Category: Swaziland Computer Society

Swaziland Computer Society Meetup January 2013

The second Swaziland Computer Society meeting was a success! I am excited to see our group is moving in a positive direction. Our first meeting in December was a great way to break the ice for SCS members to meet in person. After our initial meeting we decided we weren’t done hanging out and we went to Nando’s for an hour or so to drink coffee and talk shop.

This time for our January meeting we built on the same idea and decided to meet at the Apple Cafe in Manzini. Getting into Manzini is much easier for everyone as it is centrally located in the country. Unfortunately the urgently-needed rain did work against us, as anyone who has lived in southern Africa knows, rain generally means your event is canceled. I held out hope though and I was thrilled when two of the biggest contributors to SCS came over.

My main goal of the meeting was to talk about how Swaziland Computer Society has now been added to the NetSquared community of like-minded organizations. This pairing really helps bring reputation points to what SCS is trying to do. Additionally it gives TechSoupGlobal and NetSquared some insight and contacts for this pocket of the world. There is a lot of room to grow this connection and we are really excited to see where it goes.

You can check out the NetSquared page for SCS here:
http://www.netsquared.org/local/africa/swaziland-computer-society

Additional topics covered were the push forward with the website. PD has gone a long way towards the design of the site, including the forum, an advertising section for people to sell gear, and tools for vendors to advertise. It’s great stuff and we’re really excited to get that launched. To help out with the launch of the site, another member suggested we hold a logo-creation contest and get some talent from within SCS to come up with the logo for our new site. This will be a great way for an aspiring and upcoming Swazi graphic artist to get their work out.

Other topics had a focus on programming and fixing a few problems people are having. For programming there was some discussion about a Coursera offering for functional programming. This course teaches how to use functional programming with ML, Racket, and Ruby. The course has just started and the two people enrolled were able to talk a bit about it. A great tip was offered about http://developers.facebook.com as a site dedicated to using APIs and programming centered around Facebook.

Some of the problems addressed included an unresolved issue with using Tor under Fedora. This is still being looked at, but it’s really exciting to know people are using Tor. There was discussion on how to get an ICT intern for projects, and that process should be identified and posted online once the forum launches. We also talked about the upcoming SCS resource disc and how valuable that will be to instructors without great Internet access.

The next meeting is already in the works, with its planned date sometime after the end of the logo contest. Having these meetings is great as it really shows how much the members do appreciate what SCS is trying to do. From the admin team we are looking forward to exciting times ahead!

Commerical computer software is not sustainabile, particularly in developing countries when compared with free and open-source softare (FOSS)

This is my introduction to a project that I have proposed as a goal for my third year extension as a Peace Corps Volunteer. Although originally created as a project for a single school, my recent introduction to the Ministry of Education’s ICT department has provided a new possibility of spreading the use of free and open source software within the kingdom. I am now furthering this project and using it as a component for a www.Coursera.org class that I am attending online.

 


 

The United Nations Millennium Goal #2 : Ensure that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling

 

Every developing country’s education system will share a single key component in the future. This component is the inclusion of computer technology inside the classroom and within academic structures. All future classrooms in developing nations will have some connection to modern technology, weather through computers meant for students, teachers, or administrators.

 

Any large corporation or institution that currently has developed technical infrastructure will cite the cost of training staff to switch to Free and open-source software as a key component of its failure to supplant traditional purchased software. The costs of maintaining commercial software extend years beyond initial purchasing, covering specialized hardware, software upgrades, and vendor-specific training required to operate the technology. The commercial software industry has within its best interests a continuous cycle of software purchase, software update, software obsolescence, and software replacement.  These costs are a recurring burden on institutions, and once a specific technology or vendor has been implemented within that institutions it is tremendously cost-intensive and technically overwhelming to change.

 

As developing nations invest further into technology for classrooms, their is a choice available to these nations that is not available to currently established countries and institutions. The choice is between software that is Free and open-source software (FOSS) versus expensive commercially available software. Developing nations have a unique opportunity to prevent being trapped int he cycle of continuous costs associated with commercial software. These countries are in a position to train engineers, architects, programmers and technicians on FOSS before they have any dependency or reliance on purchased and entrenched commercial software.

 

Swaziland is a country with an extremely youthful demographic population. It is estimated that over 25% of the population are children that have been orphaned because of the HIV and AIDs epidemic. These children through the assistance of international donors such as PEPFAR and the Global Fund are being exposed to a free primary school education that has never before been available to the children of this country.

 

Swaziland is ranked by the UN as a middle-income country. Due to many factors much of this income remains out of the hands of the severely impoverished. The majority of Swaziland’s citizens live on approximately $2 per day. With the incredible income disparity and poor conditions of many rural schools, there is little or no money for technology infrastructure, and no money for proper training of staff. Without the finances to continually purchase new or updated software, the use of commercial software for improving educational systems in developing nations is an unsustainable tool for use in meeting the UN’s development goal.

 

My project proposes that implementation of training on free and open-source software through the Swaziland Ministry of Education will present an opportunity within the public school system to break from the need for purchasing expensive software.  This training presented by members of the Swaziland Computer Society (a technical user group) will be directed at those schools within the country currently operating a computer lab for students. These instructors will gain the knowledge necessary for installing, configuring, and troubleshooting selected Linux operating systems, and other open-source software selected by the Ministry of Education.

 

The milestones for this project are:

  • Creation of a presentation conveying the benefits and significance of moving the country’s educational system to FOSS
  • Scheduling a viewing of the presentation to the Swaziland Computer Society
  • Scheduling a meeting on FOSS with the Chief Inspector of ICT for the Ministry of Education
  • Preparation of training materials to be used in class
  • Acquisition of funding to finance first series of training classes
  • Selection of teachers for training class
  • Completion of the training class
  • Follow-up with training attendees on implementation results

 

The timeline for this project from beginning to the successful completion of the first training lesson will be no more than 10 months long, dictated by the Swaziland school calendar.