The ICONIC project, which stands for 'Intergenerational Codesign of Novel Technologies in Coastal Communities' -aimed to combat digital exclusion by developing novel new technology applications with disadvantaged communities, rather than for them.
An example of purposeful research in action, ICONIC began in 2022 and has just concluded with the creation of four unique prototype technologies developed hand-in-hand with the communities intended to use them.
In this episode of the Tech For Good podcast, host Romily Broad is joined by three research fellows from the Centre for Health Technology (CHT) at the University of Plymouth: Dr Rory Baxter, Oksana Hagen, and Dr Marius Varga. They describe an initiative built on years of research into the intersection of technology and public health. Their focus was on the community in its own area, rural southwest England - a perfect testbed as a region with high digital exclusion due to its rural geography and generally older, less affluent population.
The project engaged local users in developing four technologies: a VR experience of local heritage site Cotehele Hall, underwater telepresence for marine education, a conservation-focused social game, and an AI voice assistant for accessing local services. Researchers facilitated codesign workshops over the course of months, where participants shaped the development process, overcoming ther own technological hesitations while producing innovations with a much broader potential impact.
ICONIC’s results demonstrate that both its process and its outcomes offer rich benefits. Engaging excluded communities in technology development fosters digital literacy amongst participants, and simultaneously produces meaningful solutions tailored to local needs.
Now, the team is seeking new partners and funding to further develop the prototypes and expand their impact.
Find out more and get in touch: https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/research/centre-for-health-technology/iconic
Read more: https://www.techforgood.net/
In 2021, serial tech entrepreneur Nikita Kuzmin decided it was time to give something back to the world that had given him so much.
His idea was a simple one: Build a charitable organisation and app that could connect an individual in genuine need of urgent help with someone elsewhere in the world willing to donate to provide it.
The obvious first target was in healthcare. Around the world, millions of people - especially children - go without simple treatments for serious but easily curable conditions for want relatively small amounts of money to pay for them.
What if an app existed where a patient's doctors could easily connect with someone in the world willing to pay for a course of antibiotics, anti-malarial drugs, or a simple procedure? Someone with the means and the will to pay the small amount to save a life?
As Nikita says in this episode of the Tech For Good podcast: "In this world, there should not be people who die because they don't have $300 in their pocket."
But what seemed like a simple idea soon became a Herculean effort to establish both trust and the banking facilities to enable it to take shape.
Four years later, with bases now established in the USA and Estonia and now operating in multiple counties in Africa and Asia, Helpster is on the verge of realising its promise. More than 700 children's lives have already been saved, and the goal is exponential.
"We are doing it all. Nobody is going to stop us."
Visit the Helpster website.
Get the Helpster app: IOS, Android
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Estimates have it that one in five of us is somewhere on the autism spectrum, and that number is increasing. Up to 50% of Gen-Z people entering the workforce now say they are either neurodivergent themselves, or put a huge amount of value on working in a place that is neuroinclusive.
auticon is a company founded in Germany more than a decade ago by Dirk Müller-Remus, who recognised the challenges his own autistic son was to face securing gainful employment, despite his capabilities. The company, 80% staffed by people on the autism spectrum, now operates in around 15 countries and works to place neurodivergent talent in tech roles at some of the world's most significant companies.
While mentoring those people, the company also delivers a suite of advisory services to their employers to help them build truly neuroinclusive workplaces. The result is organisations that function better for all, and ones with much improved staff retention.
This year, auticon launched a new non-profit called the auticon Training Institute - a place those on the autism spectrum can go to obtain free training, mentorship, and internships as they pursue careers in the technology industry.
Today's episode of the Tech For Good podcast welcomes Vance Checketts, CEO of auticon US, who opens our eyes to the scale of the underemployment problem amongst the neurodiverse, as well as the vast opportunity for employers to help both them and themselves by embracing neuroinclusivity.
Read more thoughts from Vance at TechForGood.net.
In this episode of the Tech for Good podcast, we dive into the transformative world of education technology with Felix Oswald, the founder of GoStudent. Join us as we explore how the pandemic has reshaped the landscape of learning, making online education more accessible and effective than ever before.
