Intel
claimed today to have brought wireless broadband to one of the most remote and
uninhabited places on Earth.
The project to connect up
Parintins,
a town with 114,000 residents on an island in the
Amazon
river, forms part of the chip vendor's
World
Ahead programme.
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Intel will spend more than $1bn globally over the next five years on
initiatives to accelerate technology access for people in developing
communities.
Working with the Brazilian government and business and education officials,
Intel and its collaborators installed a WiMax network for a primary healthcare
centre, two schools, a community centre and Amazon University.
The firm also donated and installed telemedicine equipment at the health
centre and computer labs at the two schools where students and teachers can now
connect to the outside world for the first time.
"Technology has expanded what is possible in Parintins," said Intel chairman
Craig Barrett at a dedication ceremony today in the Amazon rainforest.
"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."
Frank Bi Garcia, mayor of Parintins, said: "We are really isolated and do not
have the conditions to receive the internet with cables. So we are receiving it
wireless from antennas and satellites. Access to wireless internet is a great
pleasure for us."
Goncala Do Nacimento Pinto Filha, a teacher in Parintins, added: "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."
The wireless infrastructure includes short-range Wi-Fi radio transmissions
and WiMax, which has an extended transmitting range of up to 30 miles.
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