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Working to hardwire remote villages around the world
Submitted by SHNS on Wed, 08/20/2008 - 14:17.
SAN FRANCISCO -- By day, Bruce Baikie works at Sun Microsystems as an engineer specializing in telecommunications.
On nights and weekends, however, he has a side job -- a small company that he started called Green Wi-Fi, where all the employees, including himself, are volunteers.
They bring the Internet to schoolchildren in small, remote villages around the world -- children who don't always attend school and who live with intermittent or no electricity and who may have never seen a computer.
"We're just engineers and software people out of Silicon Valley, with mortgages to pay and kids in school," he said. "But we want to do something besides sell products to the West -- more than just the next gizmo that goes on a cell phone."
Green Wi-Fi is developing solar-powered, wireless antennas for laptops that are specially designed to handle the dust and heat and other inconveniences of life in remote areas.
In May and again in June, Baikie went to Keur Sadaro, a village in Senegal, to try to get laptops donated by the One Laptop Per Child project hooked up to the Internet. The laptops are also solar-powered.
That effort was only partially successful: In New York, the Transportation Security Administration held up his Wi-Fi solar units because, he said, "They saw this thing with battery connections and circuit boards and wouldn't allow it on the flight." In Senegal, meanwhile, customs seized the laptops and wanted $5,000 in import taxes.
Also, the solar charging station isn't finished, due to problems with the local telephone company, so he will return to Senegal in September.
He is one in an ad hoc network of people in the San Francisco Bay Area -- high-school students, university professors, Silicon Valley engineers and marketing specialists -- who are helping hardwire the world.
"This is so close to our hearts and so important that we're stepping out of the high-tech startup field" to do this, said Mark Summer, the co-founder and CEO of Inveneo, a San Francisco nonprofit that gets computers into sub-Saharan Africa.
In the project in Senegal, the village school, which is also a health clinic, was built by high-school students from two San Francisco schools who saw Green Wi-Fi's Web site and asked Baikie for help.
Baikie's managers at Sun Microsystems have "bent over backward" to give him time to work on the project, Baikie said, and he's recruited other Sun employees to help. He also will ask for help from the One Laptop Per Child user group at San Francisco State University.
Although the computers in Senegal have already made an impact -- more children in Keur Sadaro are attending school now, he said, because their parents think it's important -- he needs help loading the network with curriculum in French, which the students speak.
Some day, Green Wi-Fi might make money. Baikie has incorporated it and applied for a patent on the technology. But money isn't his goal.
He hears from people all over the world about projects that could use Green Wi-Fi, and he said he finds great satisfaction in giving people tools they can use to help themselves. "If you do it for them," he said, "nothing ever changes."
(E-mail Deborah Gage at dgage(at)sfchronicle.com.)
(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)


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