Herve illustra-Mobile Developer App

July 27, 2011 08: 56 pmPrint

Herve illustra

Herve illustra is a developer of conscience social mobile app to eradicate corruption in his native Cameroon.  To this end, it has created a tool to fight corruption that allows users to report any requests for bribes by public officials. The app, not Bak Shish, introduced many administrative processes transparent and even share the actual price that people are supposed to pay for goods and services.  Entry in Google Android Developer challenge, the app is already a winner in our book. www.djiathink.com

Appropriate technology for people

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A simple technology created for, but not by, the people can’t leap too far ahead.
By Rolfe Leary


In the early 1960s, when I was a Peace Corps volunteer on the Caribbean island of St. Lucia, I had a colleague who, like me, grew up on a farm in Iowa. In St. Lucia, he worked with small farmers in a remote area. He was really out there in the field, more isolated than the rest of us.

When he returned to his hilly, southeast Iowa farm, his father suggested they clear some timber from their bottomland to have more pasture for their cattle. George thought that was a good idea and immediately went to town and bought a machete.

“Gosh darn,” his father told me later, “I thought it was a good idea for George to go to St. Lucia and help those farmers get ahead, but now he comes home and wants to set me back 200 years.”

Sometimes I think technology developed in a first-world country like the United States and taken to Africa would, in fact, set the people who were to use it back at least a bunch of years, if not quite 200.

The question comes up often today, in light of the literally thousands of highly creative, motivated persons from many nations who are doing an astounding amount of work in the area of appropriate technology.

I define the activity of “appropriate technology” as designing a tool to be used in surroundings and for a lifestyle completely different from that of the designers’ everyday environment. In other words, designing a tool appropriate to the lifestyle in which it will be used. Indeed, the tool is for use in surroundings completely different from anything the designers may have ever experienced. As is the case when American engineers and scientists develop products for use in rural Africa and for populations in developing countries.


Appropriate to the People - Youssouf Traoré, a Peace Corps volunteer, demonstrates a nut sheller

Youssouf Traoré, a Peace Corps volunteer, demonstrates a nut sheller
in the village of Niagadina, Mali. A small fee for shelling peanuts will
support additional projects.

Appropriate technology is today a worldwide home for professional engineers who want to put their knowledge and background to use helping others. Appropriate technology, if you will, is a form of socially redeeming problem solving.

Done right, appropriate technology pays special attention to the variables that affect the users, such as their gender and state of health, the power sources available to them, and fabrication materials they’re familiar with.

Tweak or Shift

Overall, most engineers follow two basic strategies when it comes to “doing” appropriate technology. They either tweak an existing technology to make it better for the user in one or more respects, such as making it more durable, more reliable, more efficient, or more effective. Or, they’ll shift the technology in some fundamental way.

To tweak existing technology might be to take the Corona or Porkert food grinders, used by hundreds of thousands of the world’s poor, and check for their weak points. The cast iron hand grinders, made by Corona of Colombia and Porkert of the Czech Republic, are what might come to mind when you are asked to envision the meat grinder your grandmother or great-grandmother might have used. These units, still in wide use, are general-purpose workhorses. They use steel cutters to grind grains, as well as legumes, coffee beans, nuts, and sesame or sunflower seeds, and also to mince dried fruits and vegetables.

To tweak the grinders for better use, an engineer might ask: Do the burrs wear out quickly? Does one part seem to break too often? Is a part prone to being lost? Tweaking these weaknesses might make the grinders more durable, stronger, better secured, but without the need for significant design changes.

A shift, on the other hand, might be simply to push, rather than to pull a tool; to use one’s legs rather than one’s arms to power a tool; to rotate a shaft around a vertical axis rather than a horizontal axis to operate a tool.


Appropriate to the People - The Universal Nut ShellerThe Universal Nut Sheller from The Full Belly Project features only one moving part and can be used to shell 125 pounds of peanuts per hour, up from 25 manually.

Take the example of the foot-powered treadle water pump. Invented in the 1970s by Gunnar Barnes, a Norwegian engineer, for use in Bangladesh, the pump is now widely used in arid regions of Africa. The pump is composed of two metal cylinders with pistons that are operated by walking, or treadling, on two treadles the way one would operate a pump organ or, in modern-day terms, a stair-stepping machine at the gym.

