This is the hear-say "story" about China in the 70s after Nixon (have I got the 
history bit right?) paid a visit to China ... 
 
Selling and buying began ... some of the end stories of this era ... brand new 
and huge farming equipment abandoned and rusted on rural farming grounds --- 
farmland once belongs to the 'greedy' landlords were divided into small plots 
for each individuals ... Caterpilar can only moves few steps in any directions 
on their new tiny homes ... 
 
Or the story I was told not 6 months ago by an Indian journalist of the Meena 
Girls in India. This was in the 80s ???. Money spent on developing the training 
programs and these were put on video tapes. When volunteers armed with the 
training materials arrived at small villages, not only they could not find VCR, 
some of these villages did not even have electricity. 
 
So, here I am looking at the world trying to solve digital divide for the poor 
developing world. Are we going to ship thousands of PC and install hot-spots 
for WIFI access, and then BINGO .. the local, perhaps, cannot read the language 
adequately enough to benefit from the wealth of information online? Therefore 
how can 'they' sustain their interest on 'learning' and benift from those 
wonderful information they could access to? 
 
Guessed what I saw at two village Internet Cafes in Malaysia? I was the only 
one there retrieving and sending emails. The rest of the 10 or so customers 
were young kids the age of 10 to 15 playing digital games. I do agree we can 
gain some skills playing games, but what skills can one gain from playing all 
these internet war games??? 
 
Or some NGOs in the rush of showing 'I also have a website', spent millions and 
millions on developing some ultra First world site, then discovered the end 
result qua usage from their 'target audiences' is way, way below what it should 
be ... and then they wondery why ??? 

And this is not a joke ... when I was tech instructor for Motorola 1994-6, I 
had engineers that did not know what is 'delete' on a key-board. They never 
saw, up-closed, or used a key-board in their life. The gap is not so much the 
wireless technologies, the gap is day-to-day operations.
 
Assuming eventually I can access the same information the finance minister 
could. What am I suppose to do with it? Run the country? I know it is just 
figure of speech, but it is this type of statement from person that is so 
high-up with so much advantages, such as World Bank or IMF or the US president, 
 that scares me. They are setting the goals for the Frist world, not the Third 
world. And we call them 'have visions'. 
 
Let's get down to the basic. BUILD the basic, give them the basic, teach them 
the basic, teach them how to use the tools. Don't give them bubbles. Most of 
all identify other stakeholders that can give their shares of valuable input to 
this 'digital divide' DREAMS. 
 
Cindy

Andy Carvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I just saw this quote in the report book distributed here at the Baramati
conference:

"We must work towards the day when through the Internet, through distance
learning, through cellular phones and wind-up radios, the village elder or
the aspiring student will have access to the same information as the
finance minister. Communications technology gives us the tool for true
participation. This is leveling the playing field. This is real equity."

-World Bank President James Wolfensohn, Prague Annual Meetings, September
2000

I wonder if the Reuters reporter who produced the story last week saying
that the World Bank believes the digital divide is being bridged "rapidly"
and that we shouldn't worry about the issue so much would reconsider his
story based on this statement. Because if this situation hasn't been
realized, then the digital divide is nowhere close to being bridged. -ac



-------------------------------------------------
Andy Carvin
Program Director
EDC Center for Media & Community
acarvin @ edc . org
http://www.digitaldividenetwork.org
http://www.edwebproject.org/andy/blog/
-------------------------------------------------

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Men know what is happening now.
The gods know the things of the future,
the full and sole possessors of all lights.
Of the future things, wise men perceive
approaching things. Their hearing

is sometimes, during serious studies,
disturbed. The mystical clamor
of approaching events reaches them.
And they heed it with reverence. While outside
on the street, the peoples hear nothing at all.

Constantine P. Cavafy (1915) 




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