Rural South Africa to get free wi-fi
26 May 2015
Rural Eastern Cape is about to get high speed internet service though a dedicated
wi-fi connection.
Project Isizwe is well known for rolling out the City of Tshwane's massive wi-fi
programme which is part of the city's vision for universal internet access. But
taking wi-fi to the Ingwe Technical Vocational Education and Training College on
their Mount Frere and Lusikisiki campuses in a pilot project was not without its
critics.
"Everyone says 'It's easy in Tshwane, but you can't do it in a rural area', but here
we are," said Alan Knott-Craig junior, the brains behind Project Isizwe.
The pilot would focus on the Department of Higher Education and Training being
able to deliver internet access on campus and surrounding areas, he explained.
"The idea is for the Department of Higher Education to deploy free wi-fi on campus
and for surrounding communities (where students live) throughout the country."
The
wi-fi deployment is scheduled for 17 June and Knott-Craig said that the rural
area provided an ideal test-bed for how the poor would be able to participate on the
internet.
"Eastern Cape is ideal because it is as rural as you get and [is] densely populated.
Until we solve connectivity problems there, South Africa will always have a
problem."
It's a sentiment similar to that expressed by Facebook chief executive Mark
Zuckerberg in his drive to push Internet.org, despite criticism the platform has
received.
"Giving people free access is the right thing to do. Facebook will keep connecting
more people and more countries, and won't stop until every person in the world can
connect to the internet," Zuckerberg said when he announced the availability of the
platform in Malawi.
In South Africa, Tshwane's city-wide wi-fi programme continues to grow beyond
expectations.
The service is now available in 96 wards with 575 live sites. Project
Isizwe has 161
577 users of the service, up from just 1 567 in 2013.
In Western Cape, Stellenbosch – where the free wi-fi project was initiated – is still
considering how to best offer citizens internet access.
"We continue to try to engage the municipality but they are going through an
internal process… as to how to take Stellenbosch Free Wi-Fi forward," said Knott-
Craig.
Source: News24Wire