Microsoft 4Afrika Academy Dean Lutz Ziob with Dahabo Abdi a student at
Sweetwaters Secondary School in Nanyuki during Mr Ziob’s visit to the
Mawingu internet project. PHOTO | Courtesy
Some 30 minutes away from Nanyuki town, pupils at a girl’s
secondary school can hardly wait for the sound of the bell to run to
their favourite spot – the library.
The 220 pupils at
Sweetwaters Secondary School still marvel at the delights of going
online and accessing education materials through computers at the
library.
Three years ago, local internet access
provider Mawingu Networks connected the rural school to internet using a
combination of low-cost wireless technology and solar power.
Interestingly,
the availability of the internet has concided with a reduction in the
school dropout rates and improved scores in the pupils’ academics.
“There has been a significant reduction in dropout rates as
pupils embrace ICT and grasp concepts initially perceived difficult.
This fascination with the internet has given them a reason to stay in
school,” said Moses Ringera, the school’s deputy principal.
Sweetwaters
is one of the 26 schools in Laikipia County that Mawingu has connected
alongside the county government office, public library, a dispensary and
small and medium enterprises (SMEs).
When it entered
Laikipia in 2013, Mawingu – which means ‘clouds’ in Swahili – had 100
hotspots. It provided cheap Wi-Fi in specifically in Nanyuki town by
tapping White Spaces.
White Spaces is a technical term
used to refer to the un-used broadcast frequencies which are a key
resource for bridging the last mile in Internet access in the country.
With
support from Microsoft and United States’ development finance
institution OPIC, Mawingu has since grown its WiFi hotspots to over
1,100. The hotspots connect 600 small businesses to the internet and
have over 11,000 active users in and around Nanyuki, a town with a
population of 50,000.
In total, Mawingu has 67,000 users on its hotspots.
“Mawingu
provides last-mile connectivity access to areas that cannot
economically access the Internet. The beauty with this is that all our
operations are cloud based,” said Tim Hobbs, director and CEO of Mawingu
networks.
Simply
put, cloud technology is computing based on the internet. It involves
using a network of remote servers hosted on the Internet to store,
manage, and process data, rather than a local server or a personal
computer.
This technological disruption has seen people
move from running applications or programs from software downloaded on a
physical computer or server in their building to accessing the same
kinds of applications through the internet.
Experts
reckon Kenya and Africa at large are yet to go fully to the cloud but
that the key obstacles — high speed access, affordable data and reliable
connectivity — are fast being cleared.
Experts say the
main challenge is in public perception regarding cloud computing as
well as and fragmented and confusing regulations.
According
to research done in 2016 by the Communications Authority of Kenya (CA)
and the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS), 35.6 per cent of
public sector institutions in Kenya use cloud services in comparison to
only 22.9 per cent of private businesses.
This trend is largely due to a government strategy to digitise services across the public sector.
Companies
fear that hosting data remotely on the could exposes them to
vulnerabilities, a perception Microsoft argues is untrue maintaining
that cloud is safer.
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