Frederick Noronha (FN) on Thu, 22 Apr 2004 05:41:09 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> SOUTH ASIA: BytesForAll * May 2004 |
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ _/ _/ B y t e s F o r A l l --- http://www.bytesforall.org _/ Making Computing Relevant to the People of South Asia _/ MAR04 * http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bytesforall_readers _/ _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ Prof Keniston on India ---------------------- Old India hand and close-watcher of ICT-for-development initiatives Prof Kenneth Keniston of MIT has recently published a new book titled 'IT Experience in India', along with Deepak Kumar of Bangalore. Published by Sage in March 2004, it is priced at Rs 250 (paperback) and Rs 425 (cloth). This book explores whether modern ICTs can deliver on their promises of democracy and prosperity for the people of developing nations who comprise 80 per cent of the world's population. In order to do this, this volume uses lessons from the Indian experience -- a country where information technology (IT) has made giant leaps, but which suffers from what has been described as multiple 'digital divides'. The contributors explore four such closely interrelated divides. The first is internal -- between the digitally empowered rich and the poor. The second is a linguistic-cultural gap between English and other languages and between 'Anglo-Saxon culture' and other world cultures. The next gap is underscored by disparities in access to information technology and between rich and poor nations. Finally, there is the phenomenon of the 'digerati'. This is an affluent elite possessing the appropriate skills and means to take advantage of the ICTs. Essays by V Balaji et al (Pondicherry), T H Chowdary (Indian telecom), Pat Hall (IT and diversity), Prof Ashok Jhunjhunwala and Bhaskar Ramamurthi (telecom and regulation scenario), P D Kaushik (e-gov for the poor), Deepak Kumar (digital development), Harsh Kumar (Indian languages), Rajeev Sangal et al (digital resources in Indian languages), Anna-Lee Saxenian (the Bangalore boom) and an introduction by Prof Keniston (The Four Digital Divides). Export documentation -------------------- Udyog Software -- phone 022-36024366 / 011-33007634 -- is offering an export documentation software. This promises customisable excise invoices, direct posting from invoice to RG register and ER returns, Excise requirements of manufacturers and traders and others, State Excise reporting and e-filing of Excise returns. Email [email protected] or call for a demo. Indian Ham ---------- Lawrence MG <[email protected]> recently announced a new mailing list that would be of interest to all those interested in amateur radio in India. To join the list, send a blank email to: [email protected] eProcurement in India --------------------- Raj Kumar Prasad of the Commonwealth Centre for e-Governance (India Chapter) recently announced that the Worldbank together with the Commonwealth organisation have and Commonwealth Centre for e-Governance India has planned first international conference on eProcurment in India on 3rd June 2004. Says he: "eProcurment is integral part of e-Governance and SMART Government." Details from Commonwealth centre for e-Governance India chapter Delhi www.electronicgovindia.net Mobile-9810063137 Dgroups list ------------ Dgroups is a joint initiative of Bellanet, DFID, Hivos, ICA, IICD, OneWorld, UNAIDS. To check out the mailing lists available via this server visit http://www.dgroups.org List for Railways ----------------- A list for the Indian Railways? Yes, with a lot of interest in it too. See http://groups.yahoo.com/group/irfca It might be of interest: there are over 5000 railway photographs in the archive of this list. Other postings dealt with the Katra-Udhampur rail link, a rail trip to Shimla, Mumbai's new EMU, and a lot more... See also http://www.irfca.org Consumer issues --------------- And another one for consumer issues in India http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Consumer_Voice_India Movie topics ------------ This list has been set up by film buffs keen to build up Goa's film culture prior to the shifting of the International Film Festival of India to India's touristic state, in November 2004. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/moviesgoa Why the list? Say ts promoters, Salil and Gayathri Konkar: "Cinema makes us laugh, it makes us cry, it inspires and it thrills. Cinema gives us much more than that: it gives us the opportunity to like and dislike, to argue, to discuss and sometimes leaves us speechless. If you enjoy cinema just for itself or if you are one of those who are hooked on films and loves to make new friends and discuss films for hours on end, then: consider joining Moving Images Film Club. Moving Images in collaboration with the International Centre, Goa at Dona Paula (also the venue of the screenings) will bring to you films and documentaries, popular and the classics, from India and across the globe. The screenings are open to all and there is no charge." Bhagwad Gita on CD ------------------ Pune-based technology company Penfosys Private Limited has announced the release of its mutimedia CD on the Hindu religious text, the Shreemad Bhagawat Gita. This includes chanting by Swami Brahmananda and translations by H.H.Swami Chinmayananda of Chinmaya Mission. Says its promoters: "This CD-ROM is an ideal tool to initiate people of all ages into the philosophies and messages of the Bhagawad Gita. It is a unique compilation of entire Shreemad Bhagawad Gita in computer readable format. The audio from this CD can also be listened to on a normal CD player that supports MP3 format." Details from http://www.penfosys.com or email [email protected] or call +91-80-31867363 Computer literate district -------------------------- MALAPPURAM is India's first computer-literate district, reports the Milli Gazette. See http://www.milligazette.com/Archives/2004/16-31Mar04-Print-Edition/1603200402.htm Acharya features ---------------- Acharya recently featured on Drum Beat, a newsletter on communication for development activities. See this multilingual software and online Sanskrit lessons for the disabled; provided by the Indian Institute of