h a l f b a k e r yOutside the bag the box came in.
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Hmmm. This is an interesting idea. Maybe the device would continuously broadcast the data so that people throughout the country side could pick up their stuff everytime the train went by. Maybe a satellite antennae on the train could allow the broadcast device to be updated frequently. |
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Where is this rural population that doesn't have phone lines? Some aborigine tribe or something? They might be short on bluetooth laptops, can you do a portal function if they carve their message on a yam maybe? |
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I've helped a little trying to get email service to a Central American rural coffee-growing town - the school would benefit from it, the medical clinic probably would, the coffee-growers would be very pleased to negotiate their own prices instead of paying middlemen, and there's clearly a tourist opportunity. Five minutes after we got the link up, a German backpacker poked her head in and said "I hear you have email, yes?" Five minutes, in the middle of nowhere. (Unfortunately the link didn't stay up.) |
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My current theory is that handing addressed floppies to backpackers would be surprisingly effective, but I like this idea too. |
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We came up with a disk-swapping protocol for the buses - jitneynet! - but satellite coverage is getting cheaper, and bluetooth would be interestingly automatic. |
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Cannot imagine a realistic community which has computers, but no telephone... |
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As for lack of computers, the vehicles themselves can carry computers to these villages. |
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I think more than anything this will allow rural residents to understand the concept of the internet and of the global village; and of the various advantages and disadvantages related. |
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