People are
constantly finding new ways to use the Internet to address our biggest
challenges: global education, health care, clean water, effective government.
But we’ve only scratched the surface on the potential of the Web. Today, 5
billion people still don’t have access to the Internet and the opportunity it
provides.
Google is
doing work to get more people connected, especially in places where Internet
access lags the most. In Sub-Saharan Africa, we’ve created programs such as Google Apps Supporting Programs for Education, offered technical assistance such as
caches for Internet providers, and generated ideas to build Internet capacity.
To help
bring the next billion people online, Google.org is announcing today our
support of two organizations that share our mission to connect the world: the
Network Startup Resource Center (NSRC) and the Internet Society (ISOC).
We are
providing $3.1M to the NSRC to grow their work to bring local network
engineering expertise to universities and national research & education
networks (NRENs) across Sub-Saharan Africa. Through labs and a
train-the-trainers program, NSRC will provide hands-on training on campus
network planning, deployment, and management for over 600 university and NREN
staff. Their work will bring the Internet to students and staff at over 50
institutions and increase network engineering know-how in Sub-Saharan Africa.
| KENET-NSRC Campus Network Design Workshop, Photo: NSRC |
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| Lesotho IXP setup. Photo Credit: ISOC/Michuki Mwangi |
We are also
supporting ISOC, providing $1.3M to improve and create Internet Exchange Points
(IXPs) in emerging markets. IXPs play a big role in core Internet
infrastructure, allowing Internet Service Providers to peer locally (and
cheaply), which can lower end user costs, promote competition, and improve user
experience. ISOC will create a toolkit for those who want to create and improve
IXPs and build an industry portal to share IXP information and data.
Some of the
brightest minds are working to improve lives in new ways through the Internet.
By supporting the work of NSRC and ISOC, we can make sure that those
opportunities are available to more people in more parts of the world.
Posted by
Jennifer Haroon, Principal, Google.org

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