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Friday, September 29, 2006
PCs and Mobiles
The Economist writes: "What is the best way to make the benefits of technology more widely available to people in poor countries? Mobile phones are spreading fast even in the poorest parts of the world, thanks to the combination of microcredit loans and pre-paid billing plans, but they cannot do everything that PCs can. For their part, PCs are far more powerful than phones, but they are also much more expensive and complicated. If only there was a way to split the difference between the two: a device as capable as a PC, but as affordable and accessible as a mobile phone. Several initiatives to bridge this gap are under way. The hope is that the right combination of technologies and business models could dramatically broaden access to computers and the internet."
Peer Production
[via Veer] CTheory.net has an article by Michel Bauwens: "Not since Marx identified the manufacturing plants of Manchester as the blueprint for the new capitalist society has there been a deeper transformation of the fundamentals of our social life. As political, economic, and social systems transform themselves into distributed networks, a new human dynamic is emerging: peer to peer (P2P). As P2P gives rise to the emergence of a third mode of production, a third mode of governance, and a third mode of property, it is poised to overhaul our political economy in unprecedented ways. This essay aims to develop a conceptual framework ('P2P theory') capable of explaining these new social processes."
Smart Tech Stories
Forbes has 10 stories. One of them:
MySpace and Attention
Om Malik writes:
Perils of UGC
Rashmi Bansal writes about the problems with user-generated content:
TECH TALK: The Now-New-Near Web: Leapfrogging
The Economist recently had an interesting essay on leapfrog technologies. It wrote:
In countries like India, the Reference Web almost does not exist. Most businesses do not have websites; the ones that do have updates that are few and far between. This has been partly due to the slow growth of PCs and the lack of an inexpensive and reliable broadband infrastructure. Most of us in India rely on the 'global' Reference Web that we can search through the likes of Google and Yahoo. India needs to leapfrog to the Now-New-Near Web. This is a web that will be built around mobiles and with a significant contribution coming from user-generated content. It will significantly improve life by bridging the information gaps that exist. It is a Web in which India can be the leader. The digital infrastructure and the devices to create and consume content are in place. What is missing is the set of services. Another barrier to the creation of the Reference Web for the mass-market has been language. India has a multitude of languages. The computers that exist do not make it easy to create local language content. By adopting multimedia content creation techniques, India can break this barrier. Mobiles are the ideal devices for the creation of such content. The Now-New-Near Web will be at the heart of the New India. It will be a virtual mirror of the physical world around us, accessible via the device we already carry and over networks that already exist. It will be the next big upgrade to the Web – and one which India can lead. Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: The Now-New-Near Web: Content Discovery [September 28, 2006] TECH TALK: The Now-New-Near Web: Citizen Media and Physical World Hyperlinks [September 27, 2006] TECH TALK: The Now-New-Near Web: The Near Web [September 26, 2006] TECH TALK: The Now-New-Near Web: Future of Feeds [September 25, 2006] TECH TALK: The Now-New-Near Web: River of News [September 22, 2006]
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fones def. can't do all that pc's can...but i'm sure they will in the near future!
Posted by deepakhttp://www.indian-recipe.net : FREE Indian Recipes!
The better way to connect poor and average people is to connect them with Information and Technology. Internet is the best happening in this millennium in the field of communication. But the question is how poor and unprivileged people will get access to the Internet, which is clearly dominated by English language. The solution is to introduce Hindi and other local languages in the Internet world in India. There are few players like www.raftaar.com a Hindi Search Engine has come out with some innovative ideas to make Internet as for the masses not for the classes. Such initiatives need to be encouraged, and the Government can make full justice to it by providing computer education in the rural area.
Posted by ManojThe better way to connect poor and average people is to connect them with Information and Technology. Internet is the best happening in this millennium in the field of communication. But the question is how poor and unprivileged people will get access to the Internet, which is clearly dominated by English language. The solution is to introduce Hindi and other local languages in the Internet world in India. There are few players like www.raftaar.com a Hindi Search Engine has come out with some innovative ideas to make Internet as for the masses not for the classes. Such initiatives need to be encouraged, and the Government can make full justice to it by providing computer education in the rural area.
Posted by ManojThe better way to connect poor and average people is to connect them with Information and Technology. Internet is the best happening in this millennium in the field of communication. But the question is how poor and unprivileged people will get access to the Internet, which is clearly dominated by English language. The solution is to introduce Hindi and other local languages in the Internet world in India. There are few players like www.raftaar.com a Hindi Search Engine has come out with some innovative ideas to make Internet as for the masses not for the classes. Such initiatives need to be encouraged, and the Government can make full justice to it by providing computer education in the rural area.
Posted by Manoj
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