Sarah Lacy

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

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