Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Fair Tracing hosts Ethics 2.0 Summit

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Workshop with 35 participants On Thursday, 23 October 2008, the EPSRC Fair Tracing Project, Centre for Developing Areas Research (CEDAR) and UNESCO Chair in ICT4D at Royal Holloway, University of London, hosted a workshop on “Ethical Consumption, Traceability and ICT” – or, short and snappy – the Ethics 2.0 Summit.  The workshop brought together 35 participants from business, NGOs, and academia. Speakers included Tim Wilson (Historicfutures), Wesa Aapro (Consumergadget), Annesley Newholm (Easyethical), Rob Harrison (Ethiscore), Juha Kaario (Nokia Green Team) and Ann Light, Macarena Vivent, Helen LeVoi and Dorothea Kleine (Fair Tracing).

Juha Kaario, Tim Wilson and Rob HarrisonThe speakers, from the UK, Finland and Chile, presented six different projects and answered questions about the thinking behind their systems. Getting this set of individuals together was in itself a success: as one speaker remarked, “I have not been to an event where you had this many key players in the field all together”.

 

 

Participant writing feedback on post-itDuring the lunch and coffee breaks, participants were able to try out and comment on post-its on the different interfaces of the various projects. Holloway students Andrew Brooks, Lucy Fenner, Simon Hepher and Rebecca Sankar exhibited posters of their research projects on ethical consumption. From the ICT4D Collective, Win Min Tun, Andrea Burris, Marije Geldof, David Hollow, Niels-Peter Nielsen and Ugo Vallauri assisted in running the workshop on the day.

 

In the discussions it became evident that there were fascinating parallels and promising synergies between the projects. We were fired up by seeing how many pieces of the puzzle allowing for a system of ethical tracking and tracing, and communicating it to consumers were there in front of our eyes, waiting to be assembled. At the end of the day, there were networking groups discussing themes like

  • “How can we give producers a voice in developing these systems?”
  • “How can we express ethical issues in figures or symbols to get information to the consumer quickly?”
  • “What kind of business model could be used to make information services for ethical consumption financially sustainable?”

In our concluding remarks, we expressed our hope that several of the projects would now begin to collaborate or, at the very least, that we would keep each other informed of our work so that, as our projects progressed, we could avoid reinventing the wheel and, instead, exploit synergies. Thanks to all the speakers and participants for coming and contributing to an exciting day!  

 

Online Commodity Trading Portal

Thursday, September 18th, 2008

The global portal for the Fresh Food Industry.

eFresh.com offers:

  • Daily international and local news in each sector
  • A live direct trading platform for buyers and sellers
  • No commission on any trade: One membership for unlimited trading
  • Market making services; your one on one assistance in on-line sales

 

Our portals:

 

 Fruit Portal  Meat Portal  Coffee Portal
includes vegetables and nuts includes poultry includes green beans
 Fish Portal  Flower Portal  Eggs Portal
includes seafood includes plants and bulbs includes processed products
 Dairy Portal

Supermarket of the future

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Supermarket of the future

A German supermarket is encouraging customers to scan and ring up their shopping using mobile phones, and check out without the help of a cashier. It is one of the number of innovations at the new “Future Store” – as Steve Rosenberg discovered when he went along to do his weekly shopping.

Project member workshop presentation and publication

Monday, June 16th, 2008

On 13 June, Fair Tracing project research student Ashima Chopra presented “The Fair Tracing project and thecase study of establishing traceability for coffe in India: Is technological innovation necessary for social development?” as part of the Ninth Informatics Workshop for Research Students.

The event is hosted annually by the University of Bradford School of Informatics, and all presentations are collected in workshop proceedings edited by Dr Dimitrios Rigas.

WhyBuy.It?

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Wibi - Los Robles wine

Just what can you achieve with a weekend of Social Innovation? After 24 hours of simultaneous hacking, designing and user requirement gathering, our Barcode Wikipedia team came up with a basic prototype system: WIBI.it. This is a simple user interface to a wiki-like system that lets anyone look up a product by its barcode and add information. The system also grabs related tagged photos from Flickr and automatically links to Amazon, price comparison sites, and related blog and review articles.

Wibi.It - Search

Tom and Fred managed to integrate some open source code to recognise photos of barcodes taken using Nokia phone cameras, allowing users to look up information directly using their mobile. One of the killer apps we envisioned for this type of system would be in-store price comparisons. If you are looking around shops for say DVDs or a flat-screen TV, wouldn’t it be useful to see what online prices were available at the same time — and click to order? This has the potential to turn most of the world’s shops into exhibition spaces, with the real commerce happening on the Internet.

Thanks to David Wilcox you can watch our team’s presentation at the conclusion of the weekend:

Social Innovation camp

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

I’m spending this weekend with fellow enthusiasts at the Social Innovation camp in east London. This group of around 60 developers, designers and campaigners have met up to work on technologies that build social capital. One of the six ideas being developed is Barcode Wikipedia, described by the Guardian as follows:

The basic idea is to build a system that lets people quickly identify information about products they find in the shops; particularly things like ethical information, news items about it or reviews. Ideally this would work through a mobile phone – you could snap a photo of your product’s barcode or tap in the numbers and get back information that helps you decide whether it’s good to buy.

I’m trying to feed in everything we have learned so far on Fair Tracing, which focuses more on information from producers, distributors and retailers. Barcode Wikipedia should generate some extremely useful ideas on incorporating user-generated content from consumers into product information systems.

Tracing Chianti

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Want to obtain more information about the bottle of Chianti you just purchased? You can trace it here (in Italian). Each bottle has a code than can be entered via the web form or by sending a text message.

Open Source Data Entry Tool for Mobile Devices

Monday, February 18th, 2008

EpiSurveyor allows anyone to very easily create a handheld data entry form, collect data, and then transfer the data back to a desktop or laptop for analysis. EpiSurveyor is one key part of a comprehensive technology partnership led by DataDyne with the support of the UN Foundation, the Vodafone Group Foundation, the WHO, the CDC, and Nokia. Our vision is to address the need for better public health data by providing sustainable and adaptable software tools to the developing countries themselves. 

India’s greener IT revolution

Monday, February 18th, 2008

“The man who helped mastermind India’s “green revolution” in agriculture in the 1960s is now hoping to do a similar thing for information technology in the country.”

e-Sagu: A Web-based Agricultural Information Dissemination System

Monday, February 18th, 2008

e-Sagu 

“Indian farming community is facing a multitude of problems to maximize crop productivity. In spite of successful research on new agricultural practices concerning crop cultivation, the majority of farmers are not getting upper-bound yield due to several reasons. One of the reasons is that expert/scientific advice regarding crop cultivation is not reaching farming community in a timely manner. Due to several reasons the current agricultural extension system in India is unable to deliver the advice to all the farming community in a personalized manner. The traditional ways of advice dissemination through radio, news papers, magazines, television are not meeting the expectations of the farmers due to the lack of coverage, accountability and personalized advice.”