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Last Updated
11/26/2007
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Villagewide Wi-Fi
WIRELESS INTERNET IN AFRICA
By AMANDA BOWER, Time Magazine, Monday, May 22, 2006
Buying power
has increased, health outcomes are improving, and more people are
learning to read.
To reach the village of Nyarukamba in western
Uganda, visitors have to clamber up a thin, almost vertical dirt
track. It's not the kind of place you would expect to find
subsistence farmers surfing the Web with wi-fi computers or making
VOIP (voice over Internet protocol) phone calls. But that's exactly
what the village's 800 or so inhabitants have been doing--thanks to
a wireless, solar-powered communications system installed in the
Ruwenzori mountains by Inveneo, a San Francisco nonprofit.
Inveneo was launched in 2004 by three Silicon
Valley veterans--Mark Summer, 36; Kristin Peterson, 45; and Bob
Marsh, 59--who share a passion for high tech and an interest in the
developing world. They had done enough volunteer work overseas to
see how wireless communications might improve and save
lives--through phone calls to health clinics, fast reporting of
natural disasters, support for trading co-ops and better educational
opportunities.
So they designed a solar-powered Internet
network that is inexpensive, easy to install and nearly maintenance
free. At its heart is a regional hub from which wireless relay
stations--some bolted to trees--fan out for up to four miles and
connect a network of PCs. Total cost, including solar panels and
relay stations: $1,995.
One year later, Nyarukamba is already reaping
the benefits. Village income is rising, thanks to improved access to
market prices for crops and co-ops formed with other villages.
Buying power has increased, health outcomes are improving, and more
people are learning to read.
Next month Inveneo will deploy systems to
schools and colleges in Uganda, and Ghana and hopes to expand over
the next year to Swaziland, Senegal and the Philippines. And just in
case the sun doesn't shine,
Inveneo has worked out how to power up the system with a
retrofitted bicycle. |