Previous to the treadle water pump, many rural people used tools that called upon the arms, rather than the legs, to pump water from the ground. But humans find it easier to treadle—as in the pump organ example—rather than pump a handle up and down with their arms. They tire less easily when using the larger, leg muscles. So the move to the natural walking motion was a major shift for the water pump.

Designers at the San Francisco nonprofit KickStart Inc. tweaked the treadle pump by changing its design from a suction-only pump to a suction and pressure pump, greatly expanding its impact on small farmers.
Or is the KickStart addition of pressure yet another shift?

Regardless, the great advance gained from the KickStart treadle pump is that it sucks water out of the ground and pushes it up a small hill. Further, it increases the area that can be irrigated from 0.2 to 2.0 acres—amazing!

Small Shift

The problem is that shifting appropriate technology is particularly difficult to do well. It’s hard to keep the end user in mind, when the designer comes from an entirely different viewpoint, an entirely different environment.

The challenge for those shifting appropriate technology is to answer the question: “What is the best next technological step given the current technological state at the place the technology will be used?” Does the location have electricity? Do residents commonly use draft animals, or call only on themselves to power simple tools?

There are three important criteria for a potential technology to be accepted and used by those for whom it’s designed:

First, it must be a natural next step to the people who will use it. That is, it must fit rather seamlessly into their current system of doing the larger process.

Second, this next-step technology must yield a large increase in output from the existing process, such as a significant reduction in the food-particle size, when a food is ground with the next-step technology.

And third, it must mirror the steps previously moved through in already developed countries. So a next step in African food crop processing must be analogous to the step that was taken in, say, Europe or North America, when farmers there were using the same technology as Africans currently use. So African farmers will need to pass through the same stages of technologies as farmers did in Europe, North America, and parts of Asia, but of course, at a much more rapid rate. Steps cannot normally be skipped.

In my short time doing appropriate technology, I’ve seen elegant systems that weren’t adopted because they didn’t move the intended users sufficiently far forward in terms of output per unit input. Why should the intended users bother?

So what is sufficiently far?  A good goal is at least one order of magnitude increase, a small jump in the technology the users currently employ. Too much of a jump and introducing the upgraded system in a developing area might be the equivalent of a group of alien scientists and engineers landing on U.S. soil and asking their Earthling counterparts to adopt the telescope they’ve developed, which far outstrips our Hubble’s capacity.

Our scientists and engineers wouldn’t have been aware of any of the middle steps in the evolution from the Hubble to the alien scope. They wouldn’t be able to operate the alien telescope and—no matter how nicely asked by the alien engineers, no matter how many times they were assured that this telescope would allow them to see further into the universe than ever before—they’d likely abandon the project. Not to mention that, should the new telescope break after the alien engineers return home, no one would have the tools or the know-how to fix it.

Great Gains

To better get the idea of the one-order-of-magnitude increase and the effect doing appropriate technology can have, take the following examples.

The Universal Nut Sheller, allows a person to shell 125 pounds of peanuts per hour, up from the traditional 25 pounds that can be done by hand, said Jock Brandis, founder and research and development director of The Full Belly Project of Wilmington, N.C., which designed the sheller (www.thefullbellyproject.org). The nonprofit project works to allow manufacture of tools, including the Universal Nut Sheller, where they will be used.

The jump in peanut-shelling production represents an order of magnitude increase appropriate for the user.

The nut sheller features only one moving part for easy manufacture and use. It comprises a concrete, solid cone within another cone that’s open at the top and bottom. The cones allow for the process of shelling, which works by centrifugal force and friction. The interior cone, with its attached handle, acts as a rotor and rotates on a shaft. The user turns the handle around fast enough to spin the nuts to the outside through centrifugal force, Brandis said.

The nuts fall between the surfaces and are rolled and squeezed, allowing the nuts and shells to fall through to the bottom. This mix of nuts and shells is then winnowed out. The sheller is adjustable and can shell coffee berries, shea nuts, and jatropha seeds.

Appropriate to the People - The Omega food grinder

Compatible Technology International introduced its Omega food
grinder into Zimbabwe in the 1990s. Grinder use has grown since then.

Likewise, in the 1990s Compatible Technology International, a St. Paul, Minn., nonprofit that develops technologies for use in developing countries, introduced its manually powered 4.5-inch diameter Omega steel burr mill into Zimbabwe for grinding roasted peanuts into peanut paste. The paste is used daily in many African households. 

