Industry News
A Vision of the Present
By Jon on July 30, 2010
Radoslav Zilinsky’s 2007 enchanting painting “The World” depicts a distant future where enormous prosperity is accompanied by enormous disparity. Funny because his future looks a …Category: Education, Industry News
What is Hive Colab?
By Jon on July 30, 2010
Hive Colab is the newest co-working space on the East Africa scene. But what is it and where did it come from? To …Category: Education, Industry News
U.S. State Department’s Conversation with African Innovators
By Jon on July 26, 2010
Last week representatives from the U.S. State Department Elana Berkowitz and Bruce Wharton reached out directly to innovators in East Africa to discuss the Apps …Category: Education, Industry News
Google Developer Days Coming to Kenya, Uganda
By Jon on July 26, 2010
Google is hosting two events in September to teach the use of Google technologies and products in Africa… Google is dedicated to making the Internet relevant …Category: Education, Industry News
Asia and Africa, Fastest Growing Facebook Regions
By Jon on July 22, 2010
Facebook recently hit the half billion users mark (more than a quarter of all internet users) and somewhat unsurprisingly developing countries are fueling a lot …Category: Education, Industry News
TED Recap: A Fornication of Ideas Pt. 1
By Jon on July 22, 2010
TED Global 2010 wrapped up last week in Oxford, UK. As a TED Senior Fellow, I’m lucky in that I’ve now attended three TED events …Category: Education, Industry News

The TED Phone
By Jon on July 14, 2010
At TED Global in Oxford, UK this week TED and Nokia announced a partnership to bring TED talks to Africa and other developing parts of …Category: Education, Industry News
Hive Colab Announced in Uganda
By Jon on July 1, 2010
Earlier in the day we announced Apps < 4> Africa, a competition for app developers across Africa. Also, today in Uganda, Appfrica Labs in …Category: Education, Industry News
Apps for Africa Contest Announced in Nairobi
By Jon on July 1, 2010
Over the past few weeks myself, Solomon King of NodeSix.com, Joshua Goldstein an Appfrica Fellow, Jessica Colaco at the iHub in Nairobi, Philip Thigo and …Category: Education, Industry News
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University Programs for ICT In Emerging Markets?
Since I began my research and subsequent move to Uganda, I’ve found a vast disparity in the amount of higher education available in the area of information technology as it relates to developing countries, NGOs, non-profits or developmental institutions. It think the implicit need for focus in this area is high as the discipline is essentially the same but the practice of IT changes significantly when ‘in the field’ or in low power areas.
It’s unfortunate because my colleagues in the tech industry see an obvious correlation and though some have a desire to ‘help’ there isn’t a lot of opportunity to acquire ‘field work’ working as something like a system admin in a developing country. It seems, the only way to get that kind of experience is to have a prior background in computers while also pursuing study in some field related to developing countries or public health. Or perhaps if an individual is hired by a company looking for an ‘IT’ person but they end up becoming the company’s sole tech Renaissance man: managing the website, sending out newsletters, setting up servers and troubleshooting Outlook…. In other words, instead of being trained for the field, people are being trained to adapt, which is inherently good but it doesn’t necessarily breed IT people ‘passionate’ about what they might be doing.
To some, it seems as if the reason most non-profits and NGOs don’t embrace technology as whole-heatedly as they might is because donors don’t support such programs. Until that community embraces this idea, I fear it will be left out of the College and University systems. That said, I think the passion from the people working in these organizations exists but there’s a substantial disconnect between these workers and the governing boards that control operations.
I’d love to hear from undergrads, MPH, PHD or other students who can tell me otherwise. Are there existing programs related to things like Information & Communications Technology, Software Development and Data Collection/Visualization in Developing Countries? Do you feel your school is taking a lead in this area? Any ideas for programs?
If so let me know so I can link to them….