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On Italy, Tanzania and now Rwanda…

My travel schedule has been a bit hectic, but I wanted to touch base with the very very few people who read this.

The morning after Hélène and I moved into our new place (at the corner of Bellevue, Bellevue and Bellevue), I flew out to Italy to meet up with Gaetano, Tap and Brian for the HCI4CID workshop @ CHI 2008. In Italy, we saw Lucca, Florence, Naples and Vatican City.

From Italy, I went down to Tanzania (Dar Es Salaam) to talk to a few NGOs to get a sense of what problems they were having that computers could help with. I’m now in Rwanda for a few days to touch base with the crew at Rwinkwavu and talk to one or two more NGOs before I head back to Seattle.

I *should* write a much longer post, but I’ll fall back to the old standard of pictures. I have a few from Italy and Tanzania that you should check out.

gentrification mural in pompeii

On Project Karatasi…

I’ve been mostly mute about what I’m going to do generals and hopefully dissertation on. The silence is mostly because I had nothing to say, but after some hard thinking, I think I have an idea worth blogging about.

There is a widespread need for tracking and reporting of data generated in the developing world. This data is often captured on paper forms that serve as the information store for many organizations. These organizations are often required to generate external reports and make evidence based decisions – tasks which paper does not easily enable.

While popular tools such as Excel and Access are sometimes used, they are often not powerful enough to meet the data needs for many organizations. At the same time, these tools cannot create easy to use systems to track and report on data.

To better address the frustrations with current tools we are planning on building a free and easy to use software framework called Karatasi. We envision Karatasi as a set of applications to enable data entry and report generation, but with less training than is currently required using programs like Microsoft Access.

Before we build the software, we wish to understand the data entry and reporting needs of organizations. We have a few broad questions we hope to explore.

  • How much of your data is stored on paper? How are computers or mobiles used to capture or process data?
  • How do you gather data for your most important forms and how do you generate your most important reports? How much effort on a weekly or monthly basis does this require?
  • What computer-based solutions to digitize data have been tried and what successes and failures have been encountered? What have been the key contributors to success or failure?

I’ll be heading to Tanzania and Rwanda from April 14 and May 5 to discuss the above questions with some organizations. The time will be spent gathering information primarily through informal interviews and photographs, so stay tuned!

P.S. Brian and I started the change group and that’s where you will find some of the other developing world work.

On geotagging photos for research…

Been playing with the gadgets I brought with me to Boston. The pictures are being taken with N95 camera phone and I’m carrying the WBT201 GPS logging my location every second.

The software I’ve been using is slightly tricky. I use Nokia’s Media Transfer tool to move the images from the phone to my Mac. Then I’ve got a custom (Intel with expat support) version of gpsbabel to pull the traces off the GPS and convert them into nmea and gpx format. GPSPhotoLinker geotags the images before I drop them into iPhoto. The iPhotoToGoogleEarth plugin can export all the images with the nmea trace in a kmz which Google Earth opens beautifully.

google earth

The GPS is pretty accurate despite the trees and buildings. You can see that from the point that I shot the image, I have a great view of the basketball court. If you have GoogleEarth you can grab a copy of the entire trace.