UN Recommends WiFi for Poor Countries 239
amerinese writes "UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan is now advocating that third-world countries be given funds to implement WiFi technology and 'leapfrog into the future.'"
Single tasking: Just Say No.
AlohaNet (Score:2, Interesting)
Cell Site Size -- Exactly: AlohaNet NOT 802.11 (Score:3, Informative)
AlohaNet and most of the cellular networks are the future of the third world (and even that of small town America). The cell sites are variable size and shape and can be scaled to meet the current AND FUTURE need just as they are in the first world.
Only the richest places on the planet can even consider copper to the home or small business better yet fiber.
-- Multics
Poor countries... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Poor countries... (Score:3, Insightful)
Some 200 people -- representing technology companies, developing nations, regulators and international agencies -- attended Thursday's conference, organized by the Boston-based Wireless Internet Institute [...]
Bingo! Food? Forget it! We have stuff to sell, targets to achieve, shareholders to keep happy...
Re:Poor countries... (Score:5, Insightful)
Making internet available to them allows them to be at least somewhat competitive on the global market.
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
Overthrowing dictatorships such as that in N. Korea, Iran, etc. would help a lot more than internet access in allowing these people compete in the global market. Also, they need farming technology. A 1st world farmer with proper technology can work half as hard and produce an order of magnitude more food than a 3rd world farmer.
He's right on (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:He's right on (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:He's right on (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
Re:Poor countries... (Score:5, Insightful)
These so called poor countries often have large money making industries to buy food, or food is being donated to the country. Perhaps a better way to put it is. Food is being donated to the people, but often does not reach the people, but only the rich. (The seem to own all the weapons).
Money made from industries, such as diamonds, oile, timber and others goes in the pockets of the few in power, again the army is a prime candidate.
There are exceptions like North Corea, where stupidity and nature makes up a crule reality.
Look at your own country. (I asume USA). There _is_ food to go around, yet some goes hungry.
Distribution of wealth is the real problem.
Alright Karl... (Score:2)
And people wonder why I back the 2nd Amendment... (Score:2)
You just made a very strong argument for the right of a free people to keep and bear arms. Imagine if everyone in these countries was sufficiently armed to protect themselves and their families. Most of the "bad apples" that those in power use to oppress everyone else would be dead pretty quickly. Innocent people would die as well of course,
Re:And people wonder why I back the 2nd Amendment. (Score:2)
Your theory may have worked a 2 centuries ago, but isn't valid anymore. Even if citizens own automatic wea
Re:Poor countries... (Score:3, Funny)
I think the people who do the most work should get the most pay. But I also think every person should be given everything they need and most of the things they want if we're talking about tools, books, supplies, etc. that could be used for something productive and
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
If we restructured even just our media system to promote real education and an environment designed for humans to live comfortably in, I bet a lot of things would change. Co
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
The reason there is plenty of food to go around in the US is that there is a respect for individual freedoms here. Govt. people with weapons aren't determining who gets what based on need. Instead, people are allowed work and trade freely, allowing motivated people who want to be rich to produce an overabundance of the things others want and need. In communist countries
Re:Poor countries... (Score:4, Insightful)
What about the 1 million metric tons [reliefweb.int] of food that we just... give away for free? This link is to just one program... in total, the U.S. gives away (for free) about 9 million metric tons of food to needy foreign countries every year. Where's the "profit" in "free."
The real problem is distribution. Quite often, the food doesn't make it to the people it mostly needs to go to. Case in point... the U.N. food-for-oil program in Iraq. Saddam kept almost all of it for his government and military, all the while telling the Iraqi people that they had no food because we were stopping the flow of food. Not true... he was keeping it for himself.
By the way, one million metric tons of food donations equals about 8 pounds per person in the United States. I also happen to donate to local food programs (voluntarily)... approximately 100 lbs per year. Did *you* donate any food this year?
