NPR "Hacking the Himalayas" Part 3: A Wireless Network for 'Little Lhasa'
Link to A Wireless Network for 'Little Lhasa'.Inside the Gyuto Ramoche temple in the northern Indian city of Dharamsala, the scene is timeless, seemingly centuries old: Rows of scarlet-robed young monks from Tibet, hunched over prayer scrolls in mediation.
But outside, an antenna sits on a rooftop not far away. It's one of 30 connection points in a wireless network that's bringing the Internet to this remote region where communication technology has been expensive, unreliable and hard to come by -- until now.
The monks in meditation over those scrolls are a key inspiration for creating the wireless network. They are refugees from Tibet and part of a community of hundreds of thousands of refugees. Web access promises better communication, a path to preserve Tibetan culture and a way to tell their stories to the outside world.
Image: Inside a Gaddi family's barn on a hilltop, Phuntsok Dorjee (left) and another technician (whose name I don't have) set a solar-powered battery into place. 2006, Xeni Jardin.
Previously:
Part 1: The Gaddi People of Dharamsala


1 Comments:
is Tibet subject to the same internet restrictions as the rest of China? (like filtered Google, etc..)
i remember going to Shanghai early this year, and my friend told me she had to present her passport just be able to go online in a cybercafe.
i was able to go online in my hotel, but the connection speed was really slow. i don't know if that was deliberate or what.
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