Broadband gets $7m boost from Gates Foundation

Keeping online in credit crunch

By Caroline McCarthy, 19 December 2008 10:48

NEWS

Charitable causes are getting hit hard these days but the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, formed by the eponymous Microsoft founder and his wife, announced Thursday the donation of nearly $14m. About half, or $6.9m, is going to two US organisations promoting broadband connectivity, and another $7m has been awarded to fight a parasitic illness that threatens millions of people in developing countries.

The $6.9m for broadband has been donated to advocacy group Connected Nation and to the American Library Association's Office for Information Technology Policy, to promote better broadband access in public libraries in Arkansas, California, Kansas, Massachusetts, New York, Texas and Virginia. The goal is to bring broadband internet of at least 1.5 Mbps to every public library in each of those states.

There's a recession angle to it: "As the economic crisis in the US deepens, visits to public libraries are up across the country," a release from the Gates Foundation explained. "Many libraries in states across the country are reporting that online services are in high demand, especially for job seekers, students and people who do not have internet access elsewhere."

As for the other $7m donation announced by the Gates Foundation on Thursday, it's going to something very different: the Infectious Disease Research Institute (IDRI) and it will be used for diagnosis and treatment of people in Africa who have been infected with Leishmania donovani, a parasite that causes visceral leishmaniasis.

Visceral leishmaniasis affects about 500,000 people per year, 10 per cent of whom die. The IDRI is working to develop a vaccine for the disease.

Comments

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  1. 1. David Fletcher

    When I was visiting the new central library in Swindon on Friday, I couldn't help smiling to see one of the computer users viewing the Kubuntu pages.

    Some extra bandwidth would be very useful to many computer users, helping to speed up downloads of their free operating system ISO files, and letting the updates work better. Judging by what I see on the mailing lists from time to time, bandwidth is a big problem for many, including some areas of the USA. So I'm sure everybody would be very grateful to Bill & Co. for any bandwidth help they can provide.

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