Frederick Noronha on Sat, 4 Jan 2003 14:17:02 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> BytesForAll * 04012003 |
###################################################################### BytesForAll (Jan 2003)************************************************ ###################################################################### Field potential --------------- Sometimes, one comes across those interesting nuggets of information almost by chance. Someone one knows only as "Besva" <besva@yahoo.com> drew one's attention to http://dacnet.nic.in/ This is a plan of the Ministry of Agriculture's Department of Agriculture and Cooperation (DAC), Ministry of Agriculture, to take E-Governance to the directorates, attached offices and subordinate offices and field units. Users of the DACNET portal include a whole lot of agri-institutions. For instance, there's AGMARKNET-Agricultural Marketing Information Network; FMC - Forward Marketing Commission; FCI - Food Corporation of India; CWC - Central Warehousing Corporation; NHB - National Horticulture Board; NCDC - National Cooperative Development Corporation; DGCIS - Directorate General of Commercial Intellignece & Statistics; APEDA - Agricultural & Processed Food Products Export Development Authority; MPEDA - Marine Products Export Development Authority; TRIFED - Tribal Marketing Federation; NAFED - National Agricultural Marketing Federation; EPCs - Export Promotion Councils; and others. Of course, there can be questions. Government IT projects often emphasise more on spending and less on optimally using the investment. Is this the case here? Time will tell. But bringing together such synergies come together, there certainly could be a potential waiting to be tapped. Specially in the often IT-ignored field of agriculture. For health ---------- This comes from Jiva <jiva@jiva.org>, located outside Delhi. It notes, in its education newsletter 'Pragati', that in rural India, there are millions of people in need of medical help who don't have access to it. Even now, many suffer or die from diseases that could have been prevented if medical help had been available. Jiva (www.jiva.org) is looking to change this scenario. They have developed a program called Handy Vaid (www.jiva.org/handyvaid) that offers remote medical support through hand-held computers. In the coming year, they say they're looking "not only to provide healthcare to 45,000 people, but to provide a sustainable, scalable model that can achieve numbers many times that". Feel you can help? Check the site above or contact educational director of the Faridabad-based institute, the young American volunteer Steve Rudolph <info@jiva.org> Incidentally, Pragati (meaning "progress" in Sanskrit) is the periodic education and outreach newsletter from Jiva Institute. It contains updates on Jiva's activities in the areas of education and sustainable development. To subscribe to Pragati, send an e-mail to: pragati-subscribe@topica.com Two projects ------------ Rahul Barkataky <rahulb@mitra.org.in> of MITRA in New Delhi's Lajpat Nagar recently announced "two interesting happenings" at the centre. First came India Calls, an online volunteering channel owned and managed by MITRA, which recently found mention in the UN Secretary General's report 'International Year of Volunteers: outcomes and future perspectives'. See http://www.unv.org/infobase/articles/2002/02_10_04USA_SG_Report_final.pdf Besides this, one of Mitra's project 'Handicrafts e-Trade Centre' became one of 10 selected to participate in this years, Digital Partners' Social Enterprise Laboratory (SEL) from a group of nearly 140 applicants across the world. See http://www.digitalpartners.org/sel_progress.html MITRA can be contacted via F/48 (Ground Floor) Lajpat Nagar I New Delhi 110 024, India Tel: +91 11 6911720 Their website is www.mitra.org.in Virtual Lab Toolkit ------------------- Unesco's first edition of its "Virtual Laboratory Toolkit" has just been released on the World Wide Web and within UNESCO's Public@ series of representative "open access" CD-ROMs that are giving access to information in the public domain or to information provided on a benevolent basis by rights holders. The Toolkit provides an extensive set of free person-to-person (P2P) communication tools (audio and video conference, scientific text chat, whiteboard, collaborative authorship, portal and mailing list management, etc.), and also basic advice on person-to-equipment (P2E) tools. It was developed for UNESCO by a team of specialists working with the Institute for Informatics of the Technical University of Freiberg (Technical Coordinator, Germany), the COPINE Centre of the Obafemi Awolowo University (Ile Ife, Nigeria) and the Shanghai Research Centre for Applied Physics (China). The Toolkit is available for testing and application by scientists and other researchers, particularly in Third World countries, who are interested in creating or participating in virtual laboratories. To begin, it's being tested by an informatics support group within the UNESCO "cross-cutting" project