« Other takes on utility computing | Main | The people problem »

Utility computing and the digital divide

June 22, 2005

What's the best way to give poor people, particularly those in the Third World, access to the power of modern computing and communications? Some argue for developing and distributing dirt-cheap personal computers. But there may be a better way: giving people a personal "virtual desktop" that they can tap into through shared PCs.

It's a similar model to the one that's allowed telephone service to reach even the poorest and most remote populations. You can't sell everyone a phone - most people in these places can't afford one. Rather you bring one or two mobile phones into a village and rent them out call by call. Similarly, with existing utility-computing technologies, you can allow individuals to maintain their files and applications in a distant data center and tap into it through a shared PC or thin-client machine. Individuals can rent time on the shared PC for a little bit of money - and their data and apps will always be there, just as they left them.

An innovative little company named SimDesk has been pursuing this model, on a limited scale, for a while now. It provides users with storage space, computing power and a set of free applications that can be accessed over the Internet. One U.S. city, Houston, and one state, Indiana, already offer the service to their citizens. (Chicago is in the process of rolling it out.) If you live in these places, you can do sophisticated computing without having to spend hundreds of dollars to buy a PC, a bunch of programs and Internet access. You just go into a public library, sit at a terminal and log into what is, in effect, your own computer.

The utility model brought cheap electricity to the masses. Maybe it can do the same for computing.

Advertisement: Are you ready for "The Big Switch"? Nicholas Carr's new book "is the best read so far about the significance of the shift to cloud computing," says the Financial Times. Fast Company calls it "compulsively readable." Order now from Amazon.com.

Comments

Renting time on a cellphone has enabled helped poor people here in South Africa. But you don't need education to do use one of those phones. When it comes to renting PC time, you first have to provide the education - how to read and write - then training on how to use the PC and its resources. That is where the 'cheap PC' concept will help, especially in schools so that kids can get that understanding.
What westerners may consider standard, from their educational perspective, is still a dream for many people in developing countries.
Once that basic education is reached, then your concept could take off.

Posted by: Simon Griffiths at June 23, 2005 04:06 AM

Post a comment

Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)


Remember me?


 Subscribe to Rough Type

The Atlantic article:
Is Google Making Us Stupid?"

Nick's new book: bigswitchcover2thumb.jpg "Future Shock for the web-apps era" -Fast Company

"Ominously prescient" -Kirkus Reviews

"Riveting stuff" -New York Post

Order from Amazon

Visit Big Switch site

Read Q&A with Nick

Greatest hits

The amorality of Web 2.0

The editor and the crowd

Avatars consume as much electricity as Brazilians

The great unread

The love song of J. Alfred Prufrock's avatar

Sharecropping the long tail

The social graft

Steve Jobs' devices

MySpace's vacancy

Other writing

The ignorance of crowds

The recorded life

The end of corporate computing

IT doesn't matter

The parasitic blogger

The sixth force

Hypermediation

More

Nick's last book: Order from Amazon

Visit book site

Rough Type is:

Written and published by
Nicholas Carr

Designed by

JavaScript must be enabled to display this email address.

What?