Archive for the ‘eKhaya ICT’ Category

Eastern Cape ICT Summit

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Very encouraging words were heard at the EC ICT Summit in Port Elizabeth (Nelson Mandela Bay) this morning from the Hon. Noxolo Kiviet, the province’s Premier. Her prime rationale for why the EC government and Premier’s Office is so interested in ICT development in this province, is that, “ICT’s can mediate the relationship between citizen and state.” Technology can “braoden the presence of state” for people especially in rural areas.

This is the enlightened stance that can bridge divides in our province between the impoverished rural areas and the highly developed sectors in cities and rurality. Ms. Kiviet called for an information driven approach to land reform, something that must surely happen as racial lines still distort the reality of the people populating this land.

Ms. Kiviet also told me that she has thrice in the last month been at schools in the Elliotdale area, near where our solar schools project has been realised and is running, and that her interests are aligned with the truly broad base. I believe that Ms. Kiviet will continue the kinds of broad based policies that we have seen from her female predecessor, Nosimo Balindlela. This bodes very well for our province.

Siyabulela!

A P2P Middleware Design for Rural Digital Access Nodes in Marginalised Rural Areas …

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

… is the title of my masters thesis, which I will hand in for external examination at the end of the week.

Thanks to my family for putting up with my midnight writing sessions.

And thanks to my friends, Erika, Ford, Henry and Tanya for proof-reading the sucker.

And thanks to my readership for putting up with the silence… (I’ll publish a copy here as soon as it’s final.)

Things have been going along at the speed of light at eKhaya ICT in the meanwhile. In December, Thozamile Ngeju our community coordinator has been doing wonders with the two schools that were operational in that time: Benjamin Mahlasela and Nathaniel Nyaluza (both Secondary Schools). This is our first small forray into the Grahamstown township (impoverished peri-urban area), and we look forward to it moving along fantastically during 2010. All signals are on green for this year.

On the ESTIMA Software Factory front, we are hard at work. A large part of the technical input at the start comes from my thesis — the primary software objective will be to create a distributed middleware for rural digital access centres. Doesn’t that sound familiar. We have hired two programmers and I am late in writing an offer to the third. Oops. So I had better go and do that now.

But first a word about innovation possibilities: we had a fab meeting with the East London IDZ last week. Dr. Nkem-abonta has really internalised all the recommendations that issue from the COFISA foresight workshops (http://www.cofisa.org.za, look under documents), and so the Eastern Cape is looking to attract Knowledge Industries, Green Transport, etc. It sounds, that the IDZ is a little behind schedule. As are many things on the African Continent. Like BROADBAND. Still, if they manage to get a green car manufacturer there, at least we’ll have a place to peddle our mobile software. I have been talking to the CEO of neofonie Mobile, and he’s keen to expand down this way…

Moving from SourceForge to GoogleCode

Monday, October 12th, 2009

awareNet is currently moving from SourceForge to GoogleCode. The main reason is the speed of the site, but a further problem is the intricate nature of the SourceForge machinery. There are really very many options on all the features, most of which I can only think would be interesting in teams of around or more than 20 programmers.

GoogleCode on the other hand is faster to access, the svn doesn’t time out all the time from South Africa and I am interested to see which of the SourceForge features I am going to miss…

Regulating the Internet in South Africa

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

The new Films and Publications Act, No. 3 which amends Act No. 89 of 1998 has an interesting section which pertains to persons providing Social Media aimed at children. This is stipulated in Section 24C.

I think it is a fairly worded law, questions only arise over implementation, i.e. whether the 60-year old judge presiding over the legal case has ever used Google (let alone understanding the intricacies of GUI design for browsers). All of the items in the Act have been or are being addressed by awareNet, our home-grown social networking software specially for schools…

Obligations of internet access and service providers

24C. (1) For the purposes of this section, unless the context otherwise indicates-

(a) ‘child-oriented service’ means a contact service and includes a content service which is specifically targeted at children;
(b) ‘contact service’ means any service intended to enable people previously unacquainted with each other to make initial contact and to communicate with each other;
(c) ‘content’ means any sound, text, still picture, moving picture, other audio visual representation or sensory representation and includes any combination of the preceding which is capable of being created, manipulated, stored, retrieved or communicated but excludes content contained in private communications between consumers;
(d) ‘content service’ means-

(i) the provision of content; or
(ii) the exercise of editorial control over the content conveyed via a communications network, as defined in the Electronic Communications Act, 2005 (Act No. 35 of 2005), to the public or sections of the public; and

(e) ‘operator’ means any person who provides a child-oriented contact service or content service, including Internet chat-rooms.

(2) Any person who provides child-oriented services, including chatrooms, on or through mobile cellular telephones or the internet, shall-

(a) moderate such services and take such reasonable steps as are necessary to ensure that such services are not being used by any person for the purpose of the commission of any offence against children;
(b) prominently display reasonable safety messages in a language that will be clearly understood by children, on all advertisements for a child-oriented service, as well as in the medium used to access such child-oriented service including, where appropriate, chat-room safety messages for chat-rooms or similar contact services;
(c) provide a mechanism to enable children to report suspicious behaviour by any person in a chat-room to the service or access provider;
(d) report details of any information regarding behaviour which is indicative of the commission of any offence by any person against any child to a police official of the South African Police Service; and
(e) where technically feasible, provide children and their parents or primary care-givers with information concerning software or other tools which can be used to filter or block access to content services and contact services, where allowing a child to access such content service or contact service would constitute an offence under this Act or which may be considered unsuitable for children, as well as information concerning the use of such software or other tools.

