| Subject: Wrestling The Crocodile: IT
Development in East Timor
From ittimor list "Lev Lafayette" <lev_lafayette@yahoo.com.au>
Presented at VUT's Cooperating With Timor Leste conference
Wrestling The Crocodile: IT Development in East Timor
For the purpose of elaboration "wrestling the crocodile" (or
alligator for the North Americans) is an IT community term for engaging in
a particularly complex IT related issue that challenges the technician
with the strength, speed and diversity of problems. For the obvious
reasons relating to Timorese mythology it serves as a highly appropriate
double metaphor for dealing with the issue of effective IT development
assistance from economically and industrially advanced nations to a nation
like Timor Leste. The reasons for this complexity starts of with problems
relating to basic social and physical infrastructure, extrapolates to
include matters of maintenance and training, and is finally confronted
with what should be the first issue considered; utility.
Consider if you will, a well-meaning Australian who, having recently
spent a lazy few thousand dollars upgrading their personal computer to
what constitutes the "latest and greatest" for a consumer
commodity spares a thought for the plight of the East Timorese, our dear
close neighbour, who are living in such impoverished conditions. They get
in their mind that perhaps one of the things that a Timorese family could
really do with to improve their lives is an old computer. So they wonder
down to their local friendship city association and the goods get bundled
up for the next lot of "gifts" and eventually find their way to
a school or community centre or even an extended family in a distant
district.
Is it possible to imagine of a worse possible application of scare
resources? A desktop computer is not a light system; it costs a
significant amount of money to transport such a thing from Australia or
New Zealand to East Timor. In transit components will be rattled and
possibly damaged. Once reaching East Timor, even in the relatively
technologically advanced capital, finding replacement components is almost
impossible. Assuming for a moment that it does arrive undamaged, gets
through the notorious harbour-side customs, it then has to travel the many
miles along the winding mountain roads to reach, say, Same. Assuming that
journey is also successfully and the system is actually allocated as
planned then there's the problem of how it is going to be used.
Electricity in the regional capitals is sporadic at best and each and
every sudden loss of supply adds additional stress to the components and
the possibility of disk head crashes. Dust and humidity will play an
extraordinary damaging role, let along the propensity for mosquitoes and
spiders to decide that the computer is a fine place to live. The operating
system - and it would probably be MS-Windows 98 - is already obsolete and
of course, is in English, as are the manuals, if they are provided at all.
There is of course, no Internet or networking to speak of and the machine
is used for a few games of solitaire before something breaks and it is
thrown out, becoming a testament to inappropriate, if well-meaning,
technological gifts.
The issue here is a complete lack of consideration of the utility of
computer technologies to the East Timorese context. So rather than
engaging in haphazard donations with the hope that somehow the utility
will be obvious and the necessary social and physical infrastructure will
arise automatically with the provision of computer systems it is
absolutely imperative that a significant degree of project planning occur
prior to the provision of what is effectively an end-user tool. In project
planning boldness of scope and long term objectives are not negatives as
long as there is sufficient attention to detail and utility. Thus, in the
first instance, consideration is necessary to determine what usefulness a
computer has and how this is applicable to the people of Timor Leste.
Additional care must be made from the outset of course to ensure that
what doesn't engage in well-meaning racism where the "simple"
lives of the East Timorese and their low level of economic development and
infrastructure is interpreted to mean that computers don't have any
utility in an East Timorese context at all. It is difficult to imagine a
strategy that would permanently impoverish the people of East Timor than
the suggestion that they do not need information technologies. If the
changes in telecommunications and information technology over the past ten
to fifteen years are impressive enough, rest assured, "you ain't seen
nothing yet". The simple fact of the matter is that, with sufficient
infrastructure, equipment and training, the people of East Timor would use
information technologies for the exactly the same reasons that they are
used in advanced economies. The primary uses are;
a) Computers as communication devices. Primary use to communicate
asynchronous recordable data between points. The benefits that this could
provide to medical, educational, policing and commercial activities are
self evident.
b) Computers as organisational management tools. National database
development for medical, educational and policing needs. Production of
minutes, agendas, plans of action, memos, spreadsheets, databases and
storage thereof etc.
c) Computers as computing tools. Programming, planning, modelling and
systems organisational tools.
There are of course very real limitations to achieving these ends in
the context of Timor-Leste.
a) Lack of physical network infrastructure, sporadic electricity
supply. Lack of maintenance technologies.
b) Lack of social capital, poor organisational development, educated
users, and maintenance crew.
