Mapping

uReport: Citizen Feedback via SMS in Uganda

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Aug 28, 2011
uReport: Citizen Feedback via SMS in Uganda data sheet 3481 Views

For aid organizations, knowing what local communities and beneficiaries want and need is the key to running successful, sustainable programs. In Uganda, UNICEF is using mobile phones and broadcast media to get direct feedback from Ugandans on everything from medication access to water sanitation. The project, called uReport, allows users to sign up via a toll-free shortcode for regular SMS-based polls and messages. Citizen responses are used both in weekly radio talk shows to create discussion on community issues, and shared among UNICEF and other aid organizations to provide a better picture of how services work across Uganda.
 
Sean Blaschke, a Technology for Development specialist at UNICEF Uganda, explains that uReport gathers information from participants and informs citizens of their rights and available services. Recent polls have included questions about school dropouts, water point availability, mosquito net usage, and youth employment, all collected via SMS polls.

Basic Information
Organization involved in the project?: 
Project goals: 

The project is three-fold:

  • To collect feedback and information directly from beneficiaries of projects in Uganda
  • To create a system to directly communicate with and push messages to uReport members
  • To allow beneficiaries to share their views on a number of different topics
Brief description of the project: 

uReport is a UNICEF project in Uganda that sends SMS polls and messages to subscribers in order to gather feedback about communities across Uganda. The information is then used in broadcast and print media to inform citizens about their rights and available services, while also acting as a means of detecting vulnerabilities in communities.

Target audience: 

The target audience is youth in Uganda who want to share information about their communities and start discussions at a community level about available services and programs.

Detailed Information
Mobile Tools Used: 
Length of Project (in months) : 
3
Status: 
Ongoing
What worked well? : 

The project has seen a huge number of signups (more than 28,000 registered users), and reasonably high response rates (ranging between 18% and 30%). UNICEF also found that the program is mutually beneficial between them and their partner organizations, as partner organizations can use the SMS system to directly target their members, while UNICEF can use the information collected in the polls to get a clearer picture of how services and systems are working in individual communities.

What did not work? What were the challenges?: 

Challenges include:

  • Finding ways to keep uReporters interested in the project so that they answer the polls (UNICEF is currently testing out multiple incentive programs to see how they affect response rates)
  • Finding a balance between the one-to-one contact of mobile communications and the need to share information with a large number of people (partnerships were built with eight local radio stations in different districts so that information could be broadcast regularly to non-mobile owners)

Commons: Real-World Games for Change

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Jun 27, 2011

Have you ever had a problem with your neighborhood and wanted to rally your community around finding a solution? Commons, a mobile mapping and reporting game, does just that. Commons is an iPhone app that allows players to locate their position on a map and then guides the players through a series of challenges to report and comment on their neighborhood. Reports can be voted on, so users who submit the best reports or images can win badges that show their involvement. The first real-world gameplay happened lower Manhattan in New York City on June 19th at the Come Out and Play Festival.

Commons: Real-World Games for Change data sheet 6081 Views
Countries: United States

Making a Splash: NextDrop Monitors Water Flow in Urban India

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Mar 25, 2011

Water is becoming one of the most contested resources in the world as populations increase and the availability of fresh water decreases. MobileActive spoke to the team behind NextDrop, an organization that uses mobile technology to monitor water flow in urban India.

Designed by a team of Berkeley and Stanford graduate students, the idea for NextDrop came out of a class at Berkeley's School of Information on how to use information technology for sustainable development. A group of students wanted to track intermittent water supplies in India. NextDrop was born. Ari Olmos, one of the team members running NextDrop, explains, “There was an opportunity to use information technology to improve the situation and create a schedule and feedback loop.”

