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Connected Communities Worldwide Stuart Gannes Digital Vision Program Stanford University September 19, 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "Connected Communities Worldwide Stuart Gannes Digital Vision Program Stanford University September 19, 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 Connected Communities Worldwide Stuart Gannes Digital Vision Program Stanford University September 19, 2006

2 Mission: Connected communities …Update on initiatives that seek to apply the tools of high tech innovation and entrepreneurship to the needs of underserved communities worldwide.

3 Connected world status report: Not yet Digital divide runs deep –2 Billion on-line –4.5 Billion still waiting Infrastructure lags social needs –Beyond the enterprise –Beyond the consumer Applications lag infrastructure –Social services –Humanitarian services –Development initiatives Where should we focus: Infrastructure, applications, or both?

4 Report card for infrastructure: “B” Accelerated expansion of data networks –Phone and cable networks nearly 50% broadband capable, but principally in developed world –Cellular networks now reach nearly ~2 billion people worldwide, but have limited data capabilities Cellular networks (led by India and China) signing up >10 million new users per month. Wireless build-out still lags in many regions of Africa, Latin America, and rural poor world-wide –Lack of electrical power –Inability to respond to natural disasters

5 Report card for application building: “D-” In so-called BOP markets business and technology ‘as usual’ not enough Connecting urban and rural poor requires innovative solutions: –New services –New interfaces –New support capabilities –New business models

6 Sources of technology innovation Major technology platform providers -Hardware -OS -Apps 2 Billion established technology customers - Enterprise - Consumer 4.5 Billion emerging global customers - Rural poor - Urban poor - Public sector

7 Digital Vision Program at Stanford A campus studio where entrepreneurs design - and implement - innovative solutions Unique resources to accelerate applications design and deployment: –Resident Fellows: “Social Entrepreneurs” and “Social Researchers” in residence –Experienced staff: DV and H*STAR Institute (Human Science and Technology Advanced Research) directors –DV Core Program: nine month “how-to course” Understanding community needs Designing and testing prototype technology-based services Creating SROI and sustainability models Obtaining financial support

8 DV studio track record since 2002 80 Stanford fellowships awarded 58 Community-oriented technology ventures created 37 pilot tested or implemented (65% survival rate) 18 Handed off to partner organizations 11 Incorporated $12+ million invested

9 Examples of DV impact Bracnet - Distributed wireless telecenter network, plus news and communications portal for Bangladesh - http://www.bracnet.nethttp://www.bracnet.net Voices in Your Hand - Giving people their own voice in the digital world. A humanitarian project to bring ICT to the underprivileged http://voices.rdvp.org/eng/http://voices.rdvp.org/eng/ Planet Read - Helping people in India read by putting subtitles in their own language on popular music videos http://www.planetread.orghttp://www.planetread.org Project Market Light - Providing the world poorest families affordable, accurate, relevant and up to date market data http://rdvp.org/fellows/2004-2005/mans-olof-ors/http://rdvp.org/fellows/2004-2005/mans-olof-ors/ Retool - Re-engineering employment training through outsourcing opportunities in developing countries http://rdvp.org/fellows/2005-2006/michael-chertok/http://rdvp.org/fellows/2005-2006/michael-chertok/ Creative Commons Africa - A web portal dedicated to showcasing the work of local creators, educators and administrators who use Creative Commons licenses http://za.creativecommons.org/ http://za.creativecommons.org/

10 Current DV initiative themes Financial Services (microfinance, micro insurance, remittances, market information, e-commerce) Health and Welfare (health administration, health research, public health and safely, telemedicine, relief services, advocacy and social justice) Knowledge and Empowerment (literacy and numeracy, e-learning and training, e government, social networks and community building)

11 Motorola DV supporters

12 Digital Vision Program Stanford University Cordura Hall 210 Panama Street Stanford, CA 94305-4115 Tel: +1-650-724-4069 Fax: 1-650-724-4076 http://rdvp.org Stuart Gannes: sgannes@stanford.edusgannes@stanford.edu Karen Coppock: kcoppock@stanford.edukcoppock@stanford.edu Contact Information


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