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Digital pony express

In Cambodia, motorcycles equipped with Wi/Fi pull up to a local school, download all the local email to a laptop, drive to the next school or village and upload those emails destined for that location, simultaneously downloading local email destined for other locales.

It is a digital pony express: five Motomen ride their routes five days a week, downloading and uploading e-mail. The system, developed by a Boston company, First Mile Solutions, uses a receiver box powered by the motorcycle's battery. The driver need only roll slowly past the school to download all the village's outgoing e-mail and deliver incoming e-mail. The school's computer system and antenna are powered by solar panels. Newly collected data is stored for the day in a computer strapped to the back of the motorcycle. At dusk, the motorcycles converge on the provincial capital, Ban Lung, where an advanced school is equipped with a satellite dish, allowing a bulk e-mail exchange with the outside world.

Posted by Dan Brooks on January 29, 2004 at 01:29 PM | Permalink