Mobile technology and Africa
Mobile technology in Africa is a fastest growing market.
[1]
Nowhere is the effect more dramatic than in Africa, where mobile
technology often represents the first modern infrastructure of any kind.
[2] Only 10% of Africans have access to the internet, the lowest percentage in the world.
[3] However, 50% of Africans have mobile phones and their penetration is expanding rapidly.
[4]
This means that mobile technology is the largest platform in Africa,
and can access a wide range of income groups. AppsAfrica reports Mobile
App downloads will reach 98 billion
[5] which will have a huge benefit for mobile app developers in Africa
[1]
Non-profit mobile technology
Thus
mobile technology can be used, not only to generate profit from high
income groups, but to provide information and create social change for
low income groups. For example, mobile technology is used to provide
information on health, education, finances or to access specific groups
such as the youth. However, people who are very poor have very basic
phones. Thus non-profit mobile technology is not aimed at advanced smart
phones, but ranges from sending out bulk SMSs to USSD, mobi-sites and mobile communities. AppsAfrica[6] writes the next 1 Billion phone users will come from Rural areas [2]
The ultimate aim of non-profit mobile technology is to make it free,
or as near to free for the end user. This means enlisting donors and
getting mobile networks on board. Internationally, companies such as
TextToChange, FrontlineSMS, RapidSMS, Ushahidi all work with mobiles in health, disaster relief and aid management.
Promote health
mHealth is using mobile technology to provide groups with health information. It was pioneered in part by the UN Foundation and Vodafone Foundation through partnerships with the World Health Organization (WHO) and the social enterprise DataDyne, who then joined with other partners in forging the mHealth Alliance.[7]
mHealth activities come in the form of appointment reminders, community
mobilization and health promotion, emergency toll-free telephone
services, health call centres, health surveys, information initiatives
and patient monitoring among others.[8]
In June 2011, the first African mobile health summit was held in Cape Town.
At the summit, the WHO released a report stating that eighty-three per
cent of governments surveyed had at least one mHealth project in their
country. However, the majority of mHealth activities were limited in
size and scope. mHealth initiatives were health call centres (59%),
emergency toll-free telephone services (55%), managing emergencies and
disasters (54%), and mobile telemedicine (49%).
In South Africa, companies like Cell-Life and GeoMed and HealthSMS use mobile technology for health.[9]
Fight HIV/Aids
The Praekelt Foundation is a South African example of a non profit organisation
that is using mobile technology to create social change. Their
programmes have currently reached 50 million people across 15 countries
in sub-Saharan Africa.[10]
The founders saw that the technology they were creating for corporate
clients could be useful for NGOs to provide information to their target
markets. “Full profit want to reach people for different reasons, but
people should not be charged for having access to life saving
information,” says Marcha Neethling, head of operations at Praekelt
Foundation.
One of the mobile technologies developed by Praekelt Foundation is a
mobile community called YoungAfricaLive (YAL). Users do not need to have
airtime or data bundles on their phones to use it. The aim of the
mobile community was to create a space that would be interactive and fun
where young people could talk candidly and learn about love,
relationships and sex and HIV/AIDS.[11]
The mobile community is unique to the Vodacom network. At the end of 2010, Vodacom’s mobile platform, Vodafone Live, was receiving 3.2 million unique users monthly.[12]
As (young) people were already using mobile technology to surf the net
and download songs etc. it seemed the perfect place to engage with this
target group.
The community is aimed at users between 16 and 24 and users receive
daily news and celeb stories. All with a social call to action at the
end, they participate in polls, watch videos that link to stories and
can engage in anonymous chat rooms. Experts come on to the chat rooms to
discuss sexual topics and allow users to ask personal questions
anonymously. For example, well known South African sexologist Dr Eve
hosts live chats once a week.
Users have engaged with the community and many of the updated
features of the community have come directly from user suggestions.
Users have commented saying YoungAfricaLive creates a platform for them
to express their ideas, making them proud of their status and
encouraging them to be responsible around sex.
The ongoing challenge with free mobile communities and technology is
continuing to engage the service provider to allow the community to be
entirely free. “With YoungAfricaLive South Africa, Vodacom is sponsoring
the bandwidth, which is a massive investment. .. (thus) sustainability
is always a question.”[13]
In 2011 Vodacom pioneered a project in South Africa to fight crime using mobile phones.[14]
They partnered with The Khulisa's Youth out of School Ubuntu Club in
Tembisa, Johannesburg and donated a computer and seven mobile phones to
the Club. These are used by the young patrollers in the community to
keep in touch and to report all crime incidents, as well as update the
community on current events.
The project is based in the Phomolong area of Tembisa, which is
notorious for high levels of criminal activity. Each mobile phone
donated has internet capabilities and the members of the Club will be
allocated a mobile phone that they will use to capture events, interview
members of the community and create video clips. These will be uploaded
to their Facebook page and website all in an effort to report on criminal activity in the community.
The South African Police Service also runs a national crime line which they encourage citizens to SMS in and report crimes in their communities.
References
- http://aiti.mit.edu/
- http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/07_39/b4051054.htm
- http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats1.htm
- https://www.budde.com.au/Research/2010-Global-Mobile-Communications-Key-Trends-and-Growth-in-a-Challenging-Environment.html
- Mobile App downloads will reach 98 billion
- / details the next 1 Billion phone users will come from Rural areas
- http://www.unfoundation.org/our-solutions/mobile-technology/tech4dev/index.html
- http://www.mhealthalliance.org/news/mobile-health-activity-spreads-over-4-5-countries-remains-limited-small-scale-and-single-issue-
- http://www.unfoundation.org/what-we-do/issues/global-health/mobile-health-for-development.html
- http://www.praekeltfoundation.org/
- http://www.praekeltfoundation.org/
- http://www.habarimedia.co.za/mobile/vodafone-live
- South African sexologist Dr Eve
http://www.vodacom.com/news_article.php?articleID=958&pid=press_releases
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