Archive for the '- ICTs4 development' Category

Village resource centres from ISRO

charukesi December 5th, 2007

Catching up on reading and writing…

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has established 291 Village Resource Centres (VRCs) to provide integrated services, including tele-education, tele-medicine, natural resources information and skill development in rural India - digitalopportunity

And from ET, Soon, Indians can buy over-the-counter (OTC) drugs from post offices. In order to increase the access of essential drugs to consumers, pharma companies are talking with the Indian Government to use post offices to sell OTC drugs.

And consumer trends for 2008 from trendwatching - status spheres, premiumization, snack culture, online oxygen, brand butlers, crowd mining, MIY - make-it-yourself, eco-iconic… And just in case you wondered about where India was vis-a-vis China in the race, the info page of the trend report says, need to know what will excite consumers in 2008? (Yes, that means India consumers too!)

Gesture-based keyboard from HP

charukesi March 20th, 2006

HP Labs, based in Banaglore has announced a pen-based technology that will allow the Kannada script to be recorded and stored directly in the computer without the use of a conventional keyboard.

From the article in Business Standard,

The technology, which is also called the gesture-based keyboard (GKB), has been developed by researchers at HP Labs India in Bangalore and holds similar potential for other Indian languages derived from the Devanagari and Tamil scripts, according to HP officials.

The HP GKB technology was easy to use through its pen-based interface. In addition to the text, GKB, which could also be used as a mouse, allowed the capture of signatures, pictures and visual elements.

Gupta said the simple gesture-based data entry method could make it easier to communicate for those who neither understand English nor know how to type.

Read about it here.

My earlier post was on Microsoft’s efforts in bridging the demand-supply divide between illiterate domestic workers and potential employers. There are many many exciting initiatives happening in India right now - I am going to watch out for the ones that do work, and on a large scale…

[Cross-posted on mindspace]

Maid in India

charukesi March 13th, 2006

Can someone who doesn’t even know how to read or write use a computer? Microsoft Corp. is probing that question at a research lab in India.

Microsoft seeking ways to help illiterate. That is promising.

And then this…

Working with a local advocacy group, Microsoft has developed a prototype of a system that would connect illiterate domestic workers in India with families seeking their services. The system uses pictures, video and voice commands to tell women what jobs are available, how much the jobs pay and where they are.

Read the full report.

I have mixed feelings about this one, most of them not so good. I am very excited about the possibilities that such systems could open up - bringing those with less access (illiterate or otherwise) closer to information in some way. echoupal does that now (although that is not a project aimed at the illiterate).

Here are some of my reasons for the not-so-good feelings :

Willingness to learn

The fantastic hole-in-the-wall experiment has shown that it is indeed possible for someone who does not know how to read or write to use a computer. But they in this experiment are children, they are naturally curious about the world around them, they are willing to experiment and to make fools of themselves in the process.

Human interaction v/s machine gobbledygook

But why domestic workers? In a country like India, the word-of-mouth system works best - I need a maid, I tell the watchman in my building, he tells others and the next morning three women are at the door-step. I do not have a fixed idea about how much I will pay for the job, not a series of tasks that I can put up on a computer.

Is there a need?

And in most places, there is a decent, well-balanced demand-supply system in place, unlike perhaps the larger employment market. Given that, I do not understand why either a potential employer or employee will need to or want to use such a system.

What is the benefit?

echoupal benefits the farmer by eliminating the middleman, the farmer has updated knowledge about prices and market trends and makes beter money for his produce. In case of domestic workers, there are no middlepeople(?)

Where does the twain meet?

The researchers say they are now trying to figure out how to implement the system, since most women who do domestic work don’t own computers. One option is to put up a kiosk in a community center, Toyama said. Er, most women, meaning some of them do? And what about those wishing to employ them - do they all own computers? If not, do they also go to a kiosk? How does communication work if both sender-receiver are not on a shared platform - any kind of platform?

I think the concept is interesting and powerful, but fraught with all the questions and that leapfroggers tend to evoke in those watching. As a confimed leapfrogger-cheerer, I’d be very happy to read somewhere the answers to these questions. In the meanwhile, here is a blasphemous suggestion - can time at Microsoft research be perhaps put to better use?