Oh, and you're wrong about why the WTO is bad: The WTO is bad because it fails to protect workers in the United States from foreign competition and encourages things like NAFTA and FTAA, which put our own people out of work. This happens because labor is a lot cheaper elsewhere (so-called sweatshops, etc), so companies increase profit margin by using foreign labor.
It's the same reason that hiring illegal immigrants is bad: It gives a job away that could be filled by a higher-paid, tax-paying, protected-by-labor-law American worker. And, the argument that "they do the jobs nobody else would take" is bullshit. If nobody took the jobs, and they needed to be done, the offered pay would increase until people would take the job for the money. Instead, illegal immigrants are exploited because they can't get a normal job, and fear getting busted.
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
I see. So, when Korean chip manufacturers give us low-cost memory chips, it's "dumping" and an "attack on US industries", but when we give away surplus, heavily subsidized food, then it supposedly is foreign aid?
US subsidies and food dumping are keeping world prices for food crops artificially low, preventing African farmers from selling their own crops at a decent price and modernizing their production metho
About the farms (Score:2)
hell lets ship the farmers instead and teach the people how to feed themselves, etc
teach a man to fish and all that
and i still stick by my first post in this thread, we should be helping our own people first and then theirs
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
Oh, there are plenty of educated people here... we've even got a University.
What good is knowing how to run farm equipment, when nobody wants farm equipment operators?
What good is knowing simple engineering, when nobody wants engineers?
Wh
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
s/timer/timber/
Re:Poor countries... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Poor countries... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sending food to needy nations accomplishes nothing besides feeding those people for a day or two. That may be all well and good if they're hit by a draught or locusts, but it's not a long term solution. In fact,
- Food aid helps local warlords, with bribes paid to them to let the shipments pass. Ever wonder why the warlords' jeeps with machine guns are called 'technicals'? Because they are paid for with UN bribe money, the outlay of which is entered into the ledgers as local 'technical assistance'.
- Food aid sometimes puts local farmers out of business. If the local market is flooded with free food, how are they going to compete with that?
Does that mean we should stop sending food? No... but we should be more careful about how, where and when we send it. We can just keep sending them food and they'll be in the same mess a hundred years from now.
The thing to do is help them develop their industry, infrastructure, in other words helping them help themselves. I don't know if Internet infrastructure is on top of the list of things they need, but it sure is a better idea than just sending them more food and going back to sleep.
As to the idea that the 3rd world doesn't even have an industry and so has no need for an IT infrastructure: look again. There might even be room for their own IT industry, look at India where one region built the infrastructure, education and business climate from the ground up, resulting in thousands of IT firms in a multimillion dollar business. That business helps the rest of the region, creating demand for other goods and services, thereby creating more jobs and improving the overall standard of living there. This might just be what the rest of the 3rd world needs.
Sending food DOES accomplish something... (Score:2)
The problem is that since we subsidize our farmers to produce food at a higher cost than it sells for, and thus produce more than is needed, they artificially deflate the prices of food on the world market.
Which means only farmers receiving government subsidies can stay in business. Which insures continued poverty for farmers in countries whose government does not pay a subsidy.
Farmers in third world countries produce food MUCH less expensiv
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
When the US sets up a puppet government, that government sells the country's land to US companies and multi-nationals. He secures huge IMF loans that specify what the country can grow; they turn from a subsistence economy to an export economy. They go into debt. They grow coffee instead of rice and beans. This is why the third world is fucked and no one can eat. Wake up. This has happened all over South and Central America. This is t
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
That's the problem with us today, we think our parents were smart. Guess what? They weren't. And neither were their parents. We're so doomed. doomed. DOOOMED!
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
Yes. Stop sending food and tell those sovereign nations that they MUST feed their people if they wish to remain sovereign. If they don't then the UN/US will overthrow their government and feed their people for them.
If we're willing to do this for Saddam and the Talebon why not expect every country to be humane? Or did we just do this for oil and the economics of the situation?
