09 Mar 2008 01:30:21 | J. Nayer Hardin
How To Bridge The Digital Divide GIVE THE GIFT OF
COMPUTERIZATION START A COMPUTER CLUB AT YOUR BANK TODAY
The digital divide is the space in our society between the
computerized and the non-computerized. The digital divide is
dangerous, yet can be made safe if we all just work together to
build a bridge to cyber freedom.
When the problem is a lack of adequate computerization, the
solution is simply to adequately computerize. Web conferencing,
computer enriched literacy programs and organizational
participation can dramatically help transform the digital divide
into opportunities wide.
We live in a world of technology haves and have-nots. Like A
Tale Of Two Cities, failure to address the issues can result in
creating a future resembling The Time Machine. Since we never
know who’s life experience will hold the key to solving the
problems of disease, environmental destruction, economic
empowerment, or our next really good laugh, we can’t afford to
leave anybody behind who wants to participate in the Information
Age Evolution.
The evidence is too precise to ignore. Maximizing cyber
opportunities is critical to the success of any economy. Make no
mistake about it. Second hand information in the information age
is truly the new slavery. If you have to go to another for your
daily data, by the time you get it, if you get it, it’s old
news. Many companies only have additional product information on
the web. Talk about second-class status.
The solution involves access to both equipment and education.
For example, internet access without the confidence and ability
to effectively use the technology, is like having a microphone
and not know how to turn it on or what to say. Though I’ve
trained thousands how to use a computer at no financial cost,
I’m still astounded at the number of people who don’t have a
clue how to use a computer. What’s even more amazing to me are
the people who have gone to traditional computer classes and
still don’t have a grasp on how to benefit from computer use. My
training notes are posted at http://www.compurest.com. Click on
Free MS Training.
Multi-level involvement of government, organizations and
individuals is imperative. Computers are the keys out of
Babylon, the next day in the genesis of our freedom as the human
race. I have a theory that during WWII enough people chose good
over evil so that we were given the power of computers. The
Enigma Machine, an early computer, was developed by the Allies
and used to break Hitler’s code, thereby turning the tide of the
war. The power of our modern Enigma Machines, computers, has
changed the tide in many lives in no less a dramatic fashion.
According to Genesis, during the time of Babylon’s ego, our
language was confounded. With computers and their language
translation capabilities, people from all over the world can
speak and be understood. I’ll never be able to convey the joy on
the face of a young man in Harlem the first time he communicated
with a soul from Japan about a mutual artistic passion. Or the
peace of senior Miss. Ruth who was able to communicate with
younger members of her family in another state through a
computer, which translated into them becoming even closer. Or
the accomplishment of a young father building stronger
communications bridges with his six-year-old daughter during
conversations they would have while together at the computer
screen. It no longer matters what one learned or did not learn
in school. The information, the commodity of kings, is available
to all who know how to use a computer, the Internet and an
assortment of educational tools. As Anthony Robbins says in his
book AWAKEN THE GIANT WITHIN…”I can’t overemphasize the power
and value of gaining even one, single distinction – a sole piece
of information – that can be used to change the course of your
life. Information is power when it is acted upon, and one thing
is that you never know when you’re going to get it.”
The difference between a computerized and non-computerized life
is like the difference between a Mercedes and a mule. Take
insurance. Via the web, one can quickly gain access to tools
that compare up to the second insurance rates offered by a
multitude of companies. Without the web, one usually relies on
whatever print or phone information is available. Anyone can be
a salesman with Yahoo Classified, a free product advertising
service that gets around 12 million hits a day. Driving
instructions, medical treatments, food information
http://www.foodstop.com, breaking news, spirituality, sports,
humor, art, http://www.audart.com, it’s all there.
I’ve been a computer diva for a quarter of a century. Back in
the late ‘80’s Harlem’s great community service diva, Mother
Clara Hale, told me that there was something going on with
computers and I needed to come uptown to help people become
computerized. I won’t repeat what she said about Harlem’s
politicians on the issues.
It is time for effective leadership. I’m not dissin’ the folks
in charge, just requesting they use computers to solve the
problems the community is facing. Truthful information is a key.
In the 80’s I was told by Harlem’s leadership that AIDS was not
a Black problem. They said the best way to handle AIDS was to
not talk about it. They’d put on another record, rather than
have on Niro Markoff Asistent who’s book WHY I SURVIVE AIDS
tells how she healed herself of HIV with ARC (aids related
complex). In the 90’s, the politicians did little about the 5
open sewers that surround Harlem, the location of the majority
of Manhattan’s bus depots in Harlem, the threat of the Hanta
Virus or plague from the large rodent population, inadequate
disaster relief programs or information available on how to deal
with the dramas on hand. The Internet has some answers, but you
have to know how to do a search or type in an address to find
them.
When I lived in mid-town Manhattan in the 80’s and early-mid
90’s, I had many computer stores in walking distance of my
apartments. When I went to Harlem in ’94, there was not one
computer store…a place where you could “kick the tires”, try new
technologies, and take a test drive of new software.
When I left Harlem in ’98, despite pleas to elected and
appointed officials, Harlem still did not have a computer super
store. Not even all the time spent on the Empowerment Zone
helped. Instead, I was told that most people had no interest in
computers or that computers were of the devil.
When I’d conduct ‘computer buying groups’, we had one Radio
Shack in Harlem, close to Columbia University, which had an
extremely limited computer selection and programs were minimal.
We ended up having to go down town. When I came to Los Angeles
in ’98 the same was true for Watts and Compton. My sister, Robin
Hardin, reports the same is true in her city, Detroit. Are there
many computers in Afghanistan? I doubt it with their reported
80% illiteracy rate.
Access to technology is meaningless until we learn how to use it
to empower our lives.
