Title: Put down your thoughts on paper
1Put down your thoughts on paper
- What is the common theme across the two papers?
- Describe their initial goals (Digital Green and
one case from the Brewer paper) - Did the goals change in the design process?
- Who are the stakeholders (Digital Green and one
case from the Brewer paper - What are the values of the designers?
- How did the technologies come to be used?
2ICTs for Developing countries (ICT4D)
3Global poverty
- Condition of not being able to afford basic human
needs - such as healthcare, clean water or sanitation
- Often measured economically
- Can also be measured through welfare and basic
needs - Inequality and vulnerability
4Pyramid of the capitalist system
5What is a developing country?
6What is a developing country?
- Developing country United Nations Human
Development Index (HDI) score lt.8 - 99 countries
- ?The HDI is comprised of
- ?Life expectancy at birth
- ?Adult literacy (age 15 and above)
- ?Combined gross enrollment ration in education
- ?Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita
- Gini coefficient
- Measure of inequality of income or wealth
7HDI distribution
The greener the better
8GINI co-efficient
The greener the better
9GINI co-efficient
The greener the better
What is this telling us?
10GINI co-efficient
The greener the better
What is this telling us?
Poverty is a global phenomenon
11ICT4Da historical view
- 1998 World Development Report
- Formalized in 2000 United Nations Millennium
Summit - "ensure that the benefits of new technologies,
especially information and communication
technologies are available to all".Â
12ICT4D
- ICTs telephone, television, computer, or
community radio - In the device or cloud Toyama and Dias
- Typically for developmentpoverty reduction,
healthcare, climate change - Can also include free expression or entertainment
13How is it different?
14How is it different?
- Designing for
- A different ethos (social and cultral values)
- Low literacies
- Disruptive connections
- Low incomes
- Areas lacking basic welfare and infrastructure at
times - Traditional western techniques of understanding,
information visualization, or evaluation do not
work
15Mobile repair store in Mumbai, India
India fastest growing mobile market (517 million
as of Dec 2009)
Image courtesy Nimmi Rangaswamy
16A household in a slum community in Bangalore
Dynamic sites of consumption
17Masai men in Kenya using mobiles
The number of mobile phone users in Africa
exceeded 370 million in 2008
Image http//www.environmentteam.com/wp-content/u
ploads/2010/02/Uganda_Receives_Kasana__The_Solar_P
owered_Phone_xlarge.jpg
18What are we doing here?
- We
- designers, technologists, policy makers
- Working towards empowerment reduction of
inequality - Understand current and potential technologies
- in solving socio-economic problems
19- To create educational opportunities for the
world's poorest children by providing each child
with a rugged, low-cost, low-power, connected
laptop with content and software designed for
collaborative, joyful, self-empowered learning. - (OLPC website)
- The worlds poorest two billion people need
desperately need healthcare, not laptops - (Bill Gates)
From Kentaro Toyamas slides
20Why technology for development?
21Why technology for development?
- It is a means and not the end
- Is technology always the solution?
- Why computing technology when other sources are
free or low-cost - social networks, cyber cafes, television, radio,
etc - Information is not always the key
- social, political, and cultural structures
prevent access and/or practice - Well-designed technologies must not exacerbate
existing divides
Some text from Kentaro Toyama
22Framing the problem
- Case Digital Green
- National Increasing debt and decreasing returns
have forced some farmers to sell cheap and commit
suicide in some cases NSSO 2005 - Inadequate knowledge about farming
- Local Green Foundation working with 20 villages
23Initial goals
- To design an information system
- catered to good practices in farming
- Evaluate the use of videos featuring NGO staff,
experts, and farmers - Increase in productivity through baseline
24Initial assumptions
- Videos may be interesting and viable
- Supporting infrastructure could be sponsored and
introduced - Videos increase in knowledge and
relevant information - Increased knowledge better farming
practices - Better farming practices higher profits
and less deaths
25Stakeholders
26Stakeholders
- Microsoft Research
- Green Foundation
- Later on, Digital Green Foundation
- Farmer users
- Field officers
27The design process
- Iterative
- Understanding Ethnographic investigation (200
days) - Initial roll-outs
- Farmers liked videos of similar people
- Demand for demos, testimonials, entertainment
- Seasonal preference
- Mediation was key
- Demand for repeated sessions
28The design process
- Participatory videos
- Overview, itemization, step-by-step instructions,
benefits, QA - Indian idol
- Verifiability
- Video editors
- Mediated instruction
- Regimented sequencing
29What happened later?
