E-waste for E-Learning & Youth Development

This post is part of Global Wire Associates’ Recharge E-Waste Campaign.

We speak a lot here about the growing problem of e-waste.  Designer and engineer Dhairya Dand also spends a great deal of his time thinking about e-waste as well while backpacking through Cambodia.

…I was around suburban Phnom Penh and came across enormous land fills stretching miles and miles.  These were piled with eWaste dumped from the developed world. What was more appalling, was that kids who should be in school were working here in the landfills. Most families had migrated from villages leaving behind agriculture to these landfills for a rich pay of a dollar a day…

So he thought what if he found a way to not only produce a possible solution to this major environmental problem, but to also make education more accessible and fun for those kids in the landfills.   Here the idea of Thinker Toys was born.  Dand takes the used computer parts in the landfills and turn them into fun, interactive toys.  So far Dand has made four prototypes using Arduino, an open-source electronics prototyping platform.

We like the Keyano, which turns a keyboard into a piano, with the keys musically mapped to the notes.  The RandoMath also uses a keyboard with a small LED screen connected to it and kids can do math puzzles.  The iPod-like Storynory plays recorded fun stories in your local language.  You can either plug it into a speaker for a collaborative storytelling experience or a headphone just to hear the stories.  Finally TV++ allows kids to connect a monitor, keyboard and mouse together to create a mini computer.  Also in development is the Mousepedia, a mouse converted into an audio encyclopedia.

Dand has already been invited to exhibit his work at ICTD 2012 and TEDx Phnom Penh.  The next step for Dand is to create an online community called Open Toys, which will open up the discussion for future toy designs and possible new ideas to e-waste activists, toy designers and engineers around the world.

Leveling The Playing Field For Slum Businesses

We recently stumbled upon this cool article in the Guardian, discussing a model for using mobile phones and e-commerce to better support “slum businesses” throughout the developing world.  There are many small businesses situated in extremely impoverished communities.  But as the article points out, most of these enterprises don’t have formal mailing addresses to send and receive products.

…Chris, a student who lives in Kibera in Kenya, the second largest urban slum in Africa, answers: “One million people live in Kibera, but we do not have addresses. So when I ordered a second-hand camera to use in my business as a journalist, I could not receive the package directly. I had to walk to the nearest postal office at a 3.5km distance. And not just once, I did not know when the package would arrive, so I had to walk back and forth regularly. And you know the people who live in Kibera have little money, so when a package arrives, we have to bribe the local authorities to ensure the package gets to the right recipient.”…

And there is also the problem of payment  for products.

…Electronic payments are crucial, as a local student explains: “India still very much has a cash payment culture. So if, let’s say, I want to make a deal with a customer in Italy via the Internet, how can I be certain I will be paid if I send him the goods? And how do I receive the money?”…

There are now corporations looking into ways to create smoother operations for slum businesses, and technology plays a key role in helping to mobilize these companies.  New technology can help these businesses rise above poverty and create an equal playing field.  A collaboration between TNT Express and Vodafone led to the design of phones that recognize a mobile phone number as an address location and enables secure payments via Vodafone’s M-paisa.

But there is more that can be done to support these companies.  Global Wire Associates is doing research on how technological innovation is helping underprivileged small businesses worldwide.  Are you a business or tech consultant who has experience working in the developing world?  Are you a small business owner in the developing world who has a problem that affects how you do business that could possibly be resolved through technology.  Please email your ideas to us at info[at]globalwireonline[dot]org that we can use for our research.  We will put together all the ideas and share them with you in the next few weeks in a more formal presentation.

Media Innovation Takes Charge in Afghanistan

Last week President Obama made a surprise visit to Afghanistan during which he signed a long-term security agreement with Afghan President Hamid Karzai that allows for the United States to potentially keep military forces in the country in a support role until 2024.  All U.S. combat troops are expected to leave Afghanistan by 2014.  Many analysts have wondered if Afghanistan will fall back into the Taliban’s hands and any progress made in the country will be reversed once the U.S. leaves.  However, there seem to be many efforts to use the media as a catalyst for good governance in Afghanistan for years to come.

Afghan radio network Salam Watandar (“Hello Countrymen”) was officially inaugurated April 8 as an independent, non-governmental Afghan organization.  It was originally established in 2003 by media advocacy group Internews and funded by United States Agency for International Development’s Office of Transition Initiatives.