The http://www.compurest.com training notes I mentioned earlier,
plus one more class that I haven’t posted yet, were given to all
who came to me to learn how to compute. I stopped counting at
3,000 people over a four-year period, 1994-1998. I read that
millions of dollars were raised for education during that time.
I had to accomplish what I did on a $10,000 grant, plus whatever
I earned and resources I had. More and better allocated
financial and educational resources need to be committed to this
issue. “Based on results” needs to be factored into funding and
training qualification.
I provide that background to say that intervention is necessary
to eliminate the digital divide. The divide, the space between
people with computers and people without, is real and we must
take steps to close it, and close it now, both nationally and
internationally.
Here are a few recommendations on how to achieve that goal.
1. Encourage banks to set up “Cyber Clubs”, much like the
“Christmas Clubs” where people can make deposits into an account
for future technology purchases. As an alternative to giving a
child a doll or game for a gift, take that money and deposit it
into the account. These clubs can make group purchases during
July 4th and Dr. King’s Birthday weekends offering additional
buying incentives based on volume discount buying. They can also
keep people informed of the newest, latest and most effective
equipment and programs to purchase. Financial management, i.e.
“computer banking” computer user groups can be formed to use the
technology to enrich the community.
2. Provide incentives for community organizations to offer free
computer training to their membership. Teach the basics
necessary to write letters, get on and use the web, balance a
budget or record one’s family tree. Encourage business growth.
With a computer, whatever one does best, they can do as a
business. For example, if someone braids hair, show them how
their computer can keep their books, appointments, send out
customer mailings, encourage word of mouth, file taxes, etc.
Sales development clubs, on the web and off, can also encourage
economic growth. These clubs can reach beyond national borders.
3. Hold more and targeted local, state and national and
international “town meetings” on the web with elected and
appointed officials answering questions and listening to
solutions from constituents. Network ideas with resources and
people to accomplish the mission.
4. Provide additional tax and financing incentives to open
computer stores, training centers, wherever. It’s not just
low-income people who need access and training. We all do. I
still can’t believe the many times I heard “I never thought I
would ever be able to use a computer,” or “I’ve never even
touched a mouse”
5. Encourage intelligent, cross
cultural-religious-economic-racial-gender, etc. computer use.
With computers we see the quality of one’s ideas before we see
the body they are in or the lifestyle they live. The opportunity
to build bridges is to great to ignore.
6. Encourage non-violent conflict resolution through a computer.
It’s tough to use a computer and a gun at the same time. Also
arguments over modems cause less violence.
7. Promote the joy of computing.
8. Unconditionally computerize all. The only way that national
testing of school children can work is if all children have
access to the same information at the same time. All 14 years of
school should be available on the web. Any child who goes
through a web-based education should be able to pass the
national standards test. This is not difficult if we allow the
needs of the students to hold greater weight than the needs of
the unions and school officials.
The systems for success are already in place. Community
organizations, one-on-one at home sharing information, economic
encouragement and technology already exist to expedite the
process. With sponsorship opportunities for computer hardware,
software and humanwear, the process can pay for itself via an
empowered tax base.
Dr. Martin Luther King was right. In my experience, which began
on computers in 1977 at ABC Radio’s WPLJ-FM, the table of
brotherhood that Dr. King spoke of in his I HAVE A DREAM speech
is a table with a computer on it, and good people around it,
using it to solve problems and have a good time. Just like he
was a champion of civil rights, we must all become champions of
cyber rights. Government, business, non-profits and individual
intervention will not only close the digital divide, but where
there was a hole in the ground, new opportunities will be found.
The real lesson from the original American Underground Railroad
is that those who have freedom, have a responsibility to share
that freedom with those who do not. Until that’s accomplished,
we’re just a slave system in another form. When that is
accomplished, everyone is free with the help of ‘a friend of a
friend.’ Free to understand, grow, pray and prosper.
How does one champion cyber rights? If you know how to use a
computer, find someone in your life that does not know and teach
him or her. If you don’t know how to use a computer, find
someone who does and ask them to teach you. Help your
organizations and institutions become computerized too. Everyone
has something to contribute. I personally recommend beginning
with each individual saying their own prayers for divinely
guided computerization.
Regarding the question can anybody learn computers, bring to
mind the image of an illiterate person who has already learned
how to read the screens and push the buttons on their ATM. We
are limited only by our imaginations.
Finally, a message from Miss. Roxanna Dawson. I had issued a
challenge to Harlem that I was actively looking for the first
person I could not train how to use a PC. Since the cost of the
training is that it be passed onto at least two other people, I
could not back up the challenge with money, but thousands of the
people came anyway over a four-year period. Roxanna, at 92 years
old, came and said she was that person I could not train. I
asked her why and she said because she was blind. I asked her if
she was totally blind or legally blind. I had read Huxley’s THE
ART OF SEEING so I know the difference. I put Roxanna’s fingers
on the home row keys and had her type her name. I made the type
big and she jumped back from the screen and yelled, “I can see.”
The people in the training room at Minisink Townhouse went
electric. She turned around and said with a smile of deep pride,
“If I can do it, the rest of your have no excuse.” For her
second lesson, I sat her at a computer with a 26-year-old woman
and they learned how to use a mouse together. In between
practice and laughter, they talked about community issues at a
level that’s helped me grow ever since. Healing can be found in
networking.
In summary, since the cause of the problem is a lack of adequate
computerization, the solution is simple – computerize. It’s
easier than it seems, and when done right, its rewards are
tremendous.
Happy Computing
About Author :
J. Nayer Hardin is the founder of Computer Underground Railroad
Ent. Nayer created a style of free computer training, How To
Compute www.geocities.com/computerjoint, that’s helped over
3,000 people between the ages of 4 and 92 learn how to use a
personal computer.