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The Rise of Chi-T: Chinese IT and the Developing World

Many people already know China represents the largest Internet and mobile user base in the world: CNNIC put usage at just under 340 million midyear last year. Likewise, Chinese mobile penetration is at 54% and climbing. Both trends have fueled a voracious appetite for access devices—PCs, mobile handsets, laptops and now new lighter classes of devices, such has netbooks and early forms of MID/media players. Western device makers have historically been a major beneficiary of this growth, though homegrown OEMs such as Lenovo and Haier have become global names in the electronics business over the past decade. Meanwhile, China's low-cost labor and a growing base of bright engineers and designers have fueled the country's attractiveness as a manufacturing center for the world's gadget fetishes.

This is changing, and Chinese IT is poised to make the leap into a strong position of influence in the next decade, driven by several important factors: the aforementioned growing demand base at home and acquired expertise among its dozens of major contract manufacturers, and a desire to exercise its know-how on the global stage. While the West remains focused on its own known brands—Intel, Nokia, Microsoft, Sony, LG, Samsung to name a few, Chinese contract manufacturers such as PC makers Founder, Tongfang and Great Wall are producing own-brand product for the domestic Chinese market, including the latest 3G netbooks, e-readers and other portable devices to meet the growing demand. And some are poised to follow other Chinese IT leaders like Lenovo, Haier, Huawei and ZTE into international waters with a wave of new, cheaper devices.

The great leap doesn't stop at hardware, but reaches into operating systems and processors to run these devices. A few weeks ago Wired covered the emergence of what it called the People's Processor, a government funded push to develop an alternative, "open" processor called the Longsoon chip, which has already found its way into a number of Chinese notebooks in recent years, and forms the cornerstone of a push toward domestically created open computing that frees Chinese developers and consumers from having to rely on high-price Western software, namely Microsoft Windows and other software dependent on x86 architecture. 

The implications of this rise of "Chi-T," or IT formulated and brewed in mainland China, are potentially far reaching. Like Brazil's push into open source in the last decade (also partially a move to enable the people to attain technology with fewer licenses, and costs, attached), China's drive to create a multipolar IT world won't stop at its own borders. As it has done with automotive, energy, and other important sectors, China is looking to fill the gaps left by Western companies in the developing world, and sees an opportunity to be the provider of IT to these areas. The head of the Longsoon project himself recognizes this potential: 

Compared to Intel and IBM, we are still in the cradle,” concedes Weiwu Hu, chief architect of the Loongson. But he also notes that China’s enormous domestic demand isn’t the only potential market for his CPU. “I think many other poor countries, such as those in Africa, need low-cost solutions,” he says. Cheap Chinese processors could corner emerging markets in the developing world (and be a perk for the nation’s allies and trade partners).

This parallel IT world will be much more driven in its definition not by Western-style early adopters, but by the wants, needs and behaviors of a much greater proportion of what we might refer to as traditional late adopters—rural, less educated, lower income users, with functionality, applications and design dictated more strongly by these groups from the beginning. China-grown technology will be a central part of the fabric of the BoPNet, just as Chinese and Indian vehicles make up more and more of the wheels on the road in the BoP. 

And, as open source technology gains further in the West with the rapid rise of new operating systems and new classes of devices that platforms like Windows can't evolve fast enough to keep up with, not just components but processors, software and applications of Chinese origin (and Brazilian and Indian) will become more prominent as companies seek to innovate freely, quickly and flexibly in the West, and take advantage of all of the building blocks that are available globally, not just from Redmond, Mountain View, Seoul or Espoo.

Filed under  //   China   Founder   Google   Great Wall   Haier   Huawei   innovation   Intel   Internet   Lenovo   LG   Longsoon   Microsoft   mobile   Nokia   Samsung   Sony   Tongfang   ZTE  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Understanding Wayfinding in India

Photo by Anil Jadhav

Google announced on its official blog today an interesting revamp of the textual directions given by Google Maps India. Until now, GMaps has delivered dry, technical, and for some people, unhelpful turn-by-turn directions, simply instructing the travel to turn right or left after a certain distance, and/or at a certain road. This is okay if you are a surveyor armed with technical equipment, or have named roads to go by.

However, Google UX designers took a closer look at the needs and operating environment of Indian users and realized they were dealing with many situations where formal road names weren't available, or where users may have literacy issues or very different wayfinding habits. Landmarks, they discovered, play a critical role in orienting the traveler, and may be a more recognizable marker that indicates a turning point or correct progress--a gas pump , a seed store, a kiosk all may be better known markers of direction and distance than a formal road name (which may not be locally recognized) or distance traveled. The result is that Google has made these subtle but important changes to their text directions. It may also present a future opportunity to build a better database of locally important businesses and information nodes as it complies these marker points. 

This change echoes research carried out by others around mobile and other computing or communications interfaces in markets where different modes of social communication--and levels of literacy--exist. It will be interesting to see if and how Google applies these learnings in analogous environments, and if it is applied at all in more advanced markets. 

Filed under  //   Google   India   literacy   location   maps  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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Street View Coming to Africa

http://www.flickr.com/photos/byrion/ / CC BY 2.0

The Guardian today reports that Google plans to bring its Street View technology to South Africa in order to provide street-level views of locations to accompany its ubiquitous Maps. While some may be pleased that Africa is now able to share in a service and technology available in developed countries, local authorities are not as pleased, saying the availability of the images will make it easier for criminal interests to plan robberies without having to leave their hideouts.

Crime and technology and intertwined, and have been as long as their has been a crowbar available to pry open a door, or wheels to make a getaway. This dynamic is not African but global. It will be a shame if concerns about potential misuse of the data that could occur anywhere stands in the way of its deployment.

The positive benefits, on the other hand, far outweigh the negatives. First in South Africa, then potentially across the continent, Google's images will help boost the utility of the BOPNet in this area (see upcoming posts for more on this). Plans reportedly call for using more rugged vehicles to capture hard to reach areas. Mobile and Web users with access to Google Maps will be able to leverage important location and wayfinding data that may save them a much higher cost of having bad information. who knows? It may even encourage development in areas that can be scouted from a distance. This situation will bear watching. 

Filed under  //   Africa   BOPNet   crime   Google   location   South Africa   Street View  
Posted by Scott Smith 

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