Re:Poor countries... (Score:2)
Logistics (Score:2)
The problem with food distribution in starving countries is that when food is scarce, it becomes the currency of trade. The powerful warlords then hoard food in order to maintain their power while the rest of the nation starves.
If we give them internet access, they will be too busy downloading pr0n and playing warcr
they are about to become poorer (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:wireless develpment in third world countries (Score:2)
Wireless networks in the developing world (Score:2)
No sense in letting a rejected post go to waste. :)
Here's more background on the ideas and issues at stake, especially (surprisingly) the technology press links.
At the recent Wireless Internet Opportunity for Developing Nations [w2i.org] conference, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said that 802.11b (AKA Wi-Fi) has "a key role to play everywhere, but especially in developing countries [reuters.com] and countries with economies in transition," where there is little to no telecommunications infrastructure in place. K
Still not economical Re:wireless develop 3rd worl (Score:2)
I did a study for a company in India. I think the concept of Wi-Fi will not work in at least one Developing Country, India, unless -
Wifi uh ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not everything in your home country looks as shiny as your UN office Mr. Annan
Re:Wifi uh ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Laptops are rare in the developing world and the money to buy the needed electronic gear is scarce.
Then
Wi-Fi allows users of laptop computers and other gadgets to access the Internet without electric cords or phone jacks.
Ok, i'd like one of those laptops powered over WiFi...
Re:Wifi uh ? (Score:2)
Re:Wifi uh ? (Score:2)
How about the accesspoints? Routers? And the rest of the infrastructure?
Satellite links are still insanely expensive and slow; infrastructure is what the poor countries lack - an this was the reason WiFi popped up here. Complete circle?
Re:Wifi uh ? (Score:2)
How about real industry first? (Score:5, Insightful)
Prime Directive (Score:2)
Oh, it's dangerous. Dangerous indeed.
Send in The Picard.
Re:How about real industry first? (Score:2)
Bottom line, places like Africa need a lot of things to come together to foster self-sustaining economic growth - stronger laws, better access to rich-world markets, etc.
Re:How about real industry first? (Score:2)
1- you could be the company that "first" brought the "internet" to a country
2- you will have a HUGE customer in the govt budget of that country
3- IT ( or wifi for that matter) is not just for supporting brick-and-mortor businesses. here's a hint: it's a *communications* network....
Re:How about real industry first? (Score:2)
The internet is the greatest research library ever (if only because the next thing hasn't been inven
This does not make sense (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides most laptop come with a wired ethernet adaptor, but not with WiFi. Therefore, a wire-based system makes a lot more sense.
Re:This does not make sense (Score:3, Insightful)
I could be wrong but as these many of these contries dont already have any existing wire infastructure it may well be cheaper to start with wireless than with wires.
Most first world contries already have power poles to hang wire between or cable trenches to lay more wires into.
I'd expect them to use wireless for the longer links and to join local computers (however many that mat be) together with 'normal' cat5.
Re:This does not make sense (Score:2)
Those wires, put in mostly by telecoms, cost hundreds of billions of dollars to implement over a period of decades.
These countries have little, if any of that infrastructure. The average household doesn't even have POTS in many of these countries.
WiFi is a *fraction* of the cost to implement.
Re:This does not make sense (Score:2)
Re:This does not make sense (Score:2)
I'd say those arre pretty important things, wouldn't you?
Re:This does not make sense (Score:2)
The nice thing about wireless is that if you're willing to accept a low
Re:This does not make sense (Score:2)
Since the time it takes between copper cable being laid and taken up and stolen is very short.
agree (Score:2)
There's a project in vietnam to run fibre from one side to the other. Note it is NOT a project to string wireless transponders one side to the other. They are paying thousands of workers, in a structure that (of course) has its share of corruption but is, nonetheless, providing jobs to thousands of people who had no work before. Paying them to dig, by hand, a two meter trench from east to west in which to bury a single t
Translation (Score:5, Insightful)
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.