Development and at a low cost?

charukesi September 30th, 2005

The developing world. And within that, rural. Children and education. And women. This is where all emerging technology seems to be headed. Politically correct noises? Or just plain marketing widsom? And is this here to last - and deliver the promise of accelerated development in these countries? Or a bubble waiting to burst?

Yahoo studying rural needs, says BusinessLine. Speaking to Business Line at his Bangalore office, Dr Prasad Ram, CTO, Yahoo! R&D India, said that `livelihood-based’ offerings for the rural market would roll out by mid-2006. Right.

And a very interesting Sub-$100 laptop design unveiled. Professor Negroponte came up with the idea for a cheap computer for all after visiting a Cambodian village. His non-profit One Laptop Per Child group plans to have up to 15 million machines in production within a year.. Such optimism is actually scary - Professor Negroponte predicts there could be 100 million to 150 million shipped every year by 2007. What I found interesting in this product idea is the thought that seems to have gone in with respect to the needs of the end users (in this case, children from the developing world) - with all the associated problems - for instance, the laptop is designed to be sturdy and will have a hand crank for charging it - which makes immense sense given the power situation in most places where this laptop is targetted. Virtually indestructible, says the report further.

Not to forget mobile phones. Mobile market shifts its focus - to surprise, surprise, the third world. It could see an increase in cheaper, data-based voice services and a rise in voice-based messaging services. The latter will be particularly popular in areas of low literacy, the report finds. However, with mobile phones, there are regulalr reports of good work happening across countries (textually is fantastic with recording these activities).

Read about village phones for farmers in Uganda and about the Bangladesh mobile help-line for women which has recently won the gender and ict awards. I had recently blogged about two similar internet-based initiatives in India, one, the NCW portal targetted at women and the other, the popular echoupal for farmers.

Update : Low-Cost PCs for the Enterprise linked by Rajesh Jain on Emergic discusses many such initiatives, including Negroponte’s sub $100 laptop.

New links on ict and development

charukesi September 20th, 2005

Lean blogging period. Here are links to a few interesting articles I came across - ave placed them here for my future reading too…

Government Launches Two Portals For Women - via ContentSutra. Maintained by the NIC (National Informatics Centre), these sites are loaded with information and statistics (I checked out both).

The NRCW website (National Resource Centre for Women) is meant to be a one-stop information centre and resource centre on women-related issues. .

The other one is from the NCW (National Commission for Women) and is intended as a place for women to lodge their complaints - they have a system providing a daily update on the status of the complaint. Apart from promising quick olice intervention and monitoring, this cell also has these objectives -

The complaints received shows the trend of crimes against women and suggests systemic changes needed for reduction in crimes.
The complaints are analysed to understand the gaps in routine functioning of government in tackling violence against women and to suggest correctional measures.
The complaints are also used as case studies for sensitization programmes for the police, judiciary, prosecutors, forensic scientists, defence lawyers and other administrative functionaries.

Seems to me a commendable effort. However, I have this nagging thought at the back of my mind about how few women will be able to make use of this website and the complaint registration service it provides, due to : lack of awareness about such a website (or service) and equally importantly, lack of access to the internet - no computer, even no education is where I see many many women who will have the need for such a service coming from… I wonder what can be done to make this more accessible to such women…

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ITC’s program e-choupal has been chosen as the winner for the Development Gateway Award 2005 from among 135 nominees. Connecting the Indian farmer with the world is the mission statement on the e-choupal home page. The idea is simple and powerful - to eliminate the middle men - usually greedy and unscrupulous, giving the farmer direct access to the market, enabling him to sell and buy at better prices.

From the piece in ContentSutra, Since June 2000, over 5,200 eChoupal Internet kiosks have been established to serve 3.5 million farmers in 31,000 villages. At the kiosks, farmers learn management techniques, order fertilizer and other supplies less expensively, check market prices and sell products online, with resulting increases in earnings of up to 20%. .

