| Partners |
| We
have various partnerships with different companies all with the mission
to help us get to our destination: |
| Soweto Free Open University - www.soweto.freeopenu.org |
- Free Open University has formed partnership with Soweto Internet Radio to provide A Totally Free and Completely Open Independent Study University.
The people of Soweto, learning together and teaching each other in the Free Open University tradition. Your education at Soweto Free Open University will include the best courses from Stanford, MIT, UC Berkeley, Yale and Harvard.
We have had our uprising, now it is time to rise up! Instead of waiting for someone to give us an education, we are going to rise up and take our degree. Join me and Free Open University as we teach each other and earn what is rightfully ours.
An independent study degree! For further information send e-mail to soweto@freeopenu.org - www.soweto.freeopenu.org.
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| Dabba Talk |
- We have also partnered with Dabba Telecom to provide Telecommunication
Wireless infrastructure all over Soweto. This will provide wireless
voice and data coverage for less to homes, schools, offices and communities
through Dabba phones and prepaid scratch cards.
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- Rael’s company, Dabba.co.za, provides inexpensive voice
and data services to residents, businesses, and community centres
in Orange Farm. What is remarkable about this is that he has been
able to set up most of his telecommunications infrastructure inexpensively
using Open Source software and commodity wireless devices. Through
this service he is able provide free local calls to anyone within
wireless range of his network. Dabba interconnects with Telkom,
Vodacom, and CellC offering Dabba callers the possibility of connecting
into the national fixed and mobile networks. Dabba offers this
service at the same cost as making a phone call from a community
container, with the added convenience that users can do so from
their own homes.
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Payment is
made, as you might expect, via pay-as-you-go cards. Dabba offers both
voice and data pay-as-you-go cards. A voice voucher is seen at the
right. Rael says that initially the pay-as-you-go system was as simple
as printing access numbers on paper and sealing them in paper envelopes.
Dabba is more sophisticated now and prints elegant looking vouchers
which are heat-sealed in plastic envelopes. |
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- Rael has been working on VoIP service delivery in Orange Farm
for a couple of years now and has experimented with a wide range
of wireless radios and antennae. He has now settled on simple commodity
wireless routers such as the Linksys WRT54G range of routers. These
devices can have their internal software (firmware) replaced with
Open Source software that allows the router to run mesh networking
and VoIP applications. This means that a R700 router can be turned
into a powerful device for delivering local voice and data services.
Each router is capable of networking (meshing) seamlessly with
others nearby creating an inexpensive web of connectivity. Combined
with software to manage access and billing, you have the seeds
of a powerful local telephony and data solution.
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- Dabba delivers local voice access to the network through a pre-configured
VoIP phone. The SMC handset to the left is an example of a wireless
VoIP phone. As an example, it is still a bit expensive at about
R1000 per handset. Rael reckons that wireless VoIP phones can be
found (in quantity) for under R500 each.
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- Dabba have also been providing local phones by mashing up inexpensive
SIP phones and wireless access points. The Dabba user at the right
is using a typical SIP phone with wireless connection. Costs for
this type of phone are also in the R500 range. It is an interesting
question as to whether having a “fixed” wireless phone
in one’s house is perceived to have lower or equal value
to having something like the SMC phone above.
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- Dabba offers pay-as-you-go data vouchers as well. Anyone accessing
the Internet via Dabba’s wireless mesh is presented with
a login screen to validate their voucher. While this is pretty
straightforward at the moment, local access control could be connected
with local advertising, presence, or a variety of features tuned
to the local community and economy.
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- Dabba also offers “Public Phone Username” cards
(seen at right) which allow users to access phone services from
any phone on the Dabba network. Last but not least, because Dabba
is a value added network (VAN) service provider in South Africa,
they are able to offer their users their own telephone numbers
dialable from any telephone network. This is getting very close
to a full-service yet low-cost telephone network.
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- Dabba have been extremely innovative in how they deploy access
points in the community. In some cases, they have partnered with
local business such as the funeral parlour, pictured at left. In
other cases, they have hosted access points in local houses in
exchange for free access for the householder. Most ambitiously
they have negotiated with the local sportsplex to set up solar-powered
access points on top of the lighting towers illuminating the sports
field. I think this kind of organic, local engagement is critical
to the success of initiatives like this.
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- I think the time has arrived in South Africa for this model of
entrepreneurship to take off. In fact, we may be nearing a “perfect
storm” for the growth of such business models. Regulation
is on the verge of allowing any VAN to operate as a telephone company.
Even as we speak Cisco is investing in training in technically
savvy entrepreneurs in South Africa in low-cost wireless deployment.
At the same time, the the Meraka Institute at the CSIR is working
on perfecting mesh networking protocols that Dabba are planning
to roll out in their network. Here in my roll at the Shuttleworth
Foundation, I am both keen to see Dabba succeed in South Africa
and keen to see the business model for a “Village Telco” commoditised
into something that could spread virally very quickly. If you’re
interested in helping build an Open Source low-cost Village Telco
model that would help others get started like Dabba, please get
in touch.
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