Hi all
I've been thinking a bit about Disaster radio in contexts where there
isn't much in the way of existing infrastructure.
In particular, I've been looking at the pay-as-you-go solar model, and
how that's been effective in an African context at getting hundreds of
thousands of people connected to solar energy:
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/africaatlse/2018/01/29/when-mobile-meets-modular-pay…
I'm wondering if this approach could be applied to comms? If you/ we
were to fund an initial deployment of say a hundred nodes into a
medium-sized African city.
One or two Disaster radio nodes in that city network are connected to
the Mobile phone network. If $X per day has been received in mobile
micro-payments, then it removes the network-wide obnoxious banner-ad
soliciting mobile payment? Or maybe it removes the annoying two
minutes forced a timeout on the wifi networks?
It seems a bit counter-intuitive to look at ways to annoy users, and
just to be clear I'm not looking to 'monetize' this in a way that
extracts value.
But if city-wide networks could self-fund further rollout, then you
could be looking at something that could scale in really interesting,
potentially transformative ways.
After the capital costs of the network had been paid, and enough
income raised to roll out to the next city, the ads/ timeout/
annoyance could be permanently removed, and the residents would
collectively own their own infrastructure.
Thanks
Sam