ITC has added health services to its network of Internet kiosks six months ago and announced the launch of a new educational services pilot in the coming months. Read more about the award and program here

Leapfrogging empowerment and development

charukesi August 16th, 2005

Indian Express has an Independence day special series - India explained, India empowered. The series was flagged off by an article by the President Dr.APJ Abdul Kalam. The focus of the President’s note is “Empowering Rural India”- and is titled - India Empowered to me is Knowledge taking roots in the village. Read the full piece here.

To the Prime Minister whose note followed the president, empowerment is Open democracy and open economy. Read it here.

And today’s piece by Mr. Somnath Chatterjee, Speaker, Lok Sabha who writes about Bringing into the mainstream all those kept out

Link through The Scientific Indian who says - If there’s one engine that’s today driving a changing India, it’s empowerment. Empowerment of the individual, the family, the neighbourhood, the community—and, hence, the nation.

The theme is India empowered to me is - to me, it is a fully functionally literate India.

And to you?

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And Sri Lanka gets connected as villages get mobile technology. Phones begin ringing in Sri Lankan villages as new technology arrives, says this report on Smart Mobs. Not mobiles, nor standard landlines, but a clever combination of the two that is quickly making telephony accessible to all. - CDMA wireless technology which has made it posible in India for mobile phones to exceed landline connections in a span of just a few years.

Some 44.5 million Indians now use mobile handsets, compared with the 43.9 million existing landline users, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India said in a statement. From this post on textually.

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An then the debate about Ethiopia leaping into technology age.

10 % of Ethiopia’s GDP spent on broadband - Smart mobs

Ethiopia Leaps - WorldChanging

A thrust on computer technology and internet connectivity is always open to debate and criticism.The loudest rumbles come from those who believe that in a country where basic infrastructure - in the form of schools and healthcare and electricity - is not in place, spending on computers and internet seem misplaced - to the point of being insensitive to the “real needs” of the people. This is a challenge for those who believe in the power of leapfrogging technology.

As the WorldChanging article says - In essence, the Ministry of Capacity Building wants to make Ethiopia Africa’s first real Knowledge Economy. For a nation that has in recent decades suffered from overwhelming famine and civil war, this is an ambitious goal to say the least. If it fails, Ethiopia could become a symbol for the dangers of leapfrogging and the dangerous temptations of going too far, too fast. But if it succeeds — and the earliest signs are hopeful — Ethiopia could instead symbolize the pathway to success in 21st Century Africa.

This is also very relevant to India - when Dr. Kalam writes about knowledge taking roots in the village, I think about leapfrogging technology making a difference to the lives of impoverished and illiterate villagers. Bringing about a visible change for the better within a generation or two. Contributing to their development in some magical way that I have not fully understood yet.

But can social development really be leapfrogged? As usual, I have the questions here but I don’t know the answers…

More for less from Xenitis?

charukesi June 7th, 2005

This report from The Week says Xenitis Computers’ PC (AAmar PC in the east, AApna PC in the north, AAmchi PC in the west and NaMMa PC in the south) sells for Rs.10,000 - while the high end model is priced at Rs.25,000.

Apart from the current pricing, two more things are striking : the company’s aim to be the first Indian MNC in computer hardware manufacturing - the chairman, Mr. Ghosh is confident that Xenitis’s low-cost computer will help it emerge as the first Indian MNC in computer hardware manufacturing. “The Indian computer market is growing at an annual rate of 35 per cent,” he said. “Every third year, the market doubles in size. I am sure that, by 2010, Xenitis’s turnover will cross Rs 5,000 crore. Already, we have captured a sizeable chunk of the market in Bangladesh. In June, we will start shipping our products to Dubai and in September, we will sell AApna PC in Russia.”

And price control in the market - He said MNCs, which monopolised the Indian hardware market for long, were feeling the pinch. “Our brand has compelled most of them to reduce the price of their products by at least 25 per cent,” said Ghosh. “When our products from the new factory hit the market, the artificial price structure maintained by them for so long will collapse. My aim is to sell a PC at a price which is at least 10 per cent less than our existing cheapest set. In this regard, my idols are Henry Ford and Ratan Tata.”

