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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
9.20.2006 - 08:50am ET
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Intel Chairman Unveils the World's Most Remote Digital City; Amazon Effort Marks Global Movement to Bring Technology to the Next Billion People
(CSRwire) PARINTINS, Brazil--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 20, 2006--In one of the most
remote inhabited places on Earth, the Amazon, Intel Corporation has
created a wireless, high-speed Internet network for residents to access
vast resources of medical, educational and commercial knowledge through
computers. The project is part of the Intel World Ahead Program, an
initiative in which Intel plans to invest more than $US 1 billion globally
over the next 5 years to accelerate access to computers, the Internet and
technology for people in developing communities.
The digital transformation of Parintins, a town on an island in the
Amazon River, is expected to improve the healthcare and education of its
114,000 residents and advance the lives of future generations.
"Technology has expanded what is possible in Parintins," said Intel
Chairman Craig Barrett at a dedication ceremony today in the Amazon rain
forest. "It is now a place where wireless broadband links to the Internet
bring the expertise of specialists, sophisticated medical imaging and the
world's libraries to a community reachable only by airplane or boat."
Working with the Brazilian government and business and education
officials, Intel and its collaborators installed a state-of-the-art WiMAX
network for a primary healthcare center, two public schools, a community
center and Amazon University. Intel also donated and installed
telemedicine equipment at the health center and computer labs at the two
schools where students and teachers can regularly connect to the outside
world for the first time.
"We've been blessed with this project," said Parintins Mayor Frank Bi
Garcia. "We're really isolated and don't have the conditions to receive
the Internet with cables. So we're receiving it wireless, from antennas,
from satellites -- access to wireless Internet is a great pleasure for us.
This project will prepare this generation for the future."
Intel led the effort in the island city on the Amazon River with
support from Cisco, CPqD, Embratel, Proxim and the Bradesco Foundation, as
well as Amazonas State University, Amazonas Federal University and Sao
Paulo University.
Intel aims to extend wireless PC access to millions of citizens in
Latin America and train more than a million teachers about the effective
use of technology in the classroom. In Parintins, Intel has already
trained 24 teachers through its education initiatives. The Intel(R) Teach
Program teaches teachers how to use technology to improve the way students
learn. The Intel(R) Learn Program provides job-readiness skills to
underprivileged students between the ages of 10 and 18.
"The student, from the moment he gets in touch with other people,
other cultures, with other information beyond the borders of his country,
he gets a lot of benefits," said Goncala Do Nacimento Pinto Filha, a fifth
grade teacher in Parintins. "The community can keep up with evolution. It
can feel equal in social terms as well."
As part of Parintins' digital makeover, Amazon University is starting
a telemedicine program developed jointly with the medical school of Sao
Paulo University. The new capabilities -- including real-time, video
interaction between specialists and patients hundreds of miles apart --
give the town's 32 doctors faster and greater access to the latest medical
data or second opinions.
"Telemedicine for us is like a new weapon, a weapon from the future,"
said Dr. Gregorz Maciejewski, municipal secretary of Health in
Parintins.
Doctors say telemedicine will also help in preventing the spread of
such diseases as AIDS and leprosy.
The solution in the Amazon is to be followed by others planned by
Intel for isolated communities in Africa, Asia and the Middle East, where
electricity and telecommunications are unreliable or antiquated and
transportation is difficult.
The wireless infrastructure includes short-range Wi-Fi radio
transmissions and WiMAX, which has an extended transmitting range of up to
30 miles. WiMAX is designed to be a less costly and more efficient way to
build wireless computing and communications networks for broadband
access.
Intel, the world's largest chip maker, is also a leading manufacturer
of computer, networking and communications products. Additional
information about Intel is available at www.intel.com/pressroom.
Intel, the Intel logo, Intel Viiv, Intel Centrino and Intel vPro are
trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its
subsidiaries in the United States and other countries.
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Copyright Business Wire 2006
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