IT role in global development explored
By our correspondents
November 17, 2017
LAHORE :The first day of 9th international conference on Information & Communication Technologies for Development (ICTD) Pakistan 2017, which opened under Information Technology University (ITU) here on Thursday, conducted four sessions.
The four-day moot will conclude on November 19. The ICTD is a research conference, which explores the role of information and communication technologies in global development. The first session on Co-Design for Accessibility conducted by Mustafa Naseem, Suleman Shahid, Khansa Maria (Georgetown) and Sohail Ahmed (GCU), who said in a penal discussion that co-Design was a process that brings together designers and users to develop products, programmes and systems in a participatory and collaborative manner. It was intended to bring together participants from a wide array of backgrounds to promote innovative thinking around issues being faced by blind users in their day to day lives, as well as challenges in the use of technology itself, they stated.
The Digital Financial Services session organised by Richard Anderson (UW), Lubna Razaq (ITU) and Jennifer Webster (UW) considered that the overcoming barriers to financial inclusion required partnerships between researchers and industry specialists to determine technological solutions. The session brought together members of the ICTD academic community with industry specialists of digital financial services to create opportunities for collaboration and knowledge sharing. It intends to develop a research agenda to address technology challenges for adoption to Digital Financial Services in Pakistan and elsewhere.
The third session on Community Wireless organised by Senka Hadzic (UCT), Kashif Ali (Facebook), Kurtis Heimerl (UW), Shaddi Hasan (Facebook), David Johnson (CSIR Meraka), Amreesh Phokeer (Afrinic) and Melissa Densmore (UCT). They opined that community wireless networks locally owned and operated networks, usually rely on alternative low-cost technologies. They provide connectivity to remote rural areas or reduce the cost of communications in areas covered by commercial operators. The discussion focused on several aspects of CNs infrastructure, content and service provision, sustainable business models, and policy. The fourth session discussed Securing Data in ICT Systems: Human-Centered and Technical Perspectives, which was conducted by Bilal Naqvi and Ahmed Seffah to focus on the role of security in successful development and deployment of working systems.
The four-day moot will conclude on November 19. The ICTD is a research conference, which explores the role of information and communication technologies in global development. The first session on Co-Design for Accessibility conducted by Mustafa Naseem, Suleman Shahid, Khansa Maria (Georgetown) and Sohail Ahmed (GCU), who said in a penal discussion that co-Design was a process that brings together designers and users to develop products, programmes and systems in a participatory and collaborative manner. It was intended to bring together participants from a wide array of backgrounds to promote innovative thinking around issues being faced by blind users in their day to day lives, as well as challenges in the use of technology itself, they stated.
The Digital Financial Services session organised by Richard Anderson (UW), Lubna Razaq (ITU) and Jennifer Webster (UW) considered that the overcoming barriers to financial inclusion required partnerships between researchers and industry specialists to determine technological solutions. The session brought together members of the ICTD academic community with industry specialists of digital financial services to create opportunities for collaboration and knowledge sharing. It intends to develop a research agenda to address technology challenges for adoption to Digital Financial Services in Pakistan and elsewhere.
The third session on Community Wireless organised by Senka Hadzic (UCT), Kashif Ali (Facebook), Kurtis Heimerl (UW), Shaddi Hasan (Facebook), David Johnson (CSIR Meraka), Amreesh Phokeer (Afrinic) and Melissa Densmore (UCT). They opined that community wireless networks locally owned and operated networks, usually rely on alternative low-cost technologies. They provide connectivity to remote rural areas or reduce the cost of communications in areas covered by commercial operators. The discussion focused on several aspects of CNs infrastructure, content and service provision, sustainable business models, and policy. The fourth session discussed Securing Data in ICT Systems: Human-Centered and Technical Perspectives, which was conducted by Bilal Naqvi and Ahmed Seffah to focus on the role of security in successful development and deployment of working systems.
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