Internet Bus Project
On Feb 3rd, Google launched the "Internet Bus Project". Simply put, this is a campaign
to take the internet - quite literally on wheels - right to people in the
smaller cities in India who are still not participating in what is now part and
parcel of our lives in urban centers. The campaign has been launched in Tamil
Nadu where the Bus will visit 15 towns in the next 45 days.
An interesting, and noble, aspect about this initiative is that the focus is
the Internet and not Google, per se, as is evidenced by the videos that have
been uploaded to the Internet Bus Google page as well as the internet
bus channel on YouTube (and are shown to visitors on the Bus as well). The
video on "Internet for Communication" for example, shows facebook and
Yahoo IM as means of social networking and communicating in the same breath as
Orkut and Google Talk. Similarly, several sites and online services that work
well to make day-to-day life easier for Indians - from online news (in Indian
languages in addition to English) to cricket to matrimony to jobs to railways
to e-gov - and are showcased in the videos, have nothing to do with Google.
Another worthwhile aspect being highlighted by the Internet Bus is the
Indian-language Internet. Communication via the internet, as well as creation
and consumption of content in Indian languages, such as Tamil, Hindi, and several
others, is possible, but not a well-known feature among certain demographics in
India, who perhaps view the internet as a service and convenience that can be
enjoyed only in the English language. The internet is being presented to the
Bus visitors in 4 themes - Internet for --
- Information
- Communication
- Education
- Entertainment
Also showcased are the tools and
services for accessing the Internet for information via mobile devices,.
With access becoming cheaper by the
day, and more and more Indic content as well as Indic language tools being made
available to Indians (by Google and others), it just does not make sense for
the large percentage of Indians in smaller towns to not avail themselves of the
affordances of the internet, and to remain marginalized from the global
revolution that is the internet.
Go Google! Go Internet Bus! Go
India!
|