Felix shares insights into GoStudent, the largest tutoring marketplace connecting students aged 6 to 18 with qualified teachers for personalized online lessons. We discuss the impact of AI on education, including how it can enhance the learning experience, reduce costs, and improve the quality of teaching.
Read more insights from Felix here.
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Whether you're a parent, educator, or simply interested in the future of learning, this episode offers valuable perspectives on the intersection of technology and education. Links Check out GoStudent: https://www.gostudent.org/ Follow Felix Oswald on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/felix-ohswald-44471489/ Subscribe to the Tech for Good podcast for more discussions on how technology is shaping our world!
Enterprise software giant SAP is working on a way to help its corporate clients embed sustainability accounting into the hearts of their businesses. The key is the Sustainability Data Exchange (SDX) - a tool that aims to provide visibility on emissions right across an organisation's value chain.
A partner in the project as been telco giant BT.
In this episode, Tech For Good is joined by SAP's Stephen Jamieson, Global Head of Circular Economy Solutions, and BT's Global Head of Digital Sustainability, Sarwar Khan.
In 2019, Canon Medical Systems, one of the world's most important makers of medical diagnostic systems, decided to bring its technology to the people. A pandemic-era project resulted in not just a community-level medical diagnostics facility for the people of Sheffield, UK, but a home for the city's fast-growing population of professional basketball fans, too.
Tech For Good checks in with Canon Medical Systems Managing Director Mark Hitchman to find out how its innovative project is shaping up since it was completed in late 2023.
What does it take to incubate a cutting-edge technology startup within a company as large and established as De Beers? After several years in development, Tracr is using blockchain technology to achieve its mission to create an immutable record of every natural diamond mined around the globe. An innovation that could transform transparency and accountability in one of the world's most ancient industries, the journey has been both a technical and a cultural challenge. Host Romily Broad is joined on the Tech For Good podcast by Tracr CEO Wes Tucker and CTO Caroline Glassberg, alongside Accenture’s Vinod Nair and Hilary Allen. Read more: https://www.techforgood.net/
The public sector is often built on old technology procured through even older processes. Even when the technology is new, the glacial pace of bureaucracy can make it old by the time it arrives. Andrea Danes, global human services leader at EY, discusses how we might break the paradigm and unburden the public sector's "innovative instigators" to deliver cutting-edge technology faster and deliver better public services for all. Read more:
Young Italian entrepreneurs at startup Novis Games, supported by Microsoft’s Entrepreneurship for Positive Impact programme, are using generative AI to revolutionise how video games can be made more accessible for the visually impaired. Founder and CEO Arianna Ortelli gives us insight into the company's origin story, how she came to attract the attention of Microsoft, and her goals for a better, AI-driven future for visually impaired gamers. Find out about Novis Games: https://www.novisgames.com/ Find out more about Microsoft Entrepreneurship for Positive Impact: https://www.microsoft.com/socialentre... Read more:
Chloe Tartan, one-time inventor of invisiblitiy cloaks for microbes, is these days a leader within global consulting giant Accenture in the area of ESG and sustainability. She's also a storied Blockchain expert and has turned her thoughts to how the technology can be leveraged to revolutionise how we govern public services and ensure digital inclusivity. Blockchain is much more, she says, than a mechanism to conjure digital currencies.
As she says in one LinkedIn post: "In my view, the only way to justify the amount of energy the [blockchain] network consumes is by demonstrating that this technology can actually solve a critical problem in society to make the world a better place."
At the turn of the millennium, the UN launched its Global Compact, an ambitious endeavour to encourage companies around the world to adopt socially and environmentally sustainable policies. One of the first names on the team sheet was technology giant Lenovo. Ever since, as the company has ballooned in size, it has released a comprehensive annual Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) report to hold itself publicly accountable against its sustainability targets.
Mary Jacques leads the company's efforts in this area as Executive Director, Global ESG and Regulatory Compliance. Her career with Lenovo stretches almost as far back as that original compact, and in every role her focus has been sustainabilty and the environment. It was the same in roles at MIT and IBM before that, and in academia where she studied environmental science.
In this episode we discuss Lenovo's progress to date, the challenges that remain, and the lessons we can all learn to continue to advance the sustainabilty cause.