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- The NGONET Africa project is based out of the Environment Liaison
- Centre International (ELCI) in Nairobi, where a Fido bulletin board system
- has been set up to provide a conduit for electronic mail traffic in the
- region and to NGOs worldwide. This is done using a high-speed modem to make
- daily calls to the GreenNet Fido gateway in London. The project is also
- supporting the MANGO (Micro-computer Assistance for NGO's) Fido bulletin board
- project in Zimbabwe (see below) and plans to assist in the
- establishment of a third bulletin board system in Dakar and another possibly in
- Ghana.
- In particular, support is being given to improving the flow of
- electronic information around the preparations for the UNCED conference in Rio,
- Brazil in 1992. An earlier survey found there were significant numbers of
- NGOs which had computers but were not using electronic mail yet. A total of
- 48 NGOs are being identified to receive modems, training,
- documentation and support. ESANET (Eastern and Southern African Network) is a
- pilot project to link researchers at universities in Uganda, Tanzania,
- Zambia, Zimbabwe and Kenya with each other and with researchers
- worldwide by installing electronic mail facilities at the computer centres of
- universities in these countries. ESANET is based at the University of Nairobi
- Institute of Computer Science. To maximise scarce resources,
- coordination and technical support is being shared with the NGONET project.
- Where there is no local NGO host system it has been agreed that NGOs will be
- able to use the resources of the campus based nodes.
- Nodes are currently being installed in Kampala - Makarere University -
- nodename MUKLA, Nairobi - nodename UNICS, Dar es Salaam - University of Dar es
- Salaam/Eastern and Southern African Universities Research Project - nodename
- ESAURP, Lusaka - University of Zambia Computer Center - nodename UZCC, and
- Harare - University of Harare Computer Centre - nodename UHCC.
- Each node runs a suite of Fido software on an IBM compatible AT with 40MB
- hard drive, high speed modem (PEP) and dedicated phone line. Zambia,
- Kenya and Harare can connect directly to the GreenNet Fido gateway
- (GNFido), while Uganda and Tanzania can only connect via Nairobi because
- direct dialling facilities outside the PTA (Preferential Trade
- Agreement) area are not available. Zambia has begun to experiment with direct
- dialling to London and the other nodes are expected to begin testing
- connectivity later next month. They are still awaiting arrival of hardware
- shipped from Nirv Centre (Web) in Toronto, Canada.
- HealthNet is operated by a Boston based NGO called Satellife which was
- initiated as a project of the International Physicians for the Prevention of
- Nuclear War (IPPNW). Satellife have purchased 60% of the capacity on the
- University of Surrey (UK) built Uosat-F satellite. This will initially be used to
- exchange health and medical information within the same Universities
- (coincidentally) participating in the ESANET project and via Memorial University in
- Newfoundland Canada. Memorial is an appropriate site because of Dr Maxwell
- House' work with telemedicine and because it is so far north the
- satellite passes overhead 10 times a day on its polar orbit.
- Because of the total overlap in institutions in Africa, the HealthNet
- project is being administered by the African participants as part of the
- ESANET project to evaluate alternative data transport methods.
- Although the current traffic is limited to health related issues, it will be up
- to the individual participating institutions in Africa to obtain
- clearance from the authorities for a wider interpretation of the health
- mandate. As far as the funders of the HealthNet project are concerned, this
- could encompass a much broader range of environmental and social issues.
- Currently however, only Zambia has been successful in obtaining approval for the
- installation of the ground station and this was with a specific medically
- oriented application.
- The Zambian approval nevertheless sets a precedent for the
- authorities in the other countries. Also Zambia will now be able to host
- satellite traffic from the other participating countries via direct dial
- telephone lines with the ESANET Fido network until other ground stations have
- been approved.
- The Pan African Documentation Centre Network - PADISNET is a project to
- link 34 countries into a network of participating development planning
- centres which exchange databases and information. PADIS is based at the
- United Nations Economic Council on Africa (UNECA) in Addis Ababa which also
- operates a Fido node connecting on demand to London, South Africa and the US.
- NGONET and PADISNET project workers have held joint workshops it is likely
- that the two projects will be able to share resources in the support of
- other nodes in Dakar-Senegal (CRAT), Accra-Ghana (AAU), Dar es
- Salaam-Tanzania (ESAURP).
- WEDNET supports research on women and natural resource management. The aim is
- to link researchers in Senegal, Ghana, Burkino Faso, Nigeria, Sudan,
- Kenya, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Canada via electronic communications and
- conventional networking. WEDNET is also based at ELCI in Nairobi.