Water

Making a Splash: NextDrop Monitors Water Flow in Urban India data sheet 3825 Views
Countries: India

FOLKSOMAPS - Towards Community Driven Intelligent Maps for Developing Regions

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Feb 02, 2011
FOLKSOMAPS - Towards Community Driven Intelligent Maps for Developing Regions data sheet 1560 Views
Author: 
Kumar, Arun, Dipanjan Chakraborty, Himanshu Chauhan, Sheetal K. Agarwal, and Nitendra Rajput
Publication Date: 
Jan 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Many services taken for granted in the developed world are often missing from the developing countries. One typical example is that of map systems that form the basis of several location-driven services. Its heavy reliance on content, provides a huge barrier towards building such systems. Further, in developing countries like India, the infrastructure typically has a history of unplanned development, leading to unorganized addresses and absence of standard naming conventions for roads. Detailed map systems such as online maps have only recently started becoming available but for major cities. Remote towns and villages remain out of reach till date.

In this paper, we investigate a community-driven approach for creating maps in developing regions - following Web 2.0 principles, but not entirely relying on the existing Web. Our system, dubbed FOLKSOMAPS is an intelligent, community constructed map system, particularly architected with developing regions in mind. We present the design of FOLKSOMAPS, followed by an implementation of our proof-of-concept system. We present user studies aimed at understanding the uptake, usability and utility of FOLKSOMAPS. The results indicate a strong need for such a community-generated mapping ecosystem.


Mapping Snow Via Mobile Phone

Posted by MelissaUlbricht on Jan 28, 2011

The radio station WNYC is creating on-air and online stories from two things very familiar to people in the Northeastern United States: mobile phones and snow. A snowstorm over the holidays was the heaviest December snowfall in six decades and dumped up to 20 inches in many parts of New York City. The story quickly became one of snow removal and how the city was not removing the snow as quickly as people had hoped.

Jim Colgan and the WNYC newsroom wanted to get a sense of what was happening on the streets. Problem was, there was no good or easy way to do this. The station couldn’t rely on the city for real-time information, and reporters couldn’t get to many of the areas. The answer was to have the listeners share their own reports and stories, via mobile phone.

Mapping Snow Via Mobile Phone data sheet 2630 Views
Global Regions:
Countries: United States

PoiMapper

Posted by KatrinVerclas on Nov 30, 2010
PoiMapper data sheet 2030 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Pertti Lounamaa
Problem or Need: 

PoiMapper is a data collection and sharing tool focused on affordable GPS-enabled phones that makes data collection from simple phones possible.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

The PoiMapper application allows a user to create a case-specific questionnaire, collect data, and upload it to a database. PoiMapper also allows the user to take photographs of specific points of interest (POIs) being recorded and these images are also uploaded to the database. Another feature is that the system can be used to update existing data.

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a mobile phone
Is a web-based application/web service
Key Features : 

1. Define program specific point-of-interests (POIs), routes and areas with associated data to be collected. Data can be of multiple types: text, numbers, single and multi-choice alternatives, conditional sub-questions.
2. Capture pictures to be included for POIs.
3. Collect data with affordable mobile phones with GPS and camera.
4. Upload data directly to a central database over the cellular network or via an internet connected computer, edit existing data in the mobile device during follow-up visits.
5. Back-office reporting and analysis.
6. Visualize the collected data in different ways.

Main Services: 
Voting, Data Collection, Surveys, and Polling
Location-Specific Services and GIS
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
Java ME
Program/Code Language: 
Java
Organizations Using the Tool: 

Plan International

Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
No
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes
Countries: 

PoiMapper: Mobile Data Collection Through Points-of-Interest in Kenya

Posted by MelissaUlbricht on Nov 30, 2010
PoiMapper: Mobile Data Collection Through Points-of-Interest in Kenya data sheet 3491 Views

PoiMapper, a product from Pajat, is a mobile application for data collection, hosting, and sharing. It works on a feature phone with Java capability and allows a user to design a case-specific questionnaire to collect field data, including numbers, text, and photo images. Through this, it supports the collection of point-of-interest (POI) data -- hence the name, PoiMapper -- and is currently being tested in this capacity in Kenya in collaboration with Plan Kenya, Plan Finland, Helsinki University of Technology, and University of Nairobi. The pilot is ongoing and an evaluation is to be done a month from now.

