Sure will do asap, apologies to other listers, had one of those light bulb moments when i saw your response and included the list in my reply. Regards On 9/21/15, Brian Munyao Longwe <blongwe@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks Barrack,
I forgot to mention that all locations and equipment are solar powered as there is very little infrastructure in Northern Uganda....
Barrack - get in touch offlist if you want to pick my brains :) or whats left of them %)
Best regards,
Brian
On Mon, Sep 21, 2015 at 11:18 AM, Barrack Otieno <otieno.barrack@gmail.com> wrote:
Great work and way to go for our local communities. Practical Internet.
Best Regards
Hi all,
I was quite excited to see this article by Wired! Featured in it is the work I've been doing for Oxfam's Internet Now! project in Northern Uganda over the past 2 and a half years. (the guy in the photo is one of the wireless internet engineers from the local community that we have trained and equipped to bridge the last mile with low cost wireless technology).
We established a social enterprise that is using internet technologies to improve livelihoods for communities in this post-conflict regions. This is mainly through making high speed broadband available to rural communities at low cost. So far we have been able to establish points-of-presence in the towns of Gulu, Lira, Soroti and Mbale - NGOs, corporates and individuals alike have been flocking to take up the broadband services after years of poor quality and expensive services from the mobile operators who sell mainly data bundles that have poor performance. We ride on Uganda's national optical fiber network (owned by the ministry of ICT's National IT Authority - NITA-U). and from Kampala interconnect with a variety of bulk providers (Seacom, Liquid Telecom, Simbanet, BCS) who are connected to submarine networks via Mombasa. Our service approach has greatly challenged the internet services paradigm and scored greatly with our subscribers, many of whom enjoy better services in these rural towns than their colleagues/counterparts in the capital Kampala.
We also provide employment to members of the local community through a specialized form on business process outsourcing known as impact sourcing or more commonly as microwork. We have an average of about 60 young
On 9/21/15, Brian Munyao Longwe via kictanet <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote: people
working daily to deliver digitial jobs to companies in the USA, mostly Sillicon Valley. Most of them are based at a BPO delivery center we have established at Gulu University with 75 workstation while others work in their villages via centers that we have established in 20 sub-counties across 5 districts that offer 5 workstation dedicated to BPO.
We're very happy with the impact that the social enterprise is having in the communities and I am now in the process of winding up my programme management role and handing over the reins to a competent management team that we have established to run the social enterprise.
Best regards,
Brian
On Wed, Sep 16, 2015 at 9:28 PM, Watila Alex via kictanet < kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Deploy Internet the old-fashioned way.
“It’s not so sexy to build roads, but we’re not going to overcome the challenge of missing infrastructure with flying cars,”
http://www.wired.com/2015/09/heres-real-way-get-internet-next-4-billion-peop...
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