The Cuban Memory Stick Underground
circletimessquare writes "The NyTimes has an aticle describing how students and others in Cuba have taken to passing around media on memory sticks, as this is the only way they can get around state-controlled media. Also driving this phenomenon is the fact that there are so few places to get on the Internet. In Old Havana there is only one Internet cafe; getting online there for an hour costs 1/3 of the average Cuban's monthly wages. Local entrepreneurs get the memory sticks from European friends, since they are scarce to find in Cuba through normal channels, and expensive."
Great example of the sneakernet in action. Quick RIAA, ban shoes! :-)
This is really smart. Maybe the college kids here in the US could learn a thing or two from this. Why provoke the beast when nobody has to know about your trading?
(I'm not advocating copyright infringement, just pointing out how silly attacks on internet users are)
std::disclaimer<std::legalese> sig=new std::disclaimer; sig->dump(); delete sig;
You can't take the sky from me...
Memory stick: generic term for portable flash media, usually USB drives
Memory Stick: name for Sony's flash media format
The capitalization is important
"I think an etch-a-sketch with an ethernet port would beat IE7 in web standards compliance."
Totally false. They don't count a child as "born" in Cuba until it has lived for a week. Since a significant portion of infants die during that time, it should not be a surprise their statistics indicate a lower infant mortality rate.
And all they've given up is their inalienable rights as human beings. Yay!
With store and forward for email and Usenet.
Though we used to feed a couple of sites with 10Mb tapes...
If all you have is analog phones, or even tapes, you can still run email and get usenet.
Deleted
Wikipedia entry on disparities between way infant mortality is measured.
US News & World Report article on same (doesn't cite sources, though news magazines almost never do).
Slate article on impact of premature births on infant mortality rate.
Boston Globe article on rate of premature births in U.S.
It would appear there is something to the claim that better medical care can skew infant mortality rate upwards.
Actually, it is more like a high tech version of the old Russian Samizdat during the Soviet era.
"You can't fight in here, this is the war room!"
I have been to Cuba, and to a few other totalitarian states, and there was a noticeable difference between in peoples attitudes towards the government. The people in Cuba mostly genuinely support Fidel Castro (it remains to be seen what kind of support Raul will get). In Myanmar it was obvious that the people were genuinely unhappy about their government. Of course non of this should be used as an excuse for denying Cubans proper elections.
Just another crappy blog