Basic Information
Organization involved in the project?: 
Project goals: 

Plan International is in the middle of a 4-month pilot in Kilifi, Kenya to use PoiMapper to create more detailed maps to support program interventions.

Brief description of the project: 

PoiMapper, a product from Pajat, is a mobile application for data collection, hosting, and sharing. It works on a feature phone with Java capability and allows a user to design a case-specific questionnaire to collect field data, including numbers, text, and photo images. PoiMapper is being tested as part of a 4-month pilot initiative in Kilifi, Kenya, with Plan International. The goals of the initiative are to contribute to the development of GIS software for both mobiles and computers and to ensure that technology is used to improve maps in terms of their accessibility and ability to provide more up-to-date and dynamic information.

Target audience: 

Field workers with Plan International in Kilifi, Kenya are currently using the PoiMapper system to map points of interest.

Detailed Information
Mobile Tools Used: 
Length of Project (in months) : 
4
Status: 
Ongoing
What worked well? : 

The ability to customize the application has been a strength for Njuguna in Kenya, as it give complete flexibility to cater the application to the needs of Plan International. Other stregths include the ability to use affordable, low-end mobiles, avoiding the use of expensive GPS devices. The application runs on a phone whose functionality is familiar, including the use of the basic mobile phone camera.

What did not work? What were the challenges?: 

A technical challenge arose when phones ran out of memory. This, in part, led to a redesign in which the service was changed from a survey approach to a database approach, where the majority of data is transferred and stored in the database.

Another challenge emerged when users wanted to change the questionnaires over time. The system had to be designed to be easy to add and change questions, Lounamaa said.


Mobile GMaps

Posted by StephanieMilbergs on Oct 22, 2010
Mobile GMaps data sheet 4611 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Cristian Streng
Problem or Need: 

Mobile phone users want to display other maps instead of just Google maps on their devices. Mobile GMaps enables users to view Yahoo! Maps, Windows Live Local, Ask. com, Open Street Map, and other sources on Java J2ME-enabled mobile phones, PDAs, and other devices.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Mobile GMaps is a free application that displays maps from Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps, Windows Live Local (MSN Virtual Earth), Ask.com, Open Street Map and other sources, but only on Java J2ME-enabled mobile phones, PDAs and other devices. MGMaps can connect to a GPS receiver over bluetooth or use internal GPS features on some phones in order to automatically display the map for your current position. You can pre-download maps and store them on your memory card in order to use them on the go without accessing the network.

 

Mobile GMaps is distributed under the Attribution - NonCommercial - NoDerivs Creative Commons license. You may download, use and distribute the application free of charge only for personal, non-commercial purposes.

 

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a mobile phone
Key Features : 

Mobile GMaps enables users of Java J2ME-based feature phones to view maps from a variety of sources.  The creator is constantly improving this application and you can view past versions for download.  There is also a G-Map Track BETA feature that allows you to view public Google maps and see a map of you and your friends.  API for this application is coming soon.

Main Services: 
Location-Specific Services and GIS
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
Java ME
Current Version: 
1.42
Program/Code Language: 
Java
Support Forums: 
http://forum.mgmaps.com/
http://www.mgmaps.com/help.php
Languages supported: 
English
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
No
Featured?: 
Yes

“If all You Have is a Hammer” - How Useful is Humanitarian Crowdsourcing?

Posted by admin on Oct 20, 2010

Editor’s NoteUrban Search and Rescue Team, with assistance from U.S. military personnel, coordinate plans before a search and rescue mission: In this article, guest contributor Paul Currion looks at the potential for crowdsourcing data during large-scale humanitarian emergencies, as part of our "Deconstructing Mobile" series. Paul is an aid worker who has been working on the use of ICTs in large-scale emergencies for the last 10 years.  He asks whether crowdsourcing adds significant value to responding to humanitarian emergencies, arguing that merely increasing the quantity of information in the wake of a large-scale emergency may be counterproductive. Instead, the humanitarian community needs clearly defined information that can help in making critical decisions in mounting their programmes in order to save lives and restore livelihoods. By taking a close look at the data collected via Ushahidi in the wake of the Haiti earthquake, he concludes that crowdsourced data from affected communities may not be useful for supporting the response to a large-scale disaster.

