Digium's Asterisk enable bicycle and solar powered communications for Inveneo
Inveneo is a non-profit, social enterprise organization that designs, integrates and deploys affordable, sustainable, open ICT (Information, Communications, Technology) solutions for NGOs (Non-Government Organizations) and the remote communities/villages they serve worldwide. Inveneo uses Asterisk-based technology for its solar- and bicycle-powered Linux-based communications system that provides basic computing, voice calling and Internet access for villages without access to electricity or telecommunications. Because of the solution's open source origins, systems are deployed at a fraction of the cost compared to solutions based on proprietary technologies.
There are over one billion people in under-served communities around the world who do not have basic access to electricity or telecommunications. Additionally, communication is the basis for communities to improve their own situation and participate in determining their own destiny. Inveneo's Digium/Asterisk based solution enables communities to communicate through voice calling, simple computing, and Internet access(including e-mail). Having these tools can mean:
Inveneo's first solution is a bicycle and solar-powered PC and communications system that provides basic computing, voice calling, and Internet access for villages without access to electricity or telecommunications. It uses standard off-the-shelf PC, VoIP and WiFi technologies that have been ruggedized and adapted for the local environment and language in addition to Digium's Asterisk solutions. This pedal-powered system was developed over the last two years on a purely volunteer basis and is working today. The first system was developed with villagers in remote locations in Laos to understand their specific needs and by working with volunteers and technology experts in the Bay area to finalize the system.
Inveneo's first pilot deployment is with Action Aid, a UK-based NGO for their ICT project serving five remote villages in the Bukuuku district in Uganda. The Village Communications System was deployed in five villages and has been operating since June. It enables Action Aid to provide these village communities with powerful communications tools.
Through the Action Aid deployment, the NGO provides these village communications with: