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Home» Technology»Unlocking the potential of technology

Unlocking the potential of technology

Loknath Das 27 Apr 2017 Technology Comments Off on Unlocking the potential of technology 505 Views

Madagascar, 2012. A girl stands with a laptop next to a black board

Ethnographer and photographer Laura de Reynal has been documenting the work of organisations, such as Mozilla and One Laptop per Child who are helping communities to get online for the first time.

  • The first online experience for these 16-year-olds in Madagascar was browsing Wikipedia and writing what they had discovered on a blackboard.

  • Madagascar, 2010. Children hold their laptops whilst smiling.to deploy small laptops inLAURA DE REYNAL

    The One Laptop per Child project was one of the first to deploy small laptops in classrooms in developing countries, more than a decade ago.

  • Madagascar, 2012. Children use their laptops.LAURA DE REYNAL

    The children were able to practise their algebra by shooting spaceships.

  • Bangladesh, 2015. Women gather around a smart phone.LAURA DE REYNAL

    In Bangladesh, Facebook was a main driver for discovering the internet, with some not looking beyond that one site.

  • India, 2016.LAURA DE REYNAL

    Smartphones are often seen as just means of taking photographs rather than a conduit to a wider world, as here in a temple in India.

  • India, 2016. An old gaming machineLAURA DE REYNAL

    Inside the toilets of a slum in Pune, India, a Pokemon arcade machine is waiting to be played.

  • Bangladesh, 2014. Two men look at their phoneLAURA DE REYNAL

    These two men play Angry Birds in the street, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, unaware they could access the internet on the smartphone.

  • Bangladesh, 2014. Men sit in a hair salon.LAURA DE REYNAL

    In places like this Bangladeshi hair salon, where music is blasting and tunes can be loaded on your phone while you get a haircut, memory cards or Bluetooth connections are used to counter the prohibitive cost of data.

  • Kenya, 2014. A butcher uses his mobile phone.LAURA DE REYNAL

    Facebook and WhatsApp provide everything small business owners, such as this Kenyan butcher, need to create an online presence.

  • Brazil, 2015. A boy sits in an internet cafe.LAURA DE REYNAL

    In Rio’s favelas, cyber-cafes remain important spaces of connectivity. Parents know their child is safe, staying indoors in dangerous neighbourhoods. They are, however, often focused on video games. And, unlike this one, many are not that welcoming to women.

  • India, 2015. A woman in a sari walks along a passage.LAURA DE REYNAL

    In India, some communities forbid women to access the web.

  • India 2015. A cotton factory worker.LAURA DE REYNAL

    It is hard to find someone with no access to technology in a booming country such as India, but this cotton mill worker does not own even a basic mobile phone. He spends his nights in an adjacent room, sharing the floor with many others. The mill owner, however, loves sharing photographs of his life on Facebook.

  • Bangladesh, 2014. A boy poses for a portrait.LAURA DE REYNAL

    In a village in rural Bangladesh, many people thought using the web meant having a Facebook account. Mobile operators commonly implement zero-rating programs in such places. These allow people to browse Facebook for free on condition they remain inside the network.

  • Madagascar, 2010. A small girl uses the internet.LAURA DE REYNAL

    Seven years ago, the villages in northern Madagascar had very limited smartphone access. But today, many people in these villages are spending time and money on Facebook and other social media websites. Photographer Laura de Reynal was quickly found online by many of her subjects, who soon joined her social media network.

    [Source:-bbc]

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Posted by : Loknath Das
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