Read : Pat Gelsinger, CTO for Intel Corp, recently visited Kofi Annan to do a sales pitch that went successfully.
Hey Pat, how about Intel donates some WiFi equipment to third world countries, to jumpstart the market if nothing else ?
Technology is not a panacea (Score:5, Insightful)
What's that big tall white thing? Oh, it's an ivory tower.
Re:Technology is not a panacea (Score:2)
First of all, IT is a job, or a department. It has to do with people trying to implement and maintain hardware, networks, and so on. While it plays a part here, you are not using the term properly. It makes it sound like they're advocating training all these people in the poor villages, making mud bricks and field-stripping their AK-47s, to be systems administrators.
Anyway, I think the following quotation from the article underscores why this is use
Re:Technology is not a panacea (Score:2)
If you take some time to look at Longhaul Wireless Networks That Really Work(ed) [openict.net] you'll see that they are all ground up projects.
There's many "impose from above" technology in development, but Wi-Fi doesn't have to be one of them.
simon
yes, slashdot is full of marie antoinnettes (sp) (Score:2)
Personally I think we need to take care of our own country first, we have lots and lots of homeless starving people many of them turned out of closed mental institutions who need actual help instead of spending billions on f
Italy a poor country ? Italy's silly wi-fi law ! (Score:3, Interesting)
To protect big Telco monopolies and cellphone companies that have invested billions in UMTS licenses, Italy has made laws that make it illegal to use wi-fi for implementing long distance links or to let private persons or small firms becoming a Wireless ISP.
You can become a WISP or do long distance wi-fi between your firm's sites but you need to ask for permission (and there is no assurance that the'll grant it to you) and possibly pay a yearly fee.
When I see communities like Seattle Wireless I'm sad because such things will never be possible in Italy (without a change of the law).
Italy is composed of many rural areas where there will no DSL for years because of the italian telcos unwilling to upgrade switches and equipement because the low return of investment.
Imagine many small towns of a few hundred people where only 5-10% will subscribe. It is economically unviable for the telcos to bring DSL in those places.
With wi-fi and small WISP it would be much easier, use a long distance wi-fi link, a a T1-like leased line or satellite and then give connectivity locally through wi-fi (point to multi-point: omni antenna at the distribution point and yagi/parabolic that the subscriber's home).
There are a couple of small towns where pilot projects where implemented but the actual regulation hinders small businesses of becoming WISPs.
sad sad
any prediction for Italy ?
Should we just ignore the reglations and start to build community networks ?
Just like in the filesharing case: you cannot put millions of citizen in jail.
The 2.4ghz spectrum is unregulated and we want to fully use it (like in the US).
Thoughts ?
does the law say WiFi specifically (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't break the law unless everyone is going to do it at the same time. You are dealing with hardware and any govt worth its salt is going to be able to interdict importers and couriers of physical objects.
then again, that kind of re
Re:Italy a poor country ? Italy's silly wi-fi law (Score:2)
Re:Italy a poor country ? Italy's silly wi-fi law (Score:2)
I think this is the law he was refering to, check this part:
Retailers who intend to offer the public Wi-fi services must present the Communications Ministry with a request to that effect which gives rights to the retailer to set up the service
... and even ordinary consumers must get a "simple authorization" . IE, you must beg to the (corrupt, horrible even facist) government to be allowed to own a fucking AirPort base station. If you plan to share it (anyone "who intend to offer the public Wi-fi servi
*sigh* (Score:2)
Yeah that'll do it (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yeah that'll do it (Score:2)
How long would East Germany and the wall have lasted if Germans on both sides (sometimes members of the same family) could have talked to each other on a daily basis?
I'm not saying "Give em WiFi!" is a be all and end all to their problems. But how will it hurt?
Re:Yeah that'll do it (Score:2)
Most likely, as long as it did. That is, until USSR blew up economically and the Leader_with_Some_Brains (who happened to be Gorbachov at the time) decided that to ensure the survaval of the Party, cash infusions from the West would help, and decided to pay for it with giving abck of East Germany.
