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by Wayne Ma
The tech world is misunderstanding
the concept of appropriate technology for developing nations as
“low-tech,” leaders in the growing field of practical invention said
today at the 2007 Popular Mechanics Breakthrough Conference. In fact, the panelists agreed, it’s likely more
difficult to design these technologies for rich,
technologically-developed countries, which don't have to worry about
limited resources.
"They're not low-tech in the sense of dumbed-down," said Ashok
Gadgil, a senior staff scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory who won a Breakthrough Award this year for co-design a
super-efficent cookstove refugees in the Darfur region of Sudan.
"They've taken a huge amount of intellectual effort to design them and
keep them simple. They are simple without compromising effectiveness."
Innovations that make life easier for the world's poor need to
be affordable, repairable, reliable and environmentally sound, stressed
Peter Haas, executive director and founder of the Appropriate
Infrastructure Development Group (AIDG). And the biggest misconception
about implementing new gadgets in the third world is that knowledge
only flows globally from the north to the south, he added. "There are
geniuses in every village ready to make significant changes to the
environment; they just don't have the access to tools, resources or
time."
Shawn Frayne, an independent inventor whose wind generator
alternative also won a Breakthrough Award this year, said that while
corporations such as DuPont and General Electric have done a solid job
of developing incremental innovations, they’ve forgotten some of the
simpler ideas—and problems—that exist today. "In the next 100 years,
what's required are new fundamental inventions, and those are going to
come from the developing world."
These designs already have taken off in new directions. Jock
Brandis has seen his 2005 Breakthrough Award-winning peanut sheller
expand across Africa with what some might call open-source new uses for
his Rube Goldberg-ian contraption. "It's like a I threw a pebble in the
water,” he said, “and the ripples have turned into tidal waves.”
Original article can be found by clicking here.
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