Smart WiFi in Barrio Napag-iwanan
Published on 23 Mar 2006 at 6:25 am.
11 Comments.
Filed under ICT4D, Edong's Dreams.
Had a chat with a friend. He was surfing and searching and found my article about Smart WiFi in Cuyo (Smart WiFi Wondering, July 26, 2005).
I’m excited about connecting remote areas of the Philippines with Smart WiFi. If, in the past, the requirements to bring internet access to an area were: electricity and telephone lines, now these are no longer prerequisites! Now we can bring internet access to Cuyo Palawan, where there are no telephone lines!
He shares this story about a quiet town in Tarlac that used to be at the farthest corner of nowhere.
There’s this town in Tarlac that was highly un-developed. It was geographically difficult to access with the poor roads, minimal local commerce, not many new houses. There were no telephone lines, there weren’t any banks setting up in the place.
In other words, the place was “napag-iwanan ng panahon” (roughly translated: forgetten by time).
The pleasant development my friend noticed is the emergence (finally!) of an internet shop! The internet shop introduced the old town to the world wide web. The internet shop opened the doors (and windows) to the wider world accessible at their fingertips.
Now the town’s folk send and receive e-mails from the internet shop, chat with relatives in the city and in other countries. The local entrepreneurs are using the shop for business purposes.
This is what I appreciate about Smart WiFi that most subscribers (especially the ones who don’t get good service) cannot appreciate.
What other service can connect our 7,107 islands to the internet at such an affordable rate?
For an under-developed remote barrio in the Philippines, the internet connection through Smart WiFi provides in-roads for further development.
ka edong
My friend, anonymouse, when do we do Cuyo?
-
Related Articles on Technobiography:
|
|



jun asis on 23 Mar 2006 at 12:52 pm: 1
Which town in Tarlac is this?
ka edong on 23 Mar 2006 at 7:09 pm: 2
Bamban.
When North Luzon Manila road traffic was diverted to Concepcion after the Mt. Pinatubo eruption, development in the Bamban area virtually stopped …
d naiiwan on 30 Mar 2006 at 1:53 pm: 3
dapat mabilis para di mapagiwanan
mell ditangco on 10 Apr 2006 at 12:42 am: 4
lol, bamban? remote? ok ok, after the lahar, yah it got abandoned by residents. but remote?
ka_edong on 10 Apr 2006 at 6:43 am: 5
Yup. The description to me by my friend came before I knew what place it actually was.
You get the picture, though, right?
mell ditangco on 10 Apr 2006 at 7:27 am: 6
its just funny to me. my roots is in tarlac, to me when you say bam ban its rather close, been there many many times, I guess since I am from there, I don’t consider it remote.
you see, bam ban is relatively close to the end of north expressway.
I do get the picture though!
ka_edong on 10 Apr 2006 at 8:33 am: 7
I remember passing bamban everytime we travelled between baguio-manila circa 80’s. I remember seeing the streets lined with carinderias catering to truck drivers.
The past years, the few times I passed through Bamban, it looks sleepy, unlike the frantic activity of decades past.
che on 23 Aug 2006 at 8:03 pm: 8
there are also some barrio napag iwanan.Example sa loob ngHacienda Luisita.There are so many places in there such as Texas,Central,Mapalacsiao,Bantog,Motrico,Parang ,Mabilog….:)
MrConnect on 17 Feb 2007 at 1:15 am: 9
I think the place should now be called barrio pinagloloko (because of the 1 year contract of always being disconnected with the very very poor cell cites). I still wonder are they still upgrading those cell sites duhh!!!
WifiNamanpoD2 on 25 Jul 2007 at 11:44 am: 10
Kailan po makakarating d2 ang smart wi-fi. Mag ilang taon n wala pa rin d2. Taga sta. ignacia tarlac po ako.Naman!!!
Technobiography » Smart Bro on the Go: Plug-into the Internet Anywhere on 19 Dec 2007 at 3:20 pm: 11
[…] I wonder if this will work in a remote places like Barrio Napag-iwanan or Cuyo. Possible bottleneck is the “activation” of a cellsite to be able to accommodate this kind of service. I wonder. […]