At the time, most local groups used the time-consuming mortar-and-pestle method for crushing the nuts, and followed that up with manually rubbing the nut meat between a smooth glass bottle and a stone to produce a fine, thin paste.

Working with the University of Zimbabwe’s Development Technology Center, CTI volunteers gauged the Omega burr mill to increase paste output in rural women’s cooperatives about one order of magnitude, moving from linear to rotary motion.

The very early history of post harvest food processing in many nations includes a period when mortar and pestle type linear motion was important. This period was replaced early in North America by rotary motion from mill dams, followed by rotary motion from steam engines, internal combustion engines, and most recently by electric motors.

Shifting from linear and reciprocating motion to motion that rotates a hardened steel burr against a fixed burr was very effective at increasing peanut paste output. Rural Zimbabwe’s peanut butter groups that adopted the manual Omega increased the amount of peanuts processed each day from four kilograms via traditional methods to around 50 kilograms of peanuts per day with the manually operated burr mill. 

The mills’ early adopters made significant profits, because the price of paste made the old way was very high. Profits declined as more grinders were introduced, but citizens ate better because peanut paste was less expensive, hence more could afford it.

To ensure replacement parts would always be locally available, CTI provided Development Technology Center a pattern for casting the Omega housing and a special apparatus to form the auger helixes. Former CTI volunteer Mark Kooiker, a machine-shop operator, worked with a Zimbabwe foundry and machine shop and with fabricators to develop precise production techniques. CTI began working in Zimbabwe in 1995 with the Omega II.  In just three years CTI went through the II, III, IV, and V versions of Omega grinders to the VI, which has been distributed for over 10 years now. Grinders and parts distributed in Zimbabwe are locally made.

Following Up

But the grinding technology wasn’t embraced without tweaking. Women agriculture workers in Africa are known to be strong, so grinding roasted peanuts to a creamy consistency in a single pass through the Omega grinder was technically feasible. But it was over-taxing physically for the women. Follow-up ergonomic studies by the Development Technology Center at the university, showed that heart rates in women hand cranking roasted peanuts with the manual grinder exceeded accepted international standards set by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, according to a report by the Technology Center. Further, the switch from linear motion to rotary motion caused significant increases in lower back, chest, and upper arm pain among workers, according to the report.

So tweaks had to be made to produce creamy peanut paste in a single pass, yet maintain the cranker’s heart rate and muscle exertion within acceptable limits. CTI and technology center engineers and scientists reduced the feed rate by developing a metering device mounted inside the hopper.

Another Axis 

A different option to overcome cranking difficulty would have been to shift from a horizontal axis to a vertical axis grinder akin to many of the original wind power grist mills in Europe and many modern burr mills.

In fact, several appropriate technology post-harvest food-processing devices feature vertical axes. These include the breadfruit shredder developed by engineers and engineering students at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, the peanut sheller from the Full Belly Project, and the maize crusher from the Agriculture Research Council of South Africa (www.arc.agric.za).


Appropriate to the People - The treadle foot pump

The treadle foot pump was invented and further refined by designers
at KickStart Inc. of San Francisco, because humans can more easily
pump by foot rather than by hand.

Vertical axis machines enable several persons to crank at the same time using design principles from radial engines. Each person replaces a piston, though the person pushes and also pulls his or her own rod—whether a master or an articulating rod—to help in the job of generating torque to accomplish the needed work.

Post harvest food processing in rural Africa seems still dominated by vertical linear motion—pounding a wooden pestle into a wooden mortar, while most of the world has moved on to rotary motion. It would appear, given the relative abundance and collaborative mindset in African village food preparation, one appropriate technology route forward might be to put greater emphasis on small, vertical axis rotary motion machines.

These machines would employ radial engine principles, wherein several pistons are replaced by three to five people engaged in coordinated linear motion—pushing and pulling—but in a horizontal plane. Master and articulating rods for these radial “engines” could, perhaps, be fabricated locally from the wooden pestles they replace.

There are many ways forward with appropriate technology, just as there are many communities of people, many countries, many environments, many needs. The challenge is to keep design criteria in mind when designing for the users. And to always ensure technology designed will be appropriate for their use.


