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The Go-Anywhere Cyber Cafe In a Shipping Container

nk497 writes "UK IT charity Computer AID has come up with a clever idea to use shipping containers to house thin-client-based, solar-powered cyber cafes, which can be used to bring connectivity to rural communities in Africa. The £20,000 boxes use a single Pentium 4 PC split out using thin client devices to offer computing to 10 people via local wireless access or mobile broadband. The solar power created from a single panel is enough to power the PC, 10 monitors, lighting, and also to charge mobile phones. Computer Aid founder Tony Roberts notes, 'The power of this idea is that we can drop that container anywhere in the world, literally in the middle of the Sahara desert.'"

5 of 145 comments (clear)

  1. that much!? by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 4, Insightful

    20 grand?! Must be some pricey solar panels... Containers aren't that expensive...

  2. Pentium 4? by NaCh0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They should have went with a more power efficient (and faster) core 2 duo. It's not like the cost difference would have been noticeable given the cost of the shipping container, solar panels, etc.

  3. Cargo cult by ugen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Dropping this container in the middle of Africa is a good way to establish a new cargo cult.

    Seriously, though - why are these people so intent on providing Internet access to countries and people that need many more basic things in life first (including proper hygiene, medical care, food, clothing, development of civic society, business, infrastructure, etc etc). Providing internet without these other things results in proliferation of "Nigerian scams" and very little else.

    1. Re:Cargo cult by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I was just wondering how far down I'd have to scroll to see this traditional response to this type of story:

      Dropping this container in the middle of Africa is a good way to establish a new cargo cult.

      Seriously, though - why are these people so intent on providing Internet access to countries and people that need many more basic things in life first (including proper hygiene, medical care, food, clothing, development of civic society, business, infrastructure, etc etc). Providing internet without these other things results in proliferation of "Nigerian scams" and very little else.

      You're responding to a post about a:

      ( ) Technical innovation in a developing country
      (*) Product shipped to a developing market
      ( ) General discussion about IT in the developing world

      The location is:

      (*) Africa
      ( ) India
      ( ) Bangladesh
      ( ) China
      ( ) Somewhere else in Asia
      ( ) South America
      ( ) Central America
      ( ) Other _unspecified_

      You're objecting to it on the basis that:

      (*) Poverty hasn't been eliminated in that country yet
      ( ) American jobs will be lost

      Your argument is bogus because:

      ( ) Poverty hasn't been eliminated in the developed world either, that doesn't mean we should halt all technological research
      ( ) This will not adversely affect any efforts to alleviate poverty
      (*) This will help to alleviate poverty
      ( ) Poverty in that country isn't as widespread as you say it is
      ( ) The US does not have a divine right to keep all the cool jobs

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
  4. OK... I'll bite... by denzacar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How in the hell will this alleviate poverty?

    Let's take Nigeria for example.
    I KNOW FOR A FACT that they've got both Internet AND a working postal system there. I've seen the evidence.

    How will the "Internet in a box" magically alleviate poverty there? You can't just have the whole country running 419 scams.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens