philip pocock on Wed, 12 Feb 2003 16:32:01 +0100 (CET)


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[Nettime-bold] Fwd: <nettime> High tech trash


its been 6 years since i worked with internet media in uganda - 
http://www.aporee.org/equator

at the time 1997 it took us only 10 minutes for an 18-year-old net-head 
in kampala to set us up with an account and a pretty speedy 28kb 
connection with few drops. in germany at that time you had to wait weeks 
to get an account sometimes.

did you meet charles musisi? he was having students type the'new vision' 
national news onto the net then to pay for a hut a few pcs and some 
oreilly linux textbooks. in 1997 there was in my view more understanding 
intrinsic understanding of net culture in uganda among the students i 
met than among students i worked with in germany! and its not a surprise 
for many reasons.

if you havent contacted charles musis i would recommend it. i met him 
through gopher in 1995 when he was canvasing worldwide universities for 
2400 baud modems to be donated to uganda. he is a pioneer net person who 
made our site possible.

viva uganda!

Anfang der weitergeleiteten E-Mail:

> Von: Steve Cisler <cisler@pobox.com>
> Datum: Wed, 12. Feb. 2003  14:35:05 Europe/Berlin
> An: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net
> Betreff: <nettime> High tech trash
> Antwort an: Steve Cisler <cisler@pobox.com>
>
> On Wednesday, February 12, 2003, at 07:48  AM, Announcer wrote:
>
>> From: Ryan Griffis <grifray@yahoo.com>
>> Subject: high tech trash and "developing nations"
>>
>> http://cbc.ca/consumers/market/files/environ/hitech_trash/
>> a story from last October by the CBC on the
>> transplantation of Computer waste to "poor" countries,
>> and the environmental/human effects.
>
> I just returned from three weeks in Uganda where I was assessing a high
> tech project involving nicely outfitted computer labs with new gear,
> wireless Internet connection, etc. in teacher training colleges around
> the country. A brief note on the Internet in Uganda is here:
> glocal.crimsonblog.com.
>
> Other groups import used PCs by the container load, and as is the case
> here in Silicon Valley they all become trash eventually.  However, the
> problems of the towns in China that actually strip boards and cables
> (water pollution, skin disorders, birth defects) are not evident in
> places like Uganda.
>
> Another thing I learned: the main U.S. export to Africa is used
> clothes, and there is a giant network of importers and a bigger one of
> re-sellers in most towns.  I walked around the main market and waded
> through hundreds stalls selling just shoes, and another section for
> women's clothes, and so on.  It was an amazing trip, all in all. Report
> to follow.
>
> Steve Cisler
>
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>
philip pocock
gabelsbergerstr. 1 d-76135 karlsruhe germany
mobile/sms +49 1707 369 870
tel +49 721 845 715  fax +49 721 830 2714

the more we share, the more we have. - l.nimoy

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