Project Overview

BACKGROUND

Rhodes and Fort Hare Universities have been active in ICT for Development for many years, through the two Telkom Centres of Excellence in Telecommunication hosted in their Computer Science departments (www.coe.ru.ac.za; www.coe.ufh.ac.za). In 2006, this activity has given rise to a field test site, in the Mbashe municipality in the vicinity of the Dwesa-Cwebe Nature Reserve, in the rural Eastern Cape Province. This initiative, now called the Siyakhula Living Lab (SLL) is organised along the lines of the emerging RDI living lab methodology whose main underlying principle is co-creation of solutions with empowered users. SLL shows in a practical fashion how marginalised rural communities that are difficult to reach, may in future be joined with the greater South African and African communities to the economic, social and cultural benefit of all. Other departments at the two institutions (Anthropology, Communication, Education, African Languages, Information Systems, Journalism and Media Studies, Sociology) have joined the project, giving it a strong, and necessary, multi-disciplinary flavour.

The original objective of the project was to develop and field-test the prototype of a simple, cost-effective and robust e-business/telecommunication platform, to deploy in marginalized and semi-marginalized communities where a large number (over 40%) of the South African population live. The project has evolved to include a generic service integration platform to support services for rural and peri-urban areas in South Africa. The need to transform into robust industrial products the experimentation in the Siyakhula Living Lab has given origin to a software house, Reed House Systems (RHS, www.reedhousesystems.com), which started its operations in 2010. RHS is at the moment hosted in the campus of Rhodes University, and offers internships to Rhodes and Fort Hare students. The service integration platform is called TeleWeaver, and this has its ‘business model’ and capacity of being a game changer in the way of introducing ICT infrastructure in marginalized areas. SLL, RHS and the two Telkom Centres of Excellence constitute an innovation eco-system whose main focus is the introduction of meaningful ICTs in marginalized areas. The eco-system and the relations between its components are represented in the diagram.  

 

TECHNOLOGY OPTIONS USED TO PROMOTE ACCESS

We use a technology mix, which we adapt to the circumstances. (This is important, given the rather dynamic field.)  At the moment, the blue-print we have is as follow:  

CONNECTIVITY

The starting point is the creation of a ‘broadband island’, i.e. the provision of points-of-presence, typically located in schools, which are connected wirelessly to each other at reasonable high speed. For this connection we use fixed and mobile WiMax, which we find very good and cost effective, but wifi can be an option, as well as other technologies, depending on geography and licensing. Then, one or two of these point-of-presences (which we call DANs, Digital Access Centres) have a connection to the Internet, to serve the whole broadband island. The nature of the connection to the internet depends on where the broadband island is located. In SLL we use a satellite connection, but GPRS / 3G can be considered, or even fixed lines, for peri-urban deployments. This architecture is the result of an evaluation of bandwidth needs and costs, and not surprisingly reflects the rather standard LAN / WAN structure, which still makes sense in our context, but will evolve if the costs or needs change.   The following picture illustrates the network as it is. While the network infrastructure is completed (base stations, satellites links, configurations), only 6 points have their Customer Premise Equipment (CPE) installed right now. The CPE rollout and the attached hardware should be completed by the end of the first semester 2012.    

STRUCTURE OF EACH DAN

Each point-of-presence contains a variable number of terminals, realized as thin clients. Depending on the circumstances, the central server is a single machine or a cluster of a few, less powerful machines. All elements in the DANs can be either new or refurbished. (Cluster for the central server allows the use refurbished machines there as well.) Edubuntu, of the Linux OS family, is used throughout the deployment. Here below is a picture of the DAN in Ngwane, during a computer literacy session for the pupils in the school.    

 

CURRENT PARTNERS

  • Telkom Centre of Excellence (CoE) at the Universities of Fort Hare ad Rhodes.The private sector funders of the Centres include Telkom South Africa, Saab Grintek Technologies, Tellabs/ Coriant, Easttel, Khula Technologies and GENBAND;
  • Technology and Human Resources for Industry Programme (THRIP) of the Department of Trade and Industry of South Africa;
  • Eastern Cape e-Skills CoLab: ICT for Rural Development.

 

GOALS AND OBJECTIVES OF THE SIYAKHULA LIVING LAB

SHORT-TERM : BUILD DIRECT BENEFITS

  • Development of a effective, low maintenance service-oriented network infrastructure
  • Learner and adult training in computer use, promoting the emergence of local training champions
  • Offer new services to the community that can directly save costs and support local economic activity, both on fixed and mobile terminals. SLL supports local businesses (art and craft production, Bed and Breakfast and other micro-tourism activities etc.) through a platform, that is being expanded to encompass a variety of other e-services (e-learning, e-health, e-governance etc.)
  • Involve researchers in real life research work, reflected by the research output

  MEDIUM-TERM: NETWORK THE COMMUNITY AND BUILD A BRIDGE TO THE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY

  • Bringing the telecommunications network into community homes – demonstrate benefits and speed up adoption, including M-Commerce
  • Start a software production centre, Reed House Systems (www.reedhousesystems.com), that could industrialize the software prototypes developed in the Siyakhula Living Lab
  • Offer effective entry into a networked and ‘research-primed’ marginalized community to government department, companies (large or small) and NGOs wanting to develop new process or products for marginalized communities
  • Developing a scalable, standardized model for similar areas in Africa and other developing countries

  LONG-TERM: ACTIVATE FULL PARTICIPATION IN THE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY

  • Most community households networked and active in the knowledge society
  • The involvement of the community as innovators reaches maturity
  • The model is replicated on a large scale in other marginalized areas in Southern Africa

 

A brief overview of the Siyakhula Living Lab and the associtated software house Reed House Systems, as of July 2014 can be downloaded here