| Frederick Noronha on 6 Aug 2000 02:18:27 -0000 |
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| <nettime> LINKS: New mailing list / India |
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DEVELOPMENT / TECHNOLOGY New mailing lists from India
We take pleasure in announcing the recent launch of two new
mailing lists, dealing with development / technology issues from
South Asia. If you, or anyone you know, would like to subscribe
to either mailing list, just send an email to fred@vsnl.com
giving a brief self-introduction, and mentioning on which list
you read this note. Thanks, Frederick Noronha, Freelance Journalist.
CR-INDIA: This list aims to campaign for the use of community
radio as a means of non-profit, low-cost and pro-development
communications in India and the other countries of South Asia.
Radio holds out immense potential in countries like ours, but for
long this medium has either been totally government-controlled,
or opened to only big commercial players. Non-profit and
educational organisations (including universities) could
contribute significantly if they are given permissions to run
their own stations. With the FM frequencies becoming available,
thousands of low-powered frequencies can be opened up across the
region. As we learn from the experiences in nearby Nepal (Radio
Sagarmatha, etc) and Sri Lanka (Kothmale's experiment with radio-
browsing, etc) this list is being used to share appropriate
information about how community radio can and is being used both
in South Asia and elsewhere in the globe.
BYTESFORALL: Welcome to South Asia. This talent-rich, resource-
poor, tragic-powerhouse of immense software skills, finds its
abilities recognised across the globe. And yet millions here
can't find the solutions that could make life a little less of a
struggle. Likewise, software brains from the region are serving
some of the biggest companies in the globe... But it also finds
itself ironically unable to afford the prices of 'legal'
software that it very badly needs for itself.
Some of the most relevant software/Internet/computer/IT ventures
in South Asia, ironically, fail to get the attention they merit.
Attending to the needs of the poor doesn't make good business
sense. bYtES For aLL is an attempt to swim against the tide.
Through a website <http://www.bytesforall.org> and an e-mail
based mailing list <bytesforall@goacom.com>, we hope to update
interested readers about interesting ventures. Attempts that
focus on people before profits. After being launched in July
1999, this venture which is based entirely on volunteer
participation, currently has its key supporters based in
Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and abroad.
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The most fundamental way of helping
other people is to teach people how to do
things better, to tell people things that
you know that will enable them to better
their lives. For people who use
computers, this means sharing the recipes
you use on your computer, in other words
the programs you run. -- Richard
Stallman, Free Software Foundation.
*********************************************
Many of the best minds of our time are
engaged in finding ways for the already
wealthy to claim even more of the world's
real wealth for themselves. -- David C
Korten yes@futurenet.org
*********************************************
[India, China] and other developing
nations have the chance to rethink the
meaning of being rural. If just a few
political leaders were to reexamine their
telecommunications agenda for the rural
populace, poverty could be redefined in
the digital age. -- Nicholas Nigroponti,
Director, MIT Media Lab.
*********************************************
The root of wealth or poverty lies in the
ends we have in mind, not in the means to
those ends. If the hand is ready then
finding the instrument of action should
not be difficult. --Rabindranath Tagore
(a legendary poet in Bengali literature
and a Noble laureate of 1913)
*********************************************
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