Rolfe Leary lives in St. Paul, Minn., where he spent 35 years working for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service Research making mathematical models of forest dynamics.  He served in the U.S. Peace Corps in St. Lucia from 1961 to 1963 and has been a volunteer at Compatible Technology International, St. Paul, since 1992. He currently is teaching a course in research methods to Ph.D. students at the Faculty of Bioscience Engineering at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and University of Gent in Leuven, Belgium.

Grain International Dawanau market


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Encouraging inventiveness

A few months ago, I wrote this piece of response to Boston Review. It distils many things, we strive to D - lab, HII and the largest community MIT: development of invention a set of tools that can be integrated into our community partners. For those of you who have asked for links, here's an excerpt and the full piece after the jump.

Michael Kremer and Rachel Glennerster noted that health and education interventions must complete more complex machines: human behaviour. They are right. And their argument can go a step further. Engaging local stakeholders in the design of policies and solutions can stimulate the innovative behaviour of the people which we evaluate the well-being.

Then D - Lab of MIT, we believe that the users in the developing world have the potential to be the daily inventors of their own solutions. A Nicaraguan hospital, a nurse could quietly create neonatal UV protective layers of surgical gauze. At the corner of the operating room, surgeons are trading sutures valve line and drainage for cut - up soda bottles that work as well for fishing. These inventive behaviors are often hidden. The drawings are remaches, geuzas, improvisation, hacks. Not exactly the stuff of professional associations. It is only because they are not the last bit of formal engineering which reveals the brilliant solutions that they are in fact.
Traditionally, technology designers who focus on the developing world are trying to create affordable solutions can be adapted to the local environment. They could develop effective water pumps that run on the power of the pedal, phones with longer strings and more intelligent features and syringes which are safer and more accessible, with retractable needles that automatically turn off. Our approach is to encourage the co-creation in the design process: we want to empower locals to invent, then they can be contributors, not just clients. In our fieldwork we teach students to seek imaginative behaviour, and many of our interventions have originated with users. Cultivate the inventiveness and the tools of the invention of the poor, it is our priority.

Biotech without borders

HI all, I don't know what you all are up to a Friday night. But I am watching Twitter, reflection on OpenPCR and lo and behold, speak of the Open Science Conference (OSCON) Eri flew by. It's great, and I recommend you check it out, and OpenPCR made a live appearance. Video below!



Join Eri Gentry, BioCurious founder, first "hackerspace in the world for biology" on a journey of biology of garage at the laboratory of the community.


For the first time, serious biological research can be done at home. The decreasing costs of biotech material came a growing community of amateur biologists. The most common name for this group is "DIYbio" (DIY Biology), a 2,000 more than group of scientists, students, engineers, artists and the entpreneurs, whose area of interest to learn how genetic testing works to completely revise the ivory tower which is scientific research.


Full description in the OSCON.com


Also, Paul + the Hackerspace in Melbourne in Australia friends are assembling kits OpenPCR 1 or 2 that you read this. Paul mentions a UStream / Google + discussion, so stay tuned! See Twitter (http://twitter.com/#!/search/openpcr) and discuss on the OpenPCR Google Group.


 



Cairo roof gardens


Photographed by Valentina Cattane.

On the roof of Labib Privy in Mohandessin is used in a location pilot for one of the first permaculture Cairo - autonomous systems in the environment.

By Steven Viney
Valentina Cattane
Al-Masry Al-Youm
04/07/2011

Excerpt:

In Cairo, urban farming grows in popularity as more people are trying to adopt more environmentally friendly approaches to the environment and encourage decentralization of the confidence of the community on the agriculture of companies.

Many academics and supporters are champion methodologies by organizing workshops in which participants can learn how to set up small urban gardens and make use of their personal spaces - roofs, balconies and gardens.

One of the greatest difficulties, however, is the lack of facilities for the supporters and practitioners to communicate with each other, on a continuous basis.

In an attempt to fill this gap, the site Web of the food sovereignty project recently was launched to provide a platform where users can blog about their experiences and to meet other people involved in urban agriculture in the community.

Read the full article here.

The post-industrial era: 7 platforms for Collaborative creation

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29 JUNE, 2011 by Kirstin Butler Reining in the maker movement, or what 3-D printed bikinis have to do with adjustable-height dog dishes.

In general, we espouse a less-is-more model for living here at Brain Pickings. And while collaborative consumption is making it ever-easier to own less, collaborative creation is enabling us to make what we do own more meaningful, thanks to a host of platforms and services that transform the things of our imagination into 3-D reality. Here are seven companies and initiatives shaping a new movement of makers.