1. The Rise of Crowdsourcing in Emergencies

Ushahidi, the software platform for mapping incidents submitted by the crowd via SMS, email, Twitter or the web, has generated so many column inches of news coverage that the average person could be mistaken for thinking that it now plays a central role in coordinating crisis responses around the globe. At least this is what some articles say, such as Technology Review's profile of David Kobia, Director of Technology Development for Ushahidi.  For most people, both inside and outside the sector, who lack the expertise to dig any deeper, column inches translate into credibility. If everybody's talking about Ushahidi, it must be doing a great job – right?

Maybe.

Ushahidi is the result of three important trends:

  1. Increased availability and utility of spatial data;
  2. Rapid growth of communication infrastructure, particularly mobile telephony; and
  3. Convergence of networks based on that infrastructure on Internet access.

Given those trends, projects like Ushahidi may be inevitable rather than unexpected, but inevitability doesn't give us any indication of how effective these projects are. Big claims are made about the way in which crowdsourcing is changing the way in which business is done in other sectors, and now attention has turned to the humanitarian sector. John Della Volpe's short article in the Huffington Post is an example of such claims:

"If a handful of social entrepreneurs from Kenya could create an open-source "social mapping" platform that successfully tracks and sheds light on violence in Kenya, earthquake response in Chile and Haiti, and the oil spill in the Gulf -- what else can we use it for?"

The key word in that sentence is “successfully”. There isn’t any evidence that Ushahidi “successfully” carried out these functions in these situations; only that an instance of the Ushahidi platform was set up. This is an extremely low bar to clear to achieve “success”, like claiming that a new business was successful because it had set up a website.  There has lately been an unfounded belief that the transformative effects of the latest technology are positively inevitable and inevitably positive, simply by virtue of this technology’s existence.

2. What does Successful Crowdsourcing Look Like?

To be fair, it's hard to know what would constitute “success” for crowdsourcing in emergencies. In the case of Ushahidi, we could look at how many reports are posted on any given instance – but that record is disappointing, and the number of submissions for each Ushahidi instance is exceedingly small in comparison to the size of the affected population – including Haiti, where Ushahidi received the most public praise for its contribution.

In any case, the number of reports posted is not in itself a useful measure of impact, since those reports might consist of recycled UN situation reports and links to the Washington Post's “Your Earthquake Photos” feature.  What we need to know is whether the service had a significant positive impact in helping communities affected by disaster.  This is difficult to measure, even for experienced aid agencies whose work provides direct help.  Perhaps the best we can do is ask a simple question: if the system worked exactly as promised, what added value would it deliver?

“If all You Have is a Hammer” - How Useful is Humanitarian Crowdsourcing? data sheet 21242 Views
Countries: Haiti

The Mobile Minute: Free Android Apps for Journalists, Mapping Indoor Spaces, and Facebook's Lack of Privacy

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Oct 19, 2010

Today's Mobile Minute brings you news about the continuous lack of Facebook privacy, the disagreement between IDC and Nokia on Nokia sales figures in India, a ranking of the top five free Android apps for journalists, a TNS study that found social media trumps e-mail as the most popular use for online mobile activity, and mapping indoor spaces with smartphone apps.

Mobile Mapping for Rapid Field Assessment of Health Infrastructure in Indonesia

Posted by cycadme on Oct 01, 2010

The rural population of eastern Indonesia generally has limited access to health services due to rugged topography, poor roads and limited health resources. Moreover, there are no comprehensive audits of health infrastructure at the district level resulting in poor coordination of health resource allocation. This project is using mobile field data collection techniques to identify gaps in health services to enable more effective and equitable delivery of scarce health resources to remote and poor regions. 

