| |
Back to Index
Technology:
Making the most of mobiles
IRIN
News
September 07, 2011
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=93675
It is not often
a technology guru will say, "Forget the internet!" but
Ken Banks, founder of Kiwanja.net, advocates going back to basics
- using mobile phones rather than the internet, and pretty
basic phones at that.
While mobile phones are ubiquitous in Africa, the internet has nothing
like the same penetration and is almost non-existent in rural areas.
Says Banks: "For example, in Zimbabwe, there's 2-3 percent
internet penetration. If your amazing, whizzy mobile tool needs
the internet, and you are looking to deploy it in Zimbabwe, you
have lost 97 percent of people before you start."
Dillon Dhanecha's company, The Change Studio, was trying to distribute
management tools and training through the internet, and admits it
fell into exactly the trap Banks was describing. "We were
developing short YouTube clips and so on, but I was in Rwanda a
few weeks ago and trying to access our site from my Smartphone,
and it just wasn't happening."
But there are plenty of options with even a not-very-smart phone:
one of the pioneers was M-Pesa, designed as a tool for repaying
microfinance loans. But Kenyans found all kinds of other uses; for
instance, people afraid to carry large sums of cash while travelling
would send it to themselves for collection at their destination.
It was also key to the recent Kenyans for Kenya drought aid funding
drive.
Tracking livestock
Another phone-based tool playing an important role in the drought-affected
areas of East Africa is EpiCollect, developed by Imperial College,
London, which allows the geospatial collation of data collected
by mobile phone. Kenyan vets are using it for disease surveillance,
monitoring outbreaks, treatments, vaccinations and animal deaths.
Even where there is no mobile-phone signal, they can record data
by phone and store it until it can be transferred to a computer,
producing an interactive map pinpointing where each observation
has been made, with additional information about locality, even
photographs, available at the click of a mouse.
Nick Short, of the NGO VetAid, has been greatly impressed by the
possibilities, and the fact that ministries of agriculture and the
UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) can now track what is
happening in real time.
"When I worked in Botswana," he says, "We had
an outbreak in the northwest of a disease called CBPP. It took us
about two-and-a-half months to hear the disease was in the country.
By the time we got there about 20,000 cows had died; we ended up
killing 300,000 cattle."
Short is also hoping its use during the current drought will help
leverage assistance, helping potential donors pinpoint exactly where
their money will be going. "Just watching the BBC is not good
enough," he says. "This way people will actually see
the animals they are benefiting."
Banks has developed an SMS-based tool, Frontline SMS, which will
work with even the simplest phones. By connecting a standard mobile
phone to a laptop, data can be received or transmitted wherever
a basic phone signal is available, without any need for 3G or an
internet connection. It is freely available to any not-for-profit
organization.
In Afghanistan it has been used to send out security alerts to field
workers. It tracks drug availability in clinics across East Africa,
and house demolitions in Zimbabwe. Civil society groups in Nigeria
have used it to collate information from their election observers,
and it is used by a company distributing agricultural pumps in Kenya
and Tanzania to keep in touch with farmers. Specialized versions
are being developed for health and educational sectors, for NGOs
working in law and microfinance, and for community radio stations.
Nay-sayers
But while the developers may be entranced by their tools, some dissenting
voices were raised at the 1 September meeting in London. A Ghanaian
lawyer, who declined to be named, said: "I find this depressing.
Just monitoring is not sufficient; monitoring is just collecting
data while people die."
Short disagreed: "Without these tools no one knows what is
happening in remote areas, and if you don't know what is happening,
you can't do anything about it... If there were an outbreak of disease,
we wouldn't know about it until it was too late, and the animals
were already dead.
Shewa Adeniji, director of a small NGO called Flourish International,
which sponsors community clinics in Ghana, expressed wider concerns
about Africa's love-affair with the mobile phone. "There are
glaring benefits, but it's adding to poverty on the ground. You
have people in Nigeria struggling to pay 1,000 naira for medical
insurance, and yet they will buy 1,000 naira top-up for their phones.
These are misplaced priorities and meanwhile the telecom companies
are going to African countries to milk them of their money."
Banks accepted there had been cases of people buying phone credit
rather than food or sending their children to school but pointed
out that building a transmission network, especially in rural areas,
costs money. "If mobile phone [companies] didn't make money,
we wouldn't have the network of coverage we have. And once the network
is there, people can use it... The technology can be used to do
both good and bad, and you can't really control that. You
can just as easily spread a hate message as a health message, but
you just have to hope that people will use it in a positive way."
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|