Technology in Madras as part of an effort to bring the benefits of ICT to all Indian people. http://acharya.iitm.ac.in/ Noted in the Gulf ----------------- GNU/Linux enthusiasts in the Gulf region recently noted the arrival of a new version of the Simputer. http://www.amidasimputer.com Said Manoj Menon <[email protected]> on the linux-middleeast mailing list on yahoogroups.com: "[GNU]Linux based PDA for less than 1000 AED ... and best of all, it's made in India." Openslate --------- Responding to the reports about the Simputer, Gary Dunn <[email protected]> of the Open Slate Project wrote: "Several years ago I started a project called Open Slate, with exactly this in mind. To date it has not generated much interest. My web site is a bit moldy, but I think you will find it interesting. If you are interested in working on Open Slate please drop me a line." See http://openslate.sourceforge.net/ Internet and poverty -------------------- "The Internet in developing nations: Grand challenges" by Larry Press, in First Monday, volume 9, number 4 (April 2004) For over a decade, we have hypothesized that the Internet could raise the quality of life in developing nations. We have conducted hundreds of studies of the state of the Internet and "e-readiness," done extensive training of technicians and policy makers, run pilot studies, and held local, regional and global conferences and workshops. After all of this activity, Internet connectivity is nearly non-existent in rural areas of developing nations, and far below that of developed nations in the urban areas of developing nations. http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue9_4/press/index.html Localisation ------------ G Karunakar <[email protected]> recently announced the launch of an Indian localisation e-newsletter. Says he: "The aim of this newsletter is to highlight localization activities based on Free/Libre Open Source Software, present a complete picture, and to serve as a mouthpiece for all localization teams & their volunteers." Its highlights include * Bengali, Punjabi supported languages in Gnome 2.6, Hindi and Tamil supported in KDE 3.2 * PCQLinux2004 with Indic support, Devanagari & Gujarati Opentype fonts, Mozilla build with Indic support * Sayamindu Dasgupta speaking on the Ankur Bangla project. Read the complete issue at http://www.indlinux.org/nl/nl150404.html A pdf of it is available at http://www.indlinux.org/nl/nlvol1.pdf (238KB) If you would like to recieve copy of newsletter regularly you can subscribe to the mailing list http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/indlinux-news E-gov database -------------- Any idea of a useful national database of e-governance projects in India? Bytesforall (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bytesforall_readers) reader Rama Bhardwaj was just one of those enquiring about the same recently. Both she and another query about the use of ICT for coping with disasters threw up some interesting debate and ideas. Open access health ------------------ Dr.Vinod Scaria <[email protected]> recently announced his article published at Plexus on Open Access for Health professionals and how Open Access can be capitalised-on by developing world professionals. Full text at: http://www.psyplexus.com/excl/open_access.html Also see the Open Access News Weblog which blogged this article: http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2004_03_28_fosblogarchive.html#a108097241949455435 Contacts: Dr.Vinod Scaria WEB: www.virtualmedonline.com Email: [email protected] Mobile: +91 98474 65452 Mapping malaria --------------- S-Asia-IT mailing list recently reported this. Remote sensing technologies combined with GIS can describe local and landscape-level features influencing disease. Authors Aruna Srivastava and B.N. Nagpal present a brief review of the use of GIS-based surveillance system to map the distribution of Anopheles sundaicus, a coastal malaria vector in India. http://www.developmentgateway.org//ict/dg-contribute/item-detail?item_id=398229&version_id=242961&from=alert For farmers ----------- Government of India has constituted a High-level Commission called `National Commission on Farmers (NCF)' under Som Pal, to examine various issues confronting Indian farmers and to suggest appropriate interventions for improving the economic viability and sustainability of diversified agriculture. A website of NCF (http://kisanayog.org) has been created for generating a dialogue with the stakeholders on relevant issues. GNU/Linux CDs ------------- ILUG-Delhi has set up a 'CD request' list. It invites people from other cities in India to join this list "and make it an India-wide resource for exchanging free software CDs". https://frodo.hserus.net/mailman/listinfo/ilugd-cd _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ _/ bYtES For aLL is a voluntary, unfunded venture. CopyLeft, 2004. bYtES _/ For aLL e-zine volunteers team includes: Frederick Noronha in Goa, _/ Partha Sarkar in Dhaka, Zunaira Durrani in Karachi, Zubair Abbasi in _/ Islamabad, Archana Nagvenkar in Goa, Arun-Kumar Tripathi in Darmstatd, _/ Shivkumar in Mumbai, Sangeeta Pandey in Nepal, Rajkumar Buyya in _/ Melbourne, Mahrukh Mohiuddin in Dhaka and Deepa Rai in Kathmandu. _/ If you'd like to volunteer in any way, please get in touch. _/ We need all the help we can get. _/ _/ BytesForAll's website www.bytesforall.org is maintained by Partha _/ Sarkar, with inputs from other members of the volunteers' team and _/ supporters. To subscribe to our main mailing list, send blank email to _/ [email protected] If you've missed out _/ recent debates, visit http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bytesforall_readers _/ _/ If you'd like to get these low-volume updates regularly, sign up _/ at the bytesforall mailing list [email protected] _/ https://mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/bytesforall _/ _/ _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ -------------------------------------------------------- Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa, India f r e d @ b y t e s f o r a l l . o r g Ph 832.2409490 / 832.2409783 Cell 9822 122436 http://linuxinindia.pitas.com http://www.bytesforall.org # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]