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The change Title Blogspot SEO Friendly = Traffic Rises, id

Written By Mike Ntobi on Thursday, October 31, 2013 | 10:03 PM

Pengertian simple SEO or Search Engine Optimizer or Search Engine Optimizing I personally think means creating content (material) of portals, websites, blogs recognized and recorded (indexed) by search engines like Google, Yahoo, Bing, Lycos and other search engines are more optimal.The hope when the person or user looking for something on the internet through search engines with keywords ( keyword ) specified the content we have in the portal, website, or blog to appear in search results.

SEO alone will be considered successful, if our position in the search results pages are on the order of the initial pages, the first page as much as possible . But of course what is sought by the people in accordance with the content we have. So the ultimate goal of SEO is to bring traffic (visits) a more through search engines.

From the above simple terms, I want to inform the simple tricks that can be used by my friends who are just learning to blogging or want to learn to make a blog with Blogspot . The following tricks related to Titleposts / articles in Blogspot with templates / default themes . default (standard) title on Blogspot is the Title (Name) Blog itself (when we opened Home, while opening one of the articles the title that appears is the name Blog continued with the article title.

Digital Governance Vision for Rural Areas

Written By Mike Ntobi on Tuesday, October 29, 2013 | 9:05 AM





- Press 1 for Agricultural Produce. 
- Press 2 for IT Services. 
- A need to break the traditional perception of rural    
  areas in developing countries. 

Rural population and development quotient

Any country whose rural population is still mired in poverty and unemployment, and faces high rural-urban economic equality cannot be termed as a developed country. In fact, the economic status of the rural population of any country provides a more realistic picture of the development quotient. Using this framework, countries such as India, China, South Africa, Vietnam, Brazil, Indonesia, Egypt are far from being developed, even though they may be witnessing a high GDP growth rate. Thus, development of rural economies is the real challenge for developing countries where large sections of people reside in villages and smaller towns. And this is the area where development interventions either fail to penetrate or bounce back without creating a significant impact, and there are more reasons than one for this.


Analysing the