- Spun off to become the Digital Green NGO
- Built capacity for Green Foundation
- Expanded to others parts
30The big issues in
Design for Development
31Cultural differences
- Cultural and language barriers between designers
and users - Gender, race, skin colour, or age affect access
- Socio-cultural norms may be different
- Sitting on the floor
- Wearing traditional clothes to reduce power levels
32Literacies
- What is literacy?
- ability to identify, understand, interpret,
create, communicate, compute and use printed and
written materials associated with varying
contexts UNESCO. - There are many forms of literacies
- Textual, numeric, digital, symbolic
- Varying degrees
- 95 of websites are in English
33Interface design
- Case Text-free UIs Medhi
- User interfaces for non-literate users
- Pen or touch interface
- Liberal use of imagery
- No text
- Semi-abstracted cartoons
- Voice annotation
- Aggressive use of mouse-over functionality
- Consistent help icon
34Nouns vs. verbs
Kitchen sink or washing dishes?
Pot or cooking?
Courtesy Indrani Medhi
35Cultural differences
An urban family user?
- Will a recycle bin make sense where it is unheard
of? - Colours mean differently in different countries
Badre
Color China Japan Egypt France USA
Red Happiness Anger / Danger Death Aristocracy Danger
Green Dynasty / Heavens Youth / Future Fertility Criminality Safety
White Death / Purity Death Joy Neutrality Purity
Courtesy Indrani Medhi
36Design
Original design
Revised design
Courtesy Indrani Medhi
37Ethics
- Whose notion of development?
- Should development always be instrumental?
38Ethics
- Whose notion of development?
- Should development always be instrumental?
- Appropriation of telecenter as photo-shopping,
astrology service - Is watching Youtube or online social networking
not useful? - Brazil and India are the largest consumers of
Orkut - Television led to increased resistance of
domestic abuse in India and family planning in
Brazil - Listen to instrumental, healthcare programs on
radio after a long days work, anyone?
39Sustainability
- Enhancing long-term capability after project ends
- Case SARI (Sustainable Access in Rural India)
- Collaboration with MIT, IIT, GaTech, Harvard, and
n-Logue - Privately-owned in 32 cases
- Lack of adequate technical support, new and
relevant content, and end of institutional
partnerships
40Marketing for the user
- How is a product created for low-income consumers
marketed? - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vTJwR9jLjTTE
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vJEPNiZNkhtc
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vnEZ30K5dBWU
- What did you notice?
41Marketing for the user
- Lifestyle-based marketing
- Family values
- Truck driver
- Entertaining and creative
- Catering to social class and aspiration
- Does not explicitly market as a poor mans
phone - Conveys through choice of characters
42Marketing for the giver
Case Kiva http//www.kiva.org/
43Marketing for the giver
- Bay area users (green leaf, white bg)
- Design to extract money (PayPal, amount raised)
- Establishing legitimacy
- Scams versus appropriate giving
- Establishes cause
- Entrepreneurship appears useful and a way out
of poverty - Poor communities
- The small amount of money can make a big
difference
44Capacity building
- Designers leave
- Training local people in usage and repair
- Expensive to provide immediate assistance
- Public demonstrations, media, word-of-mouth
45Capacity building
- Case One Laptop Per Child
- Beautiful design
- Tough, open source software, low energy use, an
- Techno-centric
- Not wrong, but irrelevant content
- Rich, American kids ! poor, Ecuadoriaskids
- MIT Ecuador, not MIT
Ecuador - Requires new skills and literacies
- No capacity building
- 10,000 laptops per country
46Value systems
- Personal, private ownership and usage
- Communal, shared, and negotiated usage
- Women as empowered or independent
- Perhaps not everywhere
- Independent use
- Intermediated use also
47Value systems
- Case Multipoint
- 10 student per computer in certain rural schools
in India
Source Udai Singh Pawar
48Solution Multi-mouse
Source Udai Singh Pawar
49Despite the challenges
- The promise is great
- Technology penetration
- Evidence of success exists
- Fishermen in Kerala
- Digital Green
- Kelsa
- Humbling
- Towards a better world!
50Questions?