The study tested the assumption that recent changes in mobile mapping and GIS technologies have made them appropriate and effective tools for public health applications in rural, developing contexts.  Three primary factors seen to be facilitating more widespread use were: (1) decreasing hardware costs, (2) the technological convergence of GPS/mobile-phone/PDA (personal digital assistant) hardware and (3) the development of free/open-source spatial data software.  

Health department staff from West Timor learning mobile field data collection tools.

Mobile Mapping for Rapid Field Assessment of Health Infrastructure in Indonesia data sheet 2846 Views
Countries: Indonesia

Managing News

Posted by PrabhasPokharel on May 04, 2010
Managing News data sheet 5293 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Alex Barth
Problem or Need: 

A large amount of news and information is produced around various events and topics. Mapping and visualization can be useful ways to track this content. There is a need for tools that allow users to search and track news and information, and republish some of that news and information. Both the back-end and front-end systems allow for mapping and visualization of that information.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Managing News originated as a news aggregation and republishing platform heavily integrated with RSS/Atom. Users can track a diverse set of RSS/Atom feeds, visualize them, and republish selected reports on a platform that allows for mapping and pluggable visualizations. Managing News has subsequently added SMS functionality to the system. The system is based on Drupal, and integrates several open source projects including OpenLayers, SimplePie, and many Drupal plug-ins.

 

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a server
Key Features : 
  • Aggregate RSS/Atom news
  • Republish news as RSS/Atom in customizable channels, or directly to Facebook, Twitter, or email.
  • Show news as list, map, timeline graphs, or visualized in other ways.
  • Search news. 
  • Integrate SMS input with SlingshotSMS.
  • Configurable location tagging and mapping.

 

Main Services: 
Location-Specific Services and GIS
Information Resources/Information Databases
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
Linux/UNIX
Mac/Apple/iPhone
Windows
Current Version: 
1
Program/Code Language: 
PHP
Organizations Using the Tool: 

United States federal government, National Democratic Institute, Drupal. See the examples page.

Support Forums: 
http://managingnews.com/contact
http://drupal.org/project/managingnews
Reviews/Evaluations: 
http://mobileactive.org/howtos/mapping-sms-incident-reports-review-ushahidi-and-managing-news
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
URL for license: 
http://managingnews.com/bsd-license
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes
Countries: 

Ushahidi

Posted by PrabhasPokharel on Aug 26, 2009
Ushahidi data sheet 4447 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Erik Hersman
Problem or Need: 

Gathering crisis information from the general public can provie insights into events happening in near real-time. Allowing easy intake, visualization and mapping of this information can be very valuable. To this effect, the goal is to have an open source application so intake and visualization methods are customisable and deployable in a wide variety of settings.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Ushahidi is a platform that allows anyone around the world to set up their own way to gather reports by mobile phone, email and the web - and visualize and map them. It is being built so that it can grow with the changing environment of the web, and to work with other websites and online tools.

Tool Category: 
Runs on a mobile phone
Runs on a server
Is a web-based application/web service
Key Features : 
  • Google Map Visualization of Reports
  • Integration with SMS input, FrontlineSMS, various Web tools
  • Admin panel and Web Input of externally validated stories
  • Other planned features
  • Various smartphone applications to upload data to Ushahidi
Main Services: 
Voting, Data Collection, Surveys, and Polling
Location-Specific Services and GIS
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
Linux/UNIX
Mac/Apple
Windows
All phones -- SMS
All phones/Mobile Browser
Program/Code Language: 
PHP
Organizations Using the Tool: 
Support Forums: 
http://wiki.ushahidi.com/doku.php
http://forums.ushahidi.com
Languages supported: 
English, French, Arabic, Others coming
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
URL for license: 
http://github.com/ushahidi/Ushahidi_Web/blob/19bbcb381ab8b9f3eac6a718d76eb015d9d9f8fe/License.txt
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes