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MIT GITA Award 2008

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Umar Saif won the MIT Global Indus Technovator Award for his work on Dritte and commercializing some technology solutions for the developing-world. This award is for South Asians, under the age of 40, who have made outstanding technological or entrepreneurial contributions. More information here. gita-mountain.jpg
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trlogo.jpg     MIT TechReview has featured our work on improving Internet connectivity in the developing-world. This Project, dubbed DonateBandwidth, is a follow-up on our Poor Man's Broadband work. With DonateBandwidth, users in the developing-world can help each other by donating their unused bandwidth to those who need it. This project received funding from the US State Department/NAS and HEC and will be further developed in collaboration with UC Berkeley.

Read the TechReview article here.
Keniston.jpg     Kenneth Keniston is scheduled to give the keynote address at NSDR this year. The keynote will focus on key issues like lessons learnt from previous efforts e.g., in India, understanding the current ICT4D boom, and future directions for ICT professionals and researchers.

Kenneth Keniston is Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Human Development at MIT and Director of the MIT India Program. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College. He received his D. Phil. from Oxford University, where he was a Rhodes Scholar. He has taught at Harvard, Yale, and MIT. He is the author of nine books including IT Experience in India: Bridging the Digital Divide and The State, IT, and Development.

More information on the keynote here. More information on the NSDR 2008 program here.

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This week's issue of New Scientist has published an article on our research on Poor Man's Broadband. This project has resulted in a modified version of a P2P system (BitTorrent) designed to bypass the "bottleneck of the Internet" in the developing-world. The system employs direct point-to-point POTS connections to exchange data at the maximum speed afforded by a modem. This project was funded by Microsoft Research's Digital Inclusion Grant.

MSRLogo.gif     One of the early good news for Dritte includes funding from MSR for one of the projects titled "Poor Man's Broadband: Peer-to-Peer Dialup Networking". It is interesting to note that this is the first time ever that MSR has funded a project in Pakistan. Here are links to some of the related press releases:

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