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Archive for the ‘Mobiles’ Category

Mobiles for Scientific Research

Friday, July 9th, 2010

We know mobiles are very useful in areas where desktop computer and communications infrastructure is not easily available or affordable. And we’re very interested in mobile applications and scientific research in exactly these regions.

So I was very interested to see a new training workshop being run by the Science Dissemination Unit (SDU) of the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP). The workshop is on Mobile Science: Sensing, Computing and Dissemination and the deadline for applications is tomorrow, July 10th.

Quoting from the announcement:

The Science Dissemination Unit (SDU) of the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), with the assistance of the University of Washington (USA) and of the UCLA Centerfor Embedded Networked Sensing (USA) will hold a Workshop on “Mobile Science: Sensing, Computing and Dissemination” in Trieste (Italy) from the 2 to the 5 of November 2010.

Mobile applications offer tremendous benefits to academic research and
education, and to society as a whole throughout the world. This is an
opportunity that deserves attention and promotion, especially in less
developed areas where mobile phones are the first telecommunications
technology in history to have more users than in the developed world.

The specific things that interested me were:

The Mobile Science workshop aims to engage the scientific community in developing countries in the design, development, and deployment of the newest mobile scientific applications;
i.e. advocating appropriate mobile applications in scientific
research/academia;
Participants will learn how to apply mobile technology tools to retrieve scientific data
I.e. designing mobile apps for science data collection;
how to apply appropriate web-based analysis to assimilate mobile data into scientific studies
I.e. web-based statistical analysis and presentation, like a free online version of SPSS? As far as I know this doesn’t exist yet. The closest that I can think of is the Google Docs spreadsheet, which is of course just a spreadsheet, requires an internet connection and doesn’t allow plugins for additional scientific analysis functionality. But there could be a very interesting app to develop here.
and how to share their scientific findings with a potentially large mobile audience.
I.e. low bandwidth design with an emphasis on web standards for cross-platform compatibility, so that it works on the largest number of mobile devices.

If you want to apply, better get on your bike (or modem?) because the deadline is tomorrow. If you want to do mobile scientific research applications, please get in touch, we’d like to help you.

Technology decisions in organisations great and small

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Ken Banks often writes about Social Mobile’s Long tail – it’s a really helpful concept; one that I find myself frequently using when explaining our work to others.

Ken Banks Social Mobile Long Tail Graphic

Social Mobile's Long Tail by Ken Banks

Whenever I see Ken’s picture, I’m reminded of the similar relationship between complexity and organisational size and I’m proud of how Aptivate works successfully across this spectrum. We try to bring the breadth of our knowledge, skills and experience to bear when working with everyone from communities in rural Zambia, to NGOs in the UK, international agencies in Europe and governments across Africa.

I think this is really important.

It’s great to be “the policy people” or “the community technology people” but you need people who span these worlds and can join the dots.

That’s us.

We’ve spent months in rural Zambia working with young women getting low-power computers, GPRS connections and mobile systems working to support local entrepreneurship. Now we have greater confidence offering advice on mobile monitoring and evaluation strategies for NGOs in the region, and in turn, to guide an international agency wanting to know what kind of policy monitoring is possible, and how data might integrate into their wider systems.

I had an enjoyable conversation yesterday with the folks at CAFOD who want to know if mobiles could strengthen their work at the local partner and international levels. I met them through BarCampAfricaUK last November and finally had a chance to catch up.

Personally, I’m really interested in working with medium-sized organisations trying to make better use of technology. I probably have similar conversations 2-3 times a month.

I think there are some common characteristics and challenges for these organisations:

  • They already use some technology in the areas you’d expect: fundraising, communications, advocacy, admin and finance, and monitoring and evaluation.
  • They don’t have much capacity to explore and understand how new technologies (e.g. mobiles, collaboration tools and media capture) or advances in current technologies (e.g. open standards, APIs, social media) can help their programmes.
  • Local partners are already ahead of the game when it comes to the use of mobiles. This is typically out of necessity – even basic SMS is an astoundingly versatile medium.
  • The “technology champions” in an organisation, the individuals who appreciate the possibilities, are not always the decision makers. They often don’t have the time to investigate these opportunities and present information around which decisions can be taken.
  • Experimenting with the various tools out there can be challenging for the non-geek and it’s hard to find out about the realities of implementation.
  • Consultants are expensive and companies who sell “off the shelf products” might not have the best interest of the organisation at heart.
  • There are some great resources out there that catalogue technologies, there are also some good case studies that cover certain scenarios but there are few resources that specifically help people make decisions at the organisational level.

So here’s a promise: we’ll help you make decisions about technology. We’ll do a whole lot more, but at its simplest, we’ll do what it takes for you to decide what do to.

The first three things on my list of “how to support decisions” after my conversations yesterday are:

  • Write a blog post on technology decision making for medium-sized organisations, reassuring them that they’re in good company. (done)
  • Write a primer on “why use mobiles for data gathering and communication” with a goal to support decisions.
  • Put together a “mobile gadget lab in a briefcase” to take to organisations so they can play with pre-configured versions of various tools on various devices supporting a couple of different workflows.

Do any of these thoughts resonate with you?

Comments most welcome!

Tariq