Virtual Laboratories for Drying Lakes (Lake Chad, the Dead Sea, the Aral Sea). If all goes well, based on the experiences and suggestions of users, a second version could come out by 2003. See http://virtuallab.tu-freiberg.de/ Info-access ----------- Twenty one participants including researchers and project managers from eight sites of a UNESCO project on "Using ICTs for poverty reduction" met in November in Chennai. Their goal: to determine the research approach and to review the beta version of special software interface "eNRICH". This software was developed to facilitate information-access based on the "life events of poor". This project has sites in Bangladesh, Bhutan, India and Sri Lank. It is trying is to determine to what extent ICTs can be utilised by the poor people to empower themselves. The different sites have developed their own technological and organizational approaches to put ICTs into the hands of poor. The last two day of the workshop was devoted to review the beta version of "eNRICH", a software interface jointly developed by UNESCO and the National Informatics Center of India. This software solution will be used in all the project sites and also will be made available for other similar projects. "eNRICH" enables easy generation of websites which encapsulate both information and communication needs in a single homepage. Users will be able to browse and use authenticated websites relevant to their daily life events; users can vote on various community issues, use bulletin boards, e-mail, chat and voice messages to express exchange and communicate concerns and information. It also has a Learning Zone for users to follow skill based modules on various occupations. "eNRICH" has the option to capture all user patterns for designated research purposes. The multilingual version of "eNRICH" is being developed and will be introduced at the beginning of 2003. 'Akshaya' project ----------------- Reports in the mainstream press say India's 'Akshaya' project plans to set up some 9,000 community information centres across Kerala as part of a campaign to bridge the digital divide. These centres are to be established through private initiative, with the objective of having one centre within two km of each household. The project would commence in Malappuram and Thiruvananthapuram in January 2003 and the entire State is proposed to be covered by May 2004. Stinging critique ----------------- If you disagree with the policy direction a cash-strapped government is taking on computerising schools, what does one do? Simple, draft an 'open letter' and splatter it all over cyberspace. That's exactly what the members of Kochi's Free Software User Group did, regarding the choice of software and syllabus prescribed for the IT@School project: "[W]e submit that implementation of the scheme as it is would harm the long term interests of our State, the general public and the country. There would be very serious violation of our citizens' basic legal and constitutional rights. ... We wish, by this letter, to bring to your kind attention, the following issues and request you to remedy them without further delay," they wrote. Their memo did the rounds across the globe, probably many times over. It attracted wide attention. See the details at http://www.symonds.net/~fsug-kochi/mass-memo.html ] Farmer's data ------------- There was this interesting story. One man has been trying almost single- handedly for the last five years to collect information on various aspects of farming from diverse sources and explore a path for the state to emerge unscathed out of the WTO maze. For 42-year- old A.V. Narayanaswami, a coffee planter in Wayanad, it has been a labour of love -- to his vocation as a farmer and as a Keralite concerned about the woes of the state's farm sector. His huge data collection currently runs into over 150,000 Web pages in more than 300 modules. The database covers the state's farm potential, the new norms of production, packaging, marketing and certification taking effect at the global level, the major players in the area of multilateral negotiations, the kind of expert services that are and that could be available to farmers and the manner in which the state's farming activities could be reoriented towards higher production. Collecting and digitising such huge volumes of data has been very strenuous. But the work is divided within the family. Narayana Swamy, his wife Prabha and 15-year-old son, Vishnu, and 13-year-old daughter, Veda, learnt Web technologies and persistently improved their skills. They together collected over 1,000 varieties of plants, identified and indexed them and then measured the light, temperature and the relative humidity four times a day. The voluminous data thus generated were digitised. A lot of information has been collected on calendar of operations, the maximum residue limits of chemical, phyto-sanitary standards, legal aspects of farming and commodity market derivatives, according to reports reaching here. 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