Competition Designed to Spread Basic Technologies
New York Times (04/18/13) Eric Pfanner

The World Bank has organized the Sanitation Hackathon, a competition
designed to identify promising solutions to address the discrepancy in
access to high and low technologies in developing countries. The three
winners of the competition are set to be honored on Friday in
connection with the annual meetings of the bank and its sister
organization, the International Monetary Fund. The hackathon took
place over two days in which more than 1,000 developers gathered in 40
cities worldwide to work on their projects. The winners of the
hackathon will travel to Silicon Valley for meetings with venture
capitalists and entrepreneurs who are interested in the issue. "We
would love it if Silicon Valley could take some of these applications
and build them into sustainable businesses," says the World Bank's
Chris Vein. Because six billion of the world's seven billion people
have mobile phones, while only 4.5 billion have access to toilets,
mobile technology is being used to help address problems in the
developing world. For example, one of the hackathon winners developed
mSchool, a reporting system that lets teachers, students, or parents
report problems with sanitation facilities at any of Senegal's more
than 2,000 schools.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/19/technology/competition-designed-to-spread-basic-technologies.html?_r=0
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