The granddaddy of this latest generation of DIY makers,Thingiverse is the Brooklyn-based brainchild of Zach Smith and Bre Pettis, whose awesome Done Manifesto we featured on Brain Pickings a few months back. Founded in 2008, Thingiverse is a platform for artists, designers, and engineers to share digital design files via Creative Commons or General Public Use licenses. Its companion site, Makerbot Industries, sells machinery (including the fantastically carnivalesque Thing-O-Matic) and hardware necessary to manufacture the goods themselves.

Thingiverse got The Colbert Report treatment earlier this month, but gave back just as as good: Pettis oversaw the real-time creation of a bust of Stephen Colbert himself.

Since 2009, Quirky has sought to bridge the gap between inventors and their inventions using a crowdsourcing model. Each week, Quirky’s community votes on the hundreds of submitted ideas to narrow them down to 10, two of which are then selected by an internal team of designers, engineers, researchers, and marketers. Anyone can consult on details throughout the development process, such as color, fabrication, and logo design; contributing to ideas makes users “Influencers” in Quirky parlance, who eventually earn a percentage of the finished products’ eventual revenue.

Imagine a day not too far a way when you’re riding in a subway, taking a bus ride, or walking in the park. Out of the corner of your eye you see something familiar. You see something beautiful. You see something that didn’t exist a few short months ago. Something that you helped create.

After confirming a predetermined number of orders, products go to market for sale in the Quirky shop as well as selected retail partners. With a focus on functionality and clean design, Quirky currently offers 150 items with more inventions to come.

Like hard candy for hackers, Adafruit provides electronics kits and parts for original, open-source projects. Its M-O is DIY, that is, empowering users to create everything from bots to wearables and anything in between that they might imagine. At Adafruit‘s site your inner geek will be in heaven, surrounded by circuit boards, sensors, and wires.

All of Adafruit‘s parts and plans are available via Creative Commons license (all that is, except the ingredients and recipes for a blinking LED Christmas tree). For the latest hack-it-yourself project, check out the unbelievably cool, programmable iCufflinks, below:

Shapeways is your go-to guide for 3-D creation. As opposed to using laser-cutting techniques, 3-D printing is an additive process that builds items up by accumulating layers. The Shapeways platform offers three ways to bring models to market: users can upload their own digital designs for one-time production or to sell to others; or for the non-CAD savvy among us, the platform will pair would-be makers with designers to realize their vision.

With 850-plus items currently for sale online, Shapeways biggest splash this season is the N12 printable bikini–the maker movement’s never looked so hot.

Through intuitive and playful design, littleBits takes engineering, usually reserved for experts, and puts it into the hands of artists, designers, makers, and anyone with curiosity about how things work. littleBits, the brainchild of MIT Media Lab alumna Ayah Bdeir, produces libraries of preassembled electronic circuits that can be snapped together to create tiny circuit boards. Held together via magnets, the discrete electronic parts are color-coded, making assembly a bit like playing with LEGOs — if LEGOs could light up, play music, and sense solar power.

Although its designs are all available via Creative Commons, you can also preorder littleBits starter kits for $99. Production is currently being completed in small batches, with the first prototypes shipped earlier this spring.

Branding itself as “the world’s easiest making system,” Ponoko launched in late 2007. An online platform for bespoke design, Ponoko hosts tens of thousands of user-generated designs, customizable for on-demand production. In addition to M-I-Y (make-it-yourself) templates that guide you through the design process, the site also lets creators bid on bringing ideas to market.

Another platform for 3-D product printing, CloudFab lets professional creators make prototypes — from one to thousands — of goods using a distributed network of fabricators. The two-year-old company matches designers with digital manufacturers, trading on the idea of excess market capacity. From “Day 2 Night Convertible Heels” to an exoskeleton for DARPA, CloudFab lets product designers test the tangibility of their creations, no matter how unique.

While a 3-D printer in every pocket may still be a few years away, practical alternatives to mass production are finally a reality, offering hope for a new frontier of changing our relationship with conspicuous consumption through conspicuous creation.

Kirstin Butler is writing an adaptation of Gogol for the Google era called Dead SULs, but when not working spends far, far too much time on Twitter. She currently lives in Cambridge, MA.

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