- WorkNet operates as the national electronic network host for NGOs in South
- Africa. The network has been established for about three years and now has
- about 150 users on a multi-user BBS programme called MajorBBS. Users
- include the labour movement, human rights groups, the alternate press,
- documentation centres, service organisations and church groups. The ICTFU has
- funded the development of gateway software which will allow MajorBBS users to
- send messages to other systems and obtain conference postings. The
- MajorBBS format is converted to the Fido standard and a separate machine
- operates as a Fido bbs to transmit and receive the messages. The Fido
- machine is now officially registered on the Internet
- (worknet.alt.za) and is in daily contact with MANGO in Harare and the GreenNet Fido
- gateway in London via high speed (PEP) modem. An X.25 leased line is
- already on premises awaiting the installation of X.25 software and PAD in
- September/October. MANGO is a bulletin board service in Harare,
- Zimbabwe, operated by a collective of NGOs:; Africa Information Afrique (a
- regional news agency), EMBISA (religious development group), SARDC
- (Southern African Research and Documentation Centre), EDICESA
- (Ecumenical Documentation and Information Centre for Eastern and Southern
- Africa), and SAPES (Southern Africa Press Service). It was recently agreed
- that the system be made available to the NGO community as a whole and a fee
- structure has been developed. MANGO now connects three times daily with the Web
- Fido gateway in Toronto. In addition it connects three times a day to
- WorkNet in Johannesburg.
- ARSONET is a CIDA professional development project to link the Africa
- Regional Standards Authorities in Addis Abbaba-Ethiopia,
- Nairobi-Kenya and Cairo-Egypt with Fido networking technology.
- In all these networking initiatives users are connecting to their
- nearest host node. This provides them with a link to the global network for
- receiving or sending private messages and public bulletins via a gateway
- operating at the Association for Progressive Communication's London host -
- GreenNet. Through this system users in Africa can gain access to the
- community of 10,000 NGOs and individuals working in peace, social
- development and environmental issues who use the APC network.
- With a 2400 baud modem, users are reliably achieving transmission speeds of
- 220 characters per second (cps), even on relatively poor phone lines.
- Because the messages and files are automatically compressed before
- transmission to as little as one third of their original size (and even more for
- fixed length record databases - up to 10 times) it is possible to send or
- receive about 40,000 characters (about 6,500 words) during a one minute
- call. Because the connection between the computers is all under control of
- the machine at each end, the only time when the full 220 cps
- transmission speed is not being achieved is during the first 10-15 seconds while
- handshaking between the two computers takes place.
- 5) Creating African Electronic Mail Host Systems
- The methods and systems described above are the early stages of
- establishing full electronic mail hosts systems in Africa, owned and operated by
- Africans.
- Complete electronic mail, computer conferencing and database systems are now
- being run on small and relatively inexpensive microcomputers ('286, '386,
- SPARC based hardware platforms can all be set up for between $5,000 and
- $15,000). Locally-based systems such as these can greatly reduce the costs to
- the individual user of computer-based telecommunications. In this case
- users can make a local phone call and share the cost of the
- international connection, rather than all individuals competing for scarce and
- expensive international lines.
- The benefits of such local operations has been proved by small UNIX
- systems installed by the Association for Progressive
- Communications, the RIO project in French-speaking countries of Africa and the
- Carribbean, and by the Bureau for Latin America of the United Nations
- Development Programme in Cuba, Bolivia, Ecuador and Costa Rica, and by BBS
- systems operating in several Eastern European and African countries. These
- benefits include service at a far lower cost than
- There is now a variety of software and hardware available for this
- purpose. Selection is not easy; some factors to consider include not just the
- cost of the original equipment, but the availability of skilled
- technical people to maintain the system, the availability of spare parts, and
- the cost and availability of technical support from vendors. The
- significant barriers to rapid implementation are the need to train system
- operators and the high state tariffs on computer and communications
- equipment.
- The challenges of making this technology work in Africa are balanced by
- significant rewards. African countries are in a position to leap-frog
- technologies and install relatively sophisticated information technology now,
- skipping older, less effective techniques and methods. With this kind of
- information system in place, dialogue and information exchange regionally and
- internationally can greatly expand, with benefits to every sector of African
- development.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Mike Jensen is a computer engineer based out of London. He was a
- founder of Web, a non-profit computer network in Canada, and, while
- working at GreenNet in London, developed software to gateway the UNIX
- systems of the Association for Progressive Communications with the FIDO
- world. Most recently he has been traveling extensively in Africa setting up
- small BBS systems and training non-governemtal organizations to use them.
- GreenNet 23 Bevenden Street London, N1 6BH, ENGLAND tel:
- +44-71-608-3040 fax: +44-71-490-4070 email: mikej@gn.apc.org
- Geoff Sears is the Director of the Institute for Global
- Communications in San Francisco, California. IGC operates the non-profit
- PeaceNet and EcoNet international computer networks. IGC is a founding
- member of the Association for Progressive Communications, and is
- currently involved in the establishment of computer networks in the USSR,
- Eastern Europe and Latin America.
- Institute for Global Communications 18 de Boom Street, 1st Floor San
- Francisco, CA 94107 tel: +1-415-442-0220 fax: +1-415-546-1794
- email:gsears@igc.apc.org
- Message 96: From fuhrmann@dfn.dbp.de Wed Dec 4 16:43:19 1991 Received: by
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- <911204161947*fuhrmann@dfn.dbp.de Subject: Isoc Newsletters 12.30 Germany Status: R
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