Yes, There is Technology in Rwanda


Rolling out the future of Rwanda

I always love conversations with Silicon Valley types who never leave the Bay Area Bubble. When I say that Inveneo is working to bring technology to Africa, I often get a funny look with a quizzical "Technology, in Africa? " as the usual response. I've educated a few on the opportunities that exist in lighting up the "Dark Continent", but its a slow process.

So I would like to thank Sarah Lacy for doing the same to a larger audience Silicon Valley denizens than I ever could, through her How to Cross the Digital Divide, Rwanda-Style post on TechCrunch. While she does get a touch hyperbole in her fawning over Rwanda's fiber-optic investments, I give her credit for showing the Valley there is higher-end technology plays that recycled computer donations.

She details five major investments in technology that should shock VC's into taking a look at African ICT:

  1. Investment in mobility - mobile phone ownership & usage is ubiquitous
  2. Investment in connectivity - each district of the country will be connected by fiber
  3. Investment in access - all thirty districts of the country have low-cost Internet centers
  4. Investment in education - Rwanda bought 100,00 XO laptops and hosts OLPC's Education Center
  5. Investment in skills - Rwanda sends 300 students at a time to India Institute of Technology for training

Each of these investments alone would be enough to jolt a country into the 21st Century, but combined, and accelerated by cheaper and better bandwidth, will give Rwanda a great leap forward.

Its a process of national renewal and branding that President Paul Kagame of Rwanda is pushing in multiple phases across the country, as Fast Company captured in Rwanda Rising: A New Model of Economic Development.

Let's just hope that Sand Hill Road takes notice.

Wayan Vota's picture

Wayan Vota

Inveneo

Wayan Vota is a technology expert focused on appropriate information and communication technologies (ICT) for rural and underserved areas of the developing world. He is a Senior Director at Inveneo and is the editor of ICTworks

Comments

Its good to see this press

I'm glad that Rwanda is in the news for their investment in technology, but I am growing tired of the constant immediate references to the genocide. Its been a decade now, can we mention it in passing, instead of making it a focus of every story?

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.