Posts Tagged Technology
The Next 4 Billion: The fortune at the bottom of the mobile pyramid
Best presentation I’ve ever seen on the future of mobile computing and it’s incredible implications among the developing world.
Via: FORA.tv – Mobile Phones: The Next 4 Billion with Tomi Ahonen.
20 years of mobile phones
Wallet, keys, phone. The way we leave our homes has changed in the last 20 years. It’s a global phenomenon that is still in infancy. Originally pitched as a luxury item, the mobile phone is radically improving quality of life for the world’s poor.
1990
2010
2030?
The culture of handouts vs. the assembly line of the future
You can try it out by ordering greeting cards from Samasource.
What is Ushahidi?
Remember those olden days before mobile phones? What would you do if you had a flat tire?
Take that feeling of personal crisis and multiply it to a community, national, or even global level. How can mobile phones help mitigate disaster or speed response and recovery?
Ushahidi is on the case.
Via The Ushahidi Blog.
Online Technology Closes the Gap Between Sponsorship and Relationship
Stuff is changing. It’s easy to connect. Who is my neighbor now?
Via: Online Technology Closes the Gap Between the Sponsored and the Sponsors – ChurchCrunch.
The WOW Challenge
I’ve been a fan of Ze Frank for a few years now. He’s working with Samsung to promote some new charity competition using the collective creativity of cell phone users.
Challenge 1 teaser says: “Get ready to grab your mobile and get a charge from the sun. Details will be revealed on Oct. 26th. In the meantime, register and choose your team. Compete in all three challenges to help your charity of choice win up to $20,000. Come back on the 26th and play!”
Homeless boy from Manila becomes Journey’s lead singer – Thanks YouTube!
The world is flat. Another example of how the internet is creating unprecedented opportunity for the poor around the world.
TXTEAGLE – Crowdsourcing tasks to the developing world
15 Million Africans are ready for work. Got tasks?
From the TXTEAGLE website:
The impact of mobile phones throughout the world has been widely documented.
These devices now function as fundamental tools instrumental to billions of economic livelihoods. The transformative impact of what is now the fastest technology adoption in human history has had the most dramatic ramifications within some of our most underserved societies. Indeed, while mobile phones were originally designed for Western business executives, the vast majority of mobile phone subscribers today live in the developing world. Africa, with East Africa at the forefront, is currently the fastest growing mobile phone market in the world.
As the price of unlocked GSM phones (complete with sim card and airtime) falls below US$20 in many of these markets, the mobile phone has become many people’s single technology purchase. As such, the expectations for this technology far exceed simply two-way communication. In East Africa, where over 90% of the population live in an area with GSM reception, mobile phones are also expected to serve as flashlights, as music players, and now, even as digital wallets.
The reduction in the price of handsets has allowed a dramatic increase in the number of individuals relying on this technology to do their jobs. Day laborers repairing roads throughout Nairobi no longer need to congregate in the morning in central areas throughout the city waiting for prospective employers to collect them for the day’s work. Instead, in many of these regions, daily labor is now organized via text message.
However, with unemployment levels rising to almost fifty percent in countries such as Kenya, there are still hundreds of millions of mobile phone subscribers who are unable to find consistent work. Given high rates of unemployment and marginal income sources, many of the more than 2 billion mobile phone subscribers currently living in the developing world would greatly benefit from even an extra dollar per day. Amazon’s Mechanical Turk has successfully introduced “human intelligence tasks” that can be completed by individuals with a personal computer connected to the internet for small amounts of money. We apply the same principle to “txteagle”, a mobile phone-based system that untethers these tasks from the PC and offers them to the world’s billions of mobile phone users – providing an additional source of supplementary income to rural and low income populations.
YouTube – eTech txteagle short.
Plus, this report on how wireless networks are developing in emerging markets.
“You are on Candid Camera” – Thomas Friedman
Thomas Friedman responds to the resignation of Van Jones over controversial statements. One way to navigate today’s technological landscape is to follow the advice I’ve heard attributed to former Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo: “Never write a letter and never throw one away.”
Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy
These devices now function as fundamental tools instrumental to billions of economic livelihoods. The transformative impact of what is now the fastest technology adoption in human history has had the most dramatic ramifications within some of our most underserved societies. Indeed, while mobile phones were originally designed for Western business executives, the vast majority of mobile phone subscribers today live in the developing world. Africa, with East Africa at the forefront, is currently the fastest growing mobile phone market in the world.