Date sent:        Mon, 30 Jun 2003 07:51:30 +0200
Subject:          [IOZ.wifi] UN wants poor nations to use wireless Internet
To:               [EMAIL PROTECTED]



UN wants poor nations to use wireless Internet
By Irwin Arieff, Reuters

27 June 2003

Kofi Annan praises the social and economic benefits of WLAN.



Wireless Internet technology may help poor nations leapfrog into the
future if they can get assistance to harness the new technology, U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan said on Thursday.

Wireless Internet access has "a key role to play everywhere, but
especially in developing countries and countries with economies in
transition," Annan said in a message to a U.N. conference on the rapidly
growing phenomenon known as Wi-Fi.

Laptops are rare in the developing world and the money to buy the needed
electronic gear is scarce.

Some 200 people -- representing technology companies, developing
nations, regulators and international agencies -- attended Thursday's
conference, organized by the Boston-based Wireless Internet Institute to
help bridge the digital divide between the information society and the
developing world.

Wi-Fi allows users of laptop computers and related gadgets to access the
Internet without electric cords or phone jacks.

A race is on to install access points known as "hotspots" around the
world, each capable of linking properly equipped portable computers in
the vicinity to the Internet.

Pat Gelsinger, chief technology officer for Intel Corp., the world's
biggest computer chip maker, said Wi-Fi was cost-effective, growing
rapidly around the world and particularly appropriate for developing
nations because it was neither government-regulated nor licensed and was
built using industry-wide and worldwide standards.

In March, Intel introduced technology that it hopes by next year will
make most new laptops sold in the world wireless Internet devices.

'Worldwide lust for technology'

Gelsinger said Intel was already marketing Wi-Fi in "tens of countries"
in the developing world and would be expanding.

In developing nations including China and India, "we are looking at
something on the order of 40 million to 50 million PCs (personal
computers) and this is the fastest-growing sector of the market,"
Gelsinger told Reuters. "This reflects a worldwide lust for technology.
We see millions of people with the potential to become Wi-Fi users."

"It is precisely in places where no infrastructure exists that Wi-Fi can
be particularly effective, helping countries to leapfrog generations of
telecommunications technology and infrastructure and empower their
people," Annan said.

Annan, who was in Geneva on Thursday and could not deliver his remarks
in person, called on governments, regulators, the computer industry and
activists to work together to identify obstacles to Wi-Fi development
and prepare a plan for overcoming them.

Mohsen Khalil, the World Bank director of information and communications
technology, agreed it would take work to get Wi-Fi off the ground in
poor areas.

Regulators might yet be tempted to impose charges or other restrictions
on the technology, and the equipment costs are not insignificant, he
said. And while the technology has shown great promise in tests, "the
business model has yet to be tested in developing countries."






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