access to crop reports in the US? Like that is going to help. To be able to make use of that data they would have to be able to farm competitively with other nations. Most of them are not even on the standards for farming in the 19th century, let alone th
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My South African friend was sure a particularly evil politician would stay in power in an election we were looking at. He was voted out in a landslide partly because of informed voters. (UN control of voting booths helped a lot too.)
African farmers are increasingly able to make use of modern farming methods. This too is due to the information age. B2B sales of farming equipment and open markets, global competition, and training via the internet have all played their part.
Technolog
Helps brings! (Score:1)
He's not an English Language professor, anyway!
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Picture a staving subsistence farmer holding one end of an Ethernet cable wondering WTH he is supposed to do with that. This will feed and clothe my family how?
Yeah, what are those savages going to do with better access to information? How are they going to plug into the knowledge economy? They don't have towns and cities in Africa, they only live in mud huts and small settlements. Those African doctors, lawyers, teachers and stuff? They don't exist, too busy eking out a living as subsistence farmers. It's white people working for charities who do all the clever work, you wouldn't expect anyone with dark skin to be able to do anything that requires a bit of inte
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As soon as I see the word "liberal" used as a term of abuse I know I'm talking to a Fox-News-watching intellectually challenged fuck who doesn't know his ass from his elbow.
GP was plugging into the tired old stereotype about black mucksavages living in mud huts and assuming that all Africans have no use for technology, as if they don't have cities, professions, highways, or any of the other trappings of civilization. It's a misinformed stereotype and I'm sick listening to it.
Now scuttle off and crawl back i
What about rural Michigan?!??!? (Score:4, Informative)
Geez, we still don't have broadband in large parts of Michigan. Dialup is still a reality, not a bad memory (as it should be) for many people - some of whom are nestled within the populous southeastern quarter of the lower peninsula.
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You can thank your local and state governments for giving into the Telcos for that one. Why invest in an area when you can just politic the PUC or the local governments to allow you to not honor your word, or ignore entire areas of your exclusive footprint...
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So did we.
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Oh my god, people just stop. We need to let these people bring themselves into the 19th century before we drag them into the 21st. Africa doesn't need another save the africans project with useless technology. Yes, its useless to them unless they are nigerian scammers or something. What they need is to be left alone to work out their problems. Basic education and teaching them that shooting each other is not the best answers to their problems.
Why didn't Africans do it? (Score:1)
It's great and all that this guy brought broadband to Tanzania , but why didn't Tanzanians do it?
Transcript (Score:2)
Title: MSU professor Kurt [DeMaagd] Helps bring Broadband Internet to Rural Africa
Description: Kurt (who was one of Slashdot's co-founders many years ago) believes his students get as much out of the broadband project as the people in Tanzania who are its primary beneficiaries.
[00:00] <TITLE>
The SlashdotTV logo bar with "Bringing broadband Internet to Rural Tanzania" appears in the bottom over a still image from the interview with Professor Kurt DeMaagd. The backdrop is a white room with a "2001: a s
The funny part... (Score:2)
He can bring broadband to rural Africa, but he cant bring broadband to rural Michigan. Most of Michigan has ZERO broadband in the rural areas.
priorities (Score:1)
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This is really good news... (Score:1)
This is a really good ste., All those poor women in Nigeria will have a chance to emails to rest of the world to help with there ransom.
Not going to work... (Score:1)
Attention /. know-it-alls (Score:2)
Ever heard of two countries called China and India? Among the most powerful growing economies in the world today? Billions of people lifted out of poverty and beggary? Manufacturing industry beefed up to the point where the west can't compete? Wanna know how they did it? With education. Better information. Embracing new technology. Industrial policy and a skilled workforce. They didn't do it with social programs. Enough of the "b-b-b-but they need to get running water and healthcare and food first" cra
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Away and shite you AC asshole. The Chinese and Indians are way the fuck better off than they were 20 years ago and that's a solid indisputable fact.