Oh, and the reason USSR's economy blew up
No silver bullet. (Score:2)
In many of these countries the media is tigthly controlled. The best way to seed democratic values is to ensure that people can have access to information that tells them different points of view.
If the internet contributes to that, it is one of the best investments to fight corruption, dictators and despots.
People could be trained about how to clear landmines via the internet.
People could learn about agricultural techniques used in 1st world countries, or the
Brilliant idea (Score:2)
Shoe production up 200% (Score:2)
Bullshit. (Score:2)
The UN people in charge of the food for oil programme have stated numerous times that the programme was one of the less corrupt they have ever seen.
The reason?
If the goverment of Hussein found somebody cheating, the person was unceremonouisly executed.
If the UN is innefective it is because powerful countries, like the US, are never commited to any serious initiative. The UN does not exist on thin air, if the member countries are not interested in making it wor
Re:Shoe production up 200% (Score:2)
Uhm... no, your was a typical dumb left-wing opinion that anyone who disagrees with your ideas is a) ignorant and b) permanently lives in his trailer.
Well guess what, I donno about the original poster, but I share 100% of his opinion and, unlike you, i KNOW what socialism is as I experienced it first-hand, having lived both in USSR and USA. Matter off act, my opinion is largely BECAUSE, unlike you, I have exper
Technology *can* help (Score:2, Interesting)
I've seen a few "what about food before internet?" posts so thought I'd stick my oar in.
I have a friend involved with a project to provide internet access (WiFi because of the lack of existing infrastructure) and cheap, reliable computers to impoverished rural areas of Asia. My first question was the same as above - is being wired more important than food and other issues?
No, but one can help the other. Currently rural farmers can usually sell their produce to one buyer in the area because of the distan
To all the "let's do food first" whiners (Score:3)
Why is everybody here always whining about giving poor countries food first, and then IT and stuff?
I believe in giving them a fishing rod instead of a few fish.
We can give them food. We can even give them means to grow food by. But they'll never be able to afford them for themselves. They stay dependent on foreign help.
The other thing we can do is help them make their own money. For that, the most important thing they need is education, the second is something to sell in this global economy.
The Internet is the best and cheapest way to get to information necessary for an education. Books are too expensive. Also, if they're going to have something to sell apart from bananas, they will need IT infrastructure for it in this day and age.
Getting good connectivity there is very important. There already is a fast cable running along the West African coast (SAT-3 [worldmarketsanalysis.com]) but it's mostly unused since the land network isn't there. If Wi-Fi can help that (should be easier to setup than cable everywhere), great!
Re:To all the "let's do food first" whiners (Score:2)
Yes! precisely! let them use the millions of dollars in wifi equipment to make fishing rods! Oh, that is the answer after all! They can use the wires from the wireless equipment as tackle, and perhaps some of the shiny internals as lures! Sily me for not seeing the alternate uses for technology to begin with-- this must be what the UN is really a
hmm (Score:2)
If you want to give them a fishing rod, tell the US and EU to repeal their outrageous farm subsidies so the African farmers can actually get reasonable prices for their products.
WiFi, or, CONNECTIVITY in general is good. (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay, so you say give them food first, then WiFi or other technology. You are wrong.
First; in many places most people aren't dying of hunger in their status quo. It's a flood, draught, war or whatever that makes people die in numbers. So, get them food all the time? No. Get them food when disaster strikes? Yes.
Second: in many places, the poor people are the ones who have no (profitable) profession. In today's world people can farm food much too efficiently to need everybody on the fields. What do the rest do? Drive rikshaws, play (or are) disabled, make themselves (or their kids) disabled, sell themselves (or others), or beg. There's a huge workforce with no skills in the poor countries. And, even if they had the skills, they usually don't have markets.
Now, tourism is a big player in any poor-and-warm country. To be successful, local guides et cetera will have to speak good english (education!), market their services abroad, do things so that western (or eastern) tourists will want to pay to them. In tourism and other professions innovation will also come in handy.