From Internews:

…Beginning as a small radio production service that provided content to a handful of independent provincial radio stations established by Internews, the network has grown to 47 radio stations that broadcast in 29 Afghan provinces with the capacity to reach over 10 million listeners. Through these partner stations, Salam Watandar broadcasts high-quality programs on current affairs, culture, social issues and sport, and has served as a strategic hub for mentoring and training its partner radio stations…

One of the key elements of Salam Watandar’s success is its ability to communicate with listeners not only through traditional phone calls, but also through text messaging.  There is a strong interest in using tech innovation to advance Afghan civil society.

…Nationwide, radio has the highest penetration among Afghans, with 73% reporting they own a radio.  Access differs dramatically between provinces, between rural and urban areas, and between men and women. In Herat, for example, 86% of Afghans own a television, while only 22% own radios. Internet access, however, remains low nationwide, with only 1% reporting access to Internet in their homes.

There is a push to give technical training to all Afghan citizens, but especially for women. Afghan women used the opportunity of International Women’s Day recently to participate in women-only technology training courses.  Participants learned how to use both new and traditional media tools to express themselves and enhance their advocacy efforts against gender discrimination.

“New media is not just for journalists,” said a participant named Parwana from Women Activities & Social Services Association (WASSA). She continued, passionately exclaiming, “As an Afghan woman who works directly in society and in close contact with different people, this [new media] will allow us to transfer our voices and pain.”

There are also efforts to reach out to Afghanistan’s tech start up community.   Internews and the Afghan Ministry for Communications and IT hosted the Kabul Innovation Lab last February to look at ways to use technology for improving the country.

“There was no functional infrastructure after 2002 unfortunately, and we had to basically start from scratch,” said Javed Hamdard, an Afghan ICT coordinator who served as a project judge, speaking to the BBC about the event. “As we are speaking, there are more than 17.96 million mobile subscribers. If we measure it from that short period of ten years then the growth and achievements and progress in the ICT sector in general, and the telecommunications in particular, it has been tremendous.”

E-Waste & Doing Better Green Business

This post is part of Global Wire Associates’ Recharge E-Waste Campaign.

Global Wire Associates Founder Talia Whyte originally wrote this post on Global Wire’s companion blog.

Lately, there has been a lot of talk about how to be “more green” in our everyday lives, and in particular how to improve the global economy. In the last year, I have looked at the ways my company Global Wire Associates and my freelance journalism workoperate and how I can create a smaller carbon footprint.

As a new media consulting firm, Global Wire Associates is in the business of using technology. However, with the growing problem of e-waste, we felt that it was our responsibility to use electronics with more mindfulness. According to the United Nations Environmental Programme, it is estimated that 20-50 million tons of discarded electronics are dumped into landfills around the world, mostly in developing countries, every year. Electronics include old mobiles, televisions, microwaves, computers and more. However, most of the time it’s not because these gadgets are broken; they’re being dumped in favor of newer versions.

Landfills with e-waste create serious problems in the long run. Toxic chemicals in electronics can leach into the land over time or are released into the atmosphere, creating severe health and environmental hazards in nearby communities.

Even if you take your old electronics to recycling sites, there is no guarantee they will be recycled properly. This is partly because it is expensive and labor-intensive to properly recycle e-waste in many developed countries, as most environmental laws in these countries require e-recyclers to use environmentally friendly processes.

So, for the last year, my company decided that when it is time to purchase any new equipment – cameras, computers, mobiles – we made sure that old or broken equipment was repairable first. We also donate old electronics that are not deemed useful for our purposes to other needy individuals or organizations. Before we consider making new purchases, we try to buy older but usable models whenever possible. If the electronics are beyond repairable, we properly recycle them.

Not only are we doing our little part to save the health of the planet and its people, but it has also made us feel really good about ourselves and wanting to extend our enthusiasm with others. So this year we launched our Recharge E-Waste campaign to make others aware of the global tech waste problem. We not only plan to use our website to have discussions about proper recycling, donating and/or selling of used electronics, and turning electronics into art and design models, but we are also seriously thinking about launching an e-waste management initiative later this year.

Our green awareness has also extended to other areas in our operations, like doing more web conferencing with clients instead of traveling, cloud computing and using green office supplies. Of course, I also use recycled cameras for my freelance video journalistic gigs. Sometimes it’s the smallest things that can make a big difference in our world.

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