digital equality

Entries categorized as ‘access to technology’

Meanwhile at One Laptop Per Child

May 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Last week saw a One Laptop Per Child conference where they revealed the ’second generation will be a two-screen e-book’ (Guardian blog).

I’m still trying to get my head round the whole OLPC debate, but I know a former big cheese there has been blogging about his dissatisfaction with the current state of the project – Ivan Krstic calls it “this whole clusterf*** of conflicting agendas” in this post that is more of an essay. Hmmm, will have to try and examine more closely.

Categories: access to technology
Tagged: ,

Google-mapping South African violence

May 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

More maps – this time a site’s been set up to monitor the recent spate of xenophobic attacks in South Africa.

They’re distributing an SMS number to report incidents – you can also donate via this method. Neat.

Will it take off? So far there’s 21 reports, dating from 12 May. Will keep an eye.

Categories: access to technology
Tagged: , , ,

Back to the beginning – mapping inequality

May 25, 2008 · Leave a Comment

So in my first post I’ve already got diverted onto funky new products – the portable light – that are ultimately outcomes of the current state of digital inequality, rather than discovering anything about access to and use of digital technology the world over.

Happily, I have discovered Gapminder, a fab mapping / graphmaking device using UN human development report stats.

I made this map, based on the percentage of internet users per country, for 2000. Use the slider to take it up to 2004, the latest year the stats are available on Gapminder. Go there and make your own maps and graphs.

In 2000, the Democratic Republic of Congo was on 0%, in 2002 it had leapt up to 0.1%. In 2004 it’s not even on the map – presumably no data was collected in the aftermath of the most deadly war since World War Two.

Sweden comes top by the way – 76% compared to the US’s 63%.

Categories: access to technology · digital divide
Tagged: , , ,

And then there was (portable) light – and some digital equality questions

May 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Fishing around for sites that might deal in digital equality I came across this pretty cool product from Pop!Tech: the amazing portable light – devised for use in poor, remote communites and trialled by some Mexican villagers. Powered up by the sun during the day, the light is very flexible (literally, it rolls up) and the women have even woven it into their bags.

The portable light, developed by Pop!Tech

There’s a nice video of a presentation on its development on the Pop!Tech site. Although as I watched the rich*, white audience applaud the rich, white speaker, I couldn’t help but feel a little uncomfortable that we were still watching admittedly altruistic rich, white people bestowing expensively developed technology (though cool and innovative) on poor, brown people.

This still has to be manufactured, paid for and shipped. It might be cheap and effective but where will it be manufactured? Who will get paid for making it? Where will the poor Mexican villagers buy more? Yep… I think it might be north of the Rio Grande.

As with computers, does the West donate technology and retain power? Or, once the technology is handed over, is it just a matter of time before the power balance shifts?

*Rich – for the purposes of this blog I’m assuming rich to mean the vast majority of people living in Europe or the USA.

Categories: access to technology · appropriate technology · digital development
Tagged: , ,