Dealing with these limitations in turn, the recommended solution for a
geographical and infrastructure environment such as Timor Leste is
widespread wireless networking. One may refer to this as a recommended
cost-effective solution for developing countries by Kofi Annan in June
2003. Certainly the "lay of the land" in Timor Leste is
conducive to such a technology. The distance between Ainaro and Same is
60km by road. But the real distance is only 16km. The longest distance
between district capitals (excluding Oecusse) is Baucau to Lospalos is
60km. Even so, it is well within fiscal possibility to use subdistricts
instead. Certainly the option of a variety of wireless networking
solutions (point-to-point, point-to-multipoint, cloud) has been the
recommendation all IT professional who have studied Timor Leste's
infrastructure. By way of comparison Mauritius has recently taken the
opportunity to make almost their entire mountainous island accessible to
wireless networking.
These recommendations were, and are, aptly helped by the existence of
usable telecommunications assets, including no less than 23 towers
throughout the country as part of a total of $20m USD worth of IT assets
"left behind". Under such circumstances, it is difficult and
indeed, demonstrably foolish, to look past microwave technologies for
national networking in Timor Leste. The climatic conditions make frequency
diversity a necessity, with competing claims for low band (fewer towers,
taller) and high band (more towers, smaller), also accounting although
there is a necessary bias arising from the pre-existing towers. Expert
considerations accounting for all these factors suggested that 6-7 GHz
band is the most suitable with prospective tenders requiring the ability
to implement a Synchronous Digital Hierarchy network with self healing
architecture. Such a network can carry fixed voice, mobile, TV and radio
For electrical supplies recent developments do indicate the viability
of solar power for "village level" computer technology, to the
point that the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh in late 2004 started using
solar powered computer systems for educational needs in remote villages.
The Uttar Pradesh Education for All Project Board bought some 1,000
computers for all 70 districts in the state, however, lacking a stable
electricity supply schools have purchased solar panels (costing
approximately $2,500 AUD each) which provide sufficient electricity to
power the computers in each school. Even Dorset in England, not exactly
known for its sunlight, also started using solar technology last year for
almost fifty computers at Medina High School where over a thousand
students study. Simply put, distributed, independent and renewable energy
sources are a realistic and effective investment for electricity supply in
communities where centralised power with ongoing costs is simply not
viable.
In many ways, the lack of social capital, the low level of
organisational development, and the lack of educated users and maintenance
crew can be more difficult that the lack of physical infrastructure. Even
under these circumstances, the government of Timor Leste is to be
applauded for its initial emphasis on raising the literacy rate and
general level of education. For obvious reasons, raising these standards
must occur prior to increasing computer and technical literacy. Unlike
many who perceive Timor Leste's linguistic diversity as problematic and
question the wisdom in choosing a relatively obscure language such as
Portuguese as a national language, in the long run such choices can be
turned into a positive. Whilst short term international trade advantages
will clearly arise through ability in English, Mandarin and Bahasa the
romance languages should not be discounted. The future possibility of a
highly literate, multilingual Timor Leste that acts as a regional
translation centre (perhaps even challenging Singapore in this role) is
far from improbable.
Assuming a useful degree of general literacy, computer literacy and
technical training is required. In Timor Leste's case, this is
significantly different to the mainstream sort of computer education
received in advanced industrial nations. In such circumstances, with
stable infrastructure, ready supply of replacement components and so
forth, many computer training packages are more strongly orientated
towards routine administrative tasks using specialised applications. This
is quite inappropriate for Timor Leste's conditions, indeed, such teaching
as common as it may be in economically advanced nations, would be a
terrible waste of resources. In relative terms, much stronger emphasis
must be placed on hardware, networking, and operating systems knowledge
rather than applications and programming. This is simply a result of the
conditional circumstances. If and when, Timor Leste's social and physical
infrastructure develops, the relative weight can be altered.
An interesting side effect of these circumstances however is the
opportunity for Timor Leste to make substantial contributions to software
development and open source software applications and programming
development in particular, both for general use for all regions in similar
conditions to Timor Leste and for the particular conditions and
organisational requirements for Timor Leste itself. After all, in an
environment of relative impoverishment it simply doesn't make sense to
utilise the more expensive proprietary solutions (even if software piracy
is rampant throughout the country). As a very modest contribution to this
myself, Peter Gossner and Kevin Scannel have added a list of words for
Tetum spell-checking for the OpenOffice application suite.
In summary, effective IT cooperation with Timor Leste requires both
bold vision and a realistic assessment of needs. Only the most mentally
truncated or sadistic would propose a telecommunications future for Timor
Leste where the neglect of European colonialism is repeated. However
equally as dangerous are impractical assistance in skills and equipment
which are inappropriate to the current or future needs of Timor Leste no
matter how well intentioned. Whilst this presentation serves only as a
general overview of opportunities and directions that could assist Timor
Leste the specific recommendations are worthy of more thorough
investigation. To return to the metaphorical title, it must be recognised,
that unlike other "crocodiles" in IT, the crocodile of Timor
Leste, although extremely challenging can be, if treated properly, a
friend for life.
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