So, they need education to succeed. How can WLAN help that? Connectivity. In some places they have e-mail but no telephone, or the telephone is a crappy radio something, and the post office doesn't always work reliably or fast. People want to talk to each other. Second; with a somewhat fast WiFi connection, the good teachers (which are few) can teach students going to other schools. Third, the internet is a vast resource of learning material, especially when there aren't many (or good) books. Imagine volunteers teaching from their western living rooms. Or, far-away places reaching potential tourists over the internet. Or, even, people organizing their work or selling their products [himalayanhandicraft.org] over the internet.
WiFi is cheaper than cable. I think I paid $2 or something (tourist price) for a 1-litre aluminium can that I turned into an antenna once.. a connector and a piece of rod made it into a nice antenna capable of over 1km. It is used between two villages 1.2km apart in Nepal, in a place where the shortest path (on the ground) between the villages is maybe 5km. WiFi tech is also being used there, to bridge distances of over 40km, with volunteer-made amplifiers.
There was a story about the place I'm talking about here [slashdot.org]. Also, I've been to the place =).
So, consider the cost and determination needed to ship useful amounts of food against the cost of helping education etc etc. One day, even the third world can count on electric communication nationwide, and that will benefit them a lot.
Ah yes... (Score:2, Funny)
Wireless may be the only sane answer... (Score:2)
Odd as it may seem, wireless networking may be the only viable answer for some of these countries. Having just returned from a trip to East Africa, I was struck by the number of mobile phones in use. Most Kenyans who can afford a telephone of any variety will get a mobile phone and/or one of the prepaid phone cards available. The reason is cost - land lines are expensive to lay and expensive to maintain. From our high-density populations in the developed world, it's easy to overlook the problems of communic
So we can spy on them? (Score:2, Insightful)
What good is Wi-Fi to a poor country... (Score:2)
or fricken' power for the computers?
Of course it'll be good for the world (Score:2)
A satellite with very directional antennas and low noise amplifiers
A parallel computing encryption deciphering supercomputer
And 75 cents will get you all the remotely gathered intellegence you could want.
I'd say the US should immediately donate billions of dollars of wireless equipment to every other country in the world.
Just try to avoid the comparisons to blankets soiled with disease sold to indians thing...
Honestly, though, except for the security issues, this is a valid
Extremely clever ! (Score:2, Insightful)
What is the matter with you people? (Score:2)
Ploughs and tractors? For goodness sake, in many cases just basic modern agricultural techniques (thought via the net) would make a world of difference.
Honestly, whay don't you think out of the fucking box and forget tired cliches?
How about a ban on weapons instead? (Score:2, Insightful)
The the undeveloping nations of the 3rd world desperately need something much simpler: peace. This is beyond the UN's capacity to deliver, but a firm statement that the weapons trade is an evil that must be abolished would be a great start.
The 3.5 million dead in Congo during the last 5 years is worth something
Re:How about a ban on weapons instead? (Score:2)
The trade in weapons is like the trade in ivory or diamonds or landmines: easily controlled if there is a political will to do so.
A basic analysis of the many bush wars in Africa show that the free availability of small arms are the primary enabling factor, although several other factors are also required, most damaging the interests of outside parties in mineral exploitati
What for? (Score:3, Funny)
besides we have tons of stockpiled (Score:2)
might as well before some high level official sells them to our future enemies (again)
Fsck the 3rd World (Score:2)
I do not work so that my government can take, by force, money out of my paycheck to pay for foreign aid that will in no way benefit me or mine.
If the third world want wifi, or food for that matter, it's their problem to drag their war torn, ethnic cleansed asses out of the septic tank they live in and do something about it.
BTW - I am not a communist, nor a
Oh yeah, it is only their fault. (Score:2)
Apartheid regime.
Somoza.
Pinochet.
Suharto.
Sadamm Hussein.
