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Mobile
development rings true
Ken Banks, BBC News
July 14, 2008
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7502474.stm
Today from Kenya to South
Africa, from Sweden to Greece, conservationists are using mobile
networks to track a range of endangered species using GSM technology.
The advance of mobile
technology has touched just about every aspect of the non-profit
world, whether the focus is wildlife conservation or human health,
and we've only just begun to scratch the surface.
It's easy to forget just
how young the mobile industry really is.
The real beauty, of course,
is that few people saw this coming.
Back in 2003, while I
was researching for one of the early publications on the use of
mobile phones in international conservation and development, there
wasn't a huge amount to report other than largely scattered anecdotal
evidence.
Back then, many believed
that people in developing countries, particularly those living off
a couple of dollars or so a day, would never be able to own a phone.
How wrong they were.
Today, in Sub-Saharan
Africa, 30% of the population own a mobile, equating to in excess
of 300 million people.
Many more have access
to the technology through Shared Phones, Village Phones or family
and friends.
Direct
link
This
explosive growth is largely down to a vibrant recycling market and
the arrival of $20 phones, but is also down in part to the efforts
of forward-thinking mobile manufacturers, some of whom spend increasing
amounts of time trying to understand what people living at the so-called
"bottom of the pyramid" might want from a phone.
Mobiles with flashlights
are just one example of a product that can emerge from this brand
of user-centric design.
Seeking to appeal to
the needs of people lacking any kind of reliable lighting in their
homes, some phones are now marketed with a strong emphasis on them
being "much more than a phone". Innovation doesn't just
happen in the West.
Local entrepreneurs are
also getting in on the act, setting up shop wherever they see a
need - which is almost everywhere - providing charging and repair
services to help people keep their phones up and running for as
long as possible.
The end result of all
of this - the manufacturer's "formal" activities and this
hugely impressive grassroots "informal" activity - means
that more phones are getting into more and more hands, and staying
there for longer.
Mobile phones are today
providing a direct line of communication to farmers, doctors, patients,
nurses, teachers and youth, or anyone else the non-profit community
might seek to engage.
This is allowing patients
to be sent reminders to take their medicine, or market prices to
be sent to farmers, or to enable citizens to help monitor elections,
or activists to report human rights abuses.
Text
solution
The
potential for mobiles in conservation and development work is huge,
and evidence of their use is increasing. Many grassroots non-profits,
however, still struggle to successfully implement them in their
work.
A key problem is that
many of the phones circulating through recycled markets are generally
older, legacy handsets.
Thanks to the ingenuity
and efficiency of the many mobile phone repair shops, it's not uncommon
to find people happily using phones six or seven years old.
But providing data services
of any kind, let alone a full web experience, is a bridge too far
for many of these devices.
The solution is often
the humble text message (SMS).
But in a world where
the mobile phone is regularly touted as the device which will help
close the digital divide, text messaging isn't necessarily the solution
people had in mind.
While many developers
concentrate on building smart applications for smart phones, grassroots
non-profits with only SMS at their disposal are largely left behind.
Building applications
for a target audience limited by their own unique blend of cultural,
geographic and economic constraints can be a real challenge, but
that doesn't mean we shouldn't try.
For the
past three years I've been working on my own solution, and it will
come as no surprise that it's based on the text message.
Health
check
FrontlineSMS
is a messaging hub which allows non-profits in developing countries
to manage bulk two-way communications using a mobile phone attached
to a laptop computer.
When I built the first
version in 2005, I was surprised to find that almost all bulk messaging
software was web-based. Getting online on the edge of Kruger National
Park, or in a remote Kenyan village, is a challenge to say the least.
Today, FrontlineSMS is
being used by grassroots non-profits in over 40 countries for a
wide range of activities, and was used in Nigeria to monitor the
2007 Presidential elections.
In Malawi, a student
from Stanford University - armed with just 100 second-hand mobile
phones and FrontlineSMS - is currently helping a rural hospital
revolutionise healthcare for 250,000 people.
There the software is
being used to connect St. Gabriel's Hospital in Namitete with 600
community health workers over 100 sq mile (260 sq km) area.
For the first time, drug
adherence monitors are able to message the hospital, reporting how
local patients are doing on their TB or HIV drug regimens.
Home-based care volunteers
are sent texts with names of patients that need to be traced, and
their condition reported.
Leaders from the "People
Living with HIV and AIDS" support group use FrontlineSMS to
communicate meeting times.
Volunteers can be messaged
before the hospital's mobile testing and immunisation teams arrive
in their village, so they can mobilise the community.
Essentially, FrontlineSMS
has adopted the new role of coordinating a far-reaching community
health network.
SMS has been the surprise
package of the mobile industry but, despite its dominance, obvious
limitations remain.
There may be better and
smarter technologies around the corner, but for many grassroots
non-profits looking to help people today it remains a hugely relevant
and powerful tool.
Mobile phones may present
us with the best opportunity yet to bridge the digital divide, but
we mustn't lose sight of the bigger picture and must always remember
that the technology comes last, not first.
*Ken Banks
is the Founder of kiwanja.net, where he devotes himself to the application
of mobile technology for positive social and environmental change
throughout the developing world
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.
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