Reaching out to
the Mud Hut
Kedar Dash,
Computer Programmer
kedar@sdalt.ernet.in
Technology
has always opened new ways and means of making life easy. It has its
impact on almost all the sectors of life and the economy, but the
major concern is about its easy reach and accessibility to the
common people. Technology should focus on the effective and
efficient delivery of basic needs of food, water and shelter.
In
the past decades, information technology has undergone substantive
improvements, which are crosscutting through different sectors.
Though it is a great success so far as the technology is concerned,
but at the same time it has only addressed the more urban setting.
The impact is more visible at the apex of most initiatives and not
the grassroots.
Information
and communication technology (ICT) is one of the several, major, new
technologies, which are having an impact on the socio-economic
system, especially in the developing countries. The ways in which
people, organizations and governments deal with ICTs and understand
their current impact is an important issue for its effective
utilization. If the emerging technology is not able to address the
fundamental problem (which is the basic amenities of the common
man), there is much to be lost, than won. In a developing country,
this is one of the basic problem areas, which leads to a digital
divide rather than the creation of a digital bridge.
Unlike
other technologies the Information Technology is not addressing the
problem at its grassroots level but is acting more as a catalyst.
ICT is facilitating to promote and disseminate ways to be able to
cope with the more basic issues and problems.
In
order to address the basic needs of the rural people
of a developing country like India, the following need to be
addressed.
Resources
and infrastructure
There
is a great potential for ICT in rural development, and in a country
like India the rural people and even the middle income groups face
resource constraints. These constraints should be bridged through
initiatives from the voluntary sector and through active community
participation. In this age of corporate social responsibility, more
and more corporate houses should get involved in addressing this
issue.
Connectivity
Connectivity
is a major issue for the application of ICT in development so far as
rural India is concerned. Many villages in India still do not have
access even to functional telephone lines. The quality of the lines
reaching other villages is not efficient enough to transmit data.
The disturbance in the telephone lines is a major bottleneck in
communication. At the same time, the process of getting the
telephone lines is extremely tedious due to lack of proper
infrastructure and access to information. There are some other
technologies available, which make life easy in such situations,
like the VSAT (Very Small Aperture Terminal). A VSAT is capable of
supporting Internet, data, LAN and voice/fax communications. This
technology is useful for geographically dispersed areas and in
places where proper infrastructure is still not well established.
Connectivity
increases business options in two directions – mainly from rural
to urban and vice versa. The corporate sector in India has
understood this concept and is aiming at the large market potential
and is laying fiber optics network in different parts of India and,
very soon, the connectivity would no more be a problem for the
implementation of ICT for development.
Customization
of information for the specific user group
Implementation
of technology needs inputs from the entire geographical spread of
the Indian sub-continent, which has inherent differences – ranging
from the disparities in the economic conditions of the households to
the availability of the natural resources. This allows for an
efficient customization of generically available information. Today,
we find many sites provide ideas about setting up of micro
enterprises for sustainable agriculture, but needs area specific
customization so as to provide value for the common people at the
grassroots. In the Indian subcontinent where diversity is immense
and at all scales, customization of content plays a major role in
ICT for development. Information packaging should be driven by the
user demand.
Multilingual
feature
In
a developing country like India, it seems to be impossible to
address the rural masses without having an interface in the language
they understand, which creates the need for a multilingual
interface.
"Multilingual
Systems" refer to computer programs, which permit user
interaction with the computer in more than one language. Typically,
a multilingual system permits the user to interact with computers in
their own mother tongue. Such a system will have a far reaching
impact in our country, where English is not spoken or understood by
majority of the people living in areas away from urban environments.
Delivering
information throughout the world requires a particular multilingual
attention as far as software is concerned but considering human
factor is also a must because the software system can not handle the
grammar as well as the language. Therefore, a good management of
multilingual system capitalizes on both the human factor and the
translation tools.
Conclusion
Information
being the key to empowerment, it is vital to adopt all the above
said measures to empower our rural folk who form the weakest link of
the chain called India. q
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