Do I need to tell you where I am going or are you brilliant enough to infer other uses of your fucking tax dollars?
BTW I am not communist and socialst, I am a democrat (as somebody that hopes for real democracy). Capitalism is fine as long as it benefits people, otherwise is as perverse as any other economic system. Nothing to be proud about it.
Ignorance of the stupid idiots here (Score:5, Insightful)
I am (originally) from a "third world" aka developing country. I grew up in the "third world" let me tell you this with authority. THEY DO NOT NEED DONATIONS OF FOOD. What they need is (in order of importance)
a) get rid of corruption
c) roads
b) capital to buy equipment (farming/industry)
c) cheap communications (internet, cell phones) e) free trade so their people can buy technology cheaper
d) reforms in education system (no memorization)
f) health care
g) security
h) Snoop Doggy Dogg
i) food
Donating food is the worst thing you can do to a country (except when there is an actual emergency/disaster)
Also what I hate is people running around claiming the govt. donates so much to the third world and now they dont have jobs/medicare etc. here. That's plain BS. The ultra miniscule drop of your tax that goes to "foreign aid" is not having any effect on any economy
Re:Ignorance of the stupid idiots here (Score:2)
US agricultural policies, including food donations, extensive domestic subsidies, free trade, and GM, are bad for developing nations because they depress prices and keep nations from developing their own agricultural base. GM foods only worsen this dependence.
If the US wants to help developing nations, it should unilaterally and unconditionally drop import duties
DON'T *give* them anything (Score:2)
Giving aid to third world countries might make you *feel* better, but if it is aid given on a regular basis rather than a one time event in response to som
Re:DON'T *give* them anything (Score:2)
Great idea (Score:2)
Starving family: We're hungry feed us.
UN: Have a WIFI adapter for your computer.
Starving family: What's a computer?
UN: It's the reason there is no food in starving land.
Starving family: Can I have some rice?
UN: No, we don't have that because it's held in customs, but you can have a gross of condoms and a safe sex video on DVD.
Starving family: I must return to forraging through the trash now.
and we wonder why the un doesn"t stop wars?
Another idiot hath spoken. (Score:2)
If you had talked about sewage or clean water, you my have been into something.
As it stnads you are talking out of that place dear to nmost people.
Re:Great idea (Score:2)
It is a good modem. Made of metal. Breaks nuts very easily.
This is bullshit. (Score:3, Insightful)
This has little practical value and the UN should be ashamed of promoting something so stupid.
It's not just Wi-Fi, it's Open Spectrum (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm particularly interested in the remarks by Patrick Gelsinger, chief
technology officer of Intel, quote "focused on the catalyzing role
lenient regulatory statutes have played in spurring growth in nations
with advanced wireless infrastructures"
Patrick said, [quote from infoworld article [infoworld.com]] I think he's absolutely right that a lot of nations governments are
basically not well-educated about Open Spectrum. They see spectrum
still as something that they get cash from licensing. How do we
convince them that they can benefit even more from adopting open
spectrum policy?
His remark "unregulated, unlicensed spectrum" though is bad. Open
Spectrum is NOT unregulated. It is REGULATED to be OPEN. That includes
the very important aspect of power-level restriction and the rule "thou
shalt accept interference from other sources".
Also, I'm very concerned when I hear from government people in the
developing world that the 2.4 GHz band is not Open Spectrum but 'ISM'
which is an old USA-ism. The original ISM didn't allow any telephony to
be done. But that's ancient history. Unfortunately the old language
seems to have somehow propagated itself into the minds of some people
so that they think that ISM and Open Spectrum are the same.
simon
Re:And I'm I know who the U.N. recommended... (Score:2)
Yeah, I was just thinking that when I read about people dying every day trying to illegally emigrate into this country.
100 packed in a semi, thousands packing into a leaky hull of a ship, people walking through the desert, and people trying to drift here on a piece of wood.
yup, no one wants to come to America.
ass.