How Web revolutionised the world
By Bitange Ndemo
This year marks the 25th birthday of the World
Wide Web – today more commonly just called the Web. It was invented by
British computer scientist Sir Tim Berners-Lee in March 1989 while he
was working at the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN).
Frustrated at the difficulties that scientists
faced in sharing information, Berners-Lee came up with a solution and
then nurtured it to become a global communications network that has
transformed everything around us.
The Web works with the Internet, a global system
of interconnected computer networks that use standard protocols to link
several billion devices worldwide.
They are linked by a broad array of electronic,
wireless, and optical networking technologies. Since Alexander Fleming’s
discovery of penicillin in 1928, no other technologies have had a
greater impact - especially in remote parts of the world - like Internet
and the Web.
These technologies have changed how doctors treat
patients, how students learn, how financial institutions transact and a
plethora of other services.
Revenue to firms already created by the Web is
surely impossible to estimate accurately, but it runs into trillions of
dollars. For example, Amazon Web Services (AWS), a leading US Web
services company, earned $3.8 billion in 2013 revenue, up from $2.1
billion in 2012, with several analysts putting AWS’ business value at
$19 billion.
In terms of productivity improvement as a result
of the Web, the benefits too run into trillions of dollars. The 2013
McKinsey report, Lions go Digital: The Internet’s Transformative
Potential in Africa, says that by 2025, Africa will have 600 million
Internet users adding $300 billion in contribution to GDP, and $300
billion in productivity gains. Annual E-commerce sales will top $75
billion.
It sounds all good but we have work to do before
we can really reap the benefits. By the end of 2014, the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU) predicts that more than 40 per cent of the
world’s population will be using the Internet.
Yet the same report predicts that in Africa, this
figure will be a paltry 19 per cent. This is because many in Africa
cannot afford to access the Internet.
The costs of an entry level Internet connection in
most countries in Africa ranges from 30 to over 100 percent of average
monthly incomes.
Across the developed world, citizens generally
spend just two per cent or less of their average income for a fixed-line
connection. If we are to unlock the true benefits of the Internet for
Africa, we must drive prices down, fast.
Recognising the transformative potential of
affordable access, the United Nations Broadband Commission has come up
with a target of entry-level broadband services priced at less than 5%
of average monthly income. Yet cost is not the only challenge.
Access too is a limiting factor especially in
remote rural areas where we must encourage shared infrastructure in
order to minimize capital expenditure by multiple providers.
Other issues include literacy, relevant local
content, availability of electricity, and the information and technology
(IT) literacy. Although literacy levels are rising in Africa, we now
must employ new strategies to deal with adult literacy.
Perhaps dealing with basic IT literacy may be the
best strategy because there is online content that can greatly help
reduce illiteracy in Africa.
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