(3) Any person who fails to comply with subsection (2) shall be guilty of an offence and liable, upon conviction, to a fine or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding six months or to both a fine and such imprisonment.”

SiLLMU – Organisational Chart

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

A previous blog explains what SiLLMU (Siyakhula Living Lab Management Unit) is about and a bit about the background.

SiLLMU Organisations and Partners
The picture alongside explains how the SiLLMU will ultimately restructure the parties taking part in the LL. Some Acronyms and Abbreviations: ENoLL (European Network of Living Labs), LLiSA (Living Labs of South Africa), SLL (Siyakhula Living Lab), RU (Rhodes University), UFH (University of Fort Hare).

Bottom are projects, Left are political organisations, and top are stakeholders in the Living Lab, which is depicted in the centre.

The Siyakhula Living Lab is currently well positioned to develop more excellent research and piloting on ICT’s in rural areas. I am very excited about the future, especially concerning recent developments around a software factory in Grahamstown involving eKhaya ICT…

Sorry Wayan Vota

Friday, May 15th, 2009

In the previous post I wrote in an insensitive manner about Wayan Vota’s idea of 4P Computing, without really getting to the root of the idea that bothered me so much. In that post, I made an untrue assumption about Wayan’s actions and motivations (writing that he had pushed his idea onto wikipedia), which he had not done.

I’d like to apologise for that and will make sure to research my statements better in future, especially where they reflect on someone’s character.

In my partial defense (of course, I concede guilty as charged), I was editing ICT4D on wikipedia and the amount of link spam and trash that lands in there (and often its impossible to get rid of) just got me thinking in a unilateral manner.

Humble apologies, Wayan.

The Value of Putting People in Touch with Each Other

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

I just read something which shouted awareNet – quite surprising that the quote comes from 1848 when John Stuart Mill, postulated “it is hardly possible to overrate the value, in this present low state of human improvement, of placing human beings in contact with persons dissimilar to themselves, and with modes of thought and action unlike those with which they are familiar… Such communication has always been, and is peculiarly in the present age, one of the main sources of progress” (quoted in Hirschman, A. (1982) Rival Interpretations of Market Society: Civilizing, Destructive or Feeble? Journal of Economic Literature XX 1463-1484.)

eKhaya ICT is currently working on awareNet software – open source free social networking software for schools, which we are beta-testing between schools in Africa and Europe, together with the Village Scribe Association.

SAFIPA and mini-Marshall plans.

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

SAFIPA – South Africa Finland Knowledge Partnership on ICT Programme

SAFIPA is the sister programme of COFISA – a part of the Finnish South african cCooperation Framework on innovation in South Africa. I think this is a kind of mini-Marshall plan and brilliant. The developed world is helping the developing world come online, which benefits everyone. And that is a reward in itself. In a knowledge based world everyone benefits. This is a huge difference to the imperialistically based models that we have seen previously and perhaps the way of the future. It is definitely the way to a better future.

eKhaya ICT and Rhodes University recently attended a workshop on making a proposal for the programme in East London. eKhaya ICT is definitely looking at shaping a better future, through knowledge.

This links to an article in the Weekly Guardian about Cuba and a new Latin-American rennaissance (despite falling oil costs). Latin America seems to be putting faith in a new kind of socialism, based on education, poverty reduction, controlled nationalisation of resources. African citizens, citizens of arguably the richest region in the world, could take note of these changes and demand some of them from their governments. If only they knew.

Village Scribe Association Founded!

Monday, December 8th, 2008

On the evening of the 3rd of December at “Huis van Rooi” in St-Agatha-Rode, Belgium, the Village Scribe Association was founded. The official registration will follow in January. The association has its home in Boortmeerbeek in Belgium.

Founding honorary members are:

  • Christoph Flügge, The Hague, Lawyer, Judge in the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY)
  • Prof. Robert Tolksdorf, Berlin, IT Specialist, Professor for Computer Science and Head of the Group on Networked Informationsystems, Free University of Berlin
  • Dr. Antonino Gulli’, Pisa, IT Specialist, CTO Ask.com Europe and UK

Founding members are:

  • Ronald Wertlen, Grahamstown, IT Specialist, CEO of eKhaya ICT, Centre of Excellence (CoE) Coordinator at the Computer Science Department, Rhodes University
  • Dr. Anna Wertlen, Grahamstown, Biologist, COO of eKhaya ICT
  • Amanda McPhail, Boortmeerbeek (Belgium), Biologist, Research Database Specialist
  • Dr. Jan Baekelandt, Boortmeerbeek (Belgium), Gynaecologic Oncologic Surgeon

We are looking forward to increased cooperation between the cultures of Europe and Africa with the founding of the association.

Grant Awarded to eKhaya ICT!

Monday, November 17th, 2008

The South African Department of Science and Technology (DST) and Cooperation Framework on Innovation Systems between Finland and South (COFISA) have awarded eKhaya ICT a travel grant for the upcoming trip to Germany, Switzerland and Finland. The purpose of the trip is threefold:

1) To found the Village Scribe Association which will organise an international
support network for the deployment of the awareNet technology;

2) To meet software innovation organisations to improve innovation production of
the awareNet technology;

3) To research how awareNet and the ECSPIRT project as a whole can be included
in activities with specific living labs in the European Network of Living Labs’
(ENoLL) project portfolio.

You can find out more about ECSPIRT and the awareNet at the pages of the Village Scribe Association.