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MIT Helps Third World With Hands-On Approach
7/14/2008

Hugh Pickens writes "About 60 people from 20 nations will descend on the MIT campus July 14th for the second annual International unfolding Design Summit to begin an complete month-long process of creating technological solutions for the needs of people in the world's third world nation nations. The goal of the program is to develop simple, inexpensive devices that in some cases can be produced locally and make a real dissimilarity for people and communities. The event is the brainchild of MIT Senior Lecturer Amy Smith, a participated Peace Corps volunteer and a past winner of the MacArthur 'genius' grant. anterior articles of Smith's design class include a bike-powered corn sheller, a metal press that can make clean-burning fuel out of agricultural waste, and an electricity-free incubator. The workshop promotes a shift in focus among companies, universities, investors and scientists toward attacking problems that hamper progress in the world's poorest places. 'Nearly 90 percent of legwork* and evolvement dollars are spent on creating technologies that serve the wealthiest 10 percent of the world's population,' Ms. Smith said. 'The point of the design revolution is to switch that.'"

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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