From Business Line - Xenitis Group launches sub-10k PC, to set up manufacturing unit

Then what is all the fuss about the Mobilis please? (I now sit back and wait for Dheepak / Abi to answer this one - am genuinely puzzled - and I have always said I was tech-handicapped - am fascinated more by the economics aspects of this)

Also The Rs 10,000 solution? Low-cost PCs are the rage. While the price barrier has been broken, what about functionality? My understanding of this is that while such low priced computers may not provide the most sophisticated programs, they are adequate for basic computer functions like word processing and internet browsing - these computers are targeted at low end users in any case…

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And as I was surfing, I came across this - If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the computer, a Rolls-Royce would today cost $100, get a million miles per gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside - Robert X. Cringely, InfoWorld magazine

The ‘affordable’ computer dream

charukesi May 12th, 2005

‘Mobilis’ PC @Rs10K! Encore, Encore!. The Mobilis, a Linux based desktop is slated for launch soon - priced roughly at Rs.10000. “The “Mobilis” would cost between 10,000-12,000 rupees per piece initially but the price may come down with large volume production,” Vinay Deshpande, chairman and CEO of the Bangalore-based Encore Software, told Reuters.

Clearly, the company has concerned itself with the issue of scalability - so far so good, atleast they are talking about large volumes - making the Mobilis a ‘model’ would contribute little towards development as such - The company had launched the Simputer a while ago - while it was heralded as the ultimate ICT4D solution, it seems to have gone the ‘demo’ route (also read what happened to the Simputer to understand this better). Also here is a Simputer for idiots piece from rediff. I had also written about thinking out of the demo mode a long while ago….

However, on a more optimistic note, a PC costing less than Rs.10000 is a marvel. Combine this with efforts to provide computing in regional languages. Making technology accessible in more ways than one to those on the other side of the great digital divide - as information and communication technologies increasingly become the foundation on which our economy functions, it is no longer feasible or even commercially viable for technology providers to deny the have-nots the opportunity of being part of the new economy.

Read Rajesh Jain’s posts on the massputer where he talks about the need for IT companies to reconise the fortune at the bottom of the pyramid

It is very interesting to watch how markets move and products become cheaper and more accessible with technology - I was driving through parts of rural Maharasthra recently - and I noticed that there were villages with population figures of a few hundreds - with no basic facilities - no schools, no roads, not even a doctor or a dispensary - but many of them had an STD booth…

There is no arguing this fact (although this is one of the most disputed topics in development studies!) - technological progress must and does contribute towards development….

Remember the days when mobile phones cost a small packet - and people bought them but rarely used them (can afford the phone but can’t afford the call charges!). Why, remember a time when we had to book a trunk call and wait for hours to get through - and then pay a bomb - or wait for 11 p.m. to make use of the discounted call rates? Or when you had to apply for a land line and wait for months and even years to get a connection?

Thinking out of the ‘demo’ mode

charukesi March 11th, 2004

Earlier this week, I was at a conference where the focus was on ICTS for development in India. Among many interesting speakers was Prof. Kriti Ramamrutham from IIT Bombay. The Professor is working in the Media Lab Asia Project which has been described as the world’s largest academic research program dedicated to bringing the benefits of new technologies to everyone, with a special focus on meeting the grand challenges in learning, health, and economic development.

In the course of his speech, he mentioned that this was the fourth conference he was attending in the last one month on this subject of ICTs. The fourth in one month. Which may not be very surprising considering that ICTs seem to be the flavour of the season in the development arena. There are indeed hundreds of projects related to ICTs in India; in the course of research for my presentation at this conference, I read about some fascinating initiatives in the areas of education and governance and so on. Which are touching and making a difference in the lives of thousands of people.

But think about their overall impact on the devlepoment process; it is close to negligible. True, individual projects make a difference to people, but only in that community, that village or that district…. and no further…. Rajesh Jain keeps writing about this all the time…. about the need to get out of the ‘demo’ mode and think about scalability. For, unless the projects are implemented on a large scale, the impact on development will stay this way, in small pockets and in certain regions. To me, this means that the divide gets larger….. or deeper…… development divide, digital divide whatever……. Some regions, some communities get the benefits of such demo projects….. and repeatedly….. The problem is just too large in India (as far as development needs are concerned) and it will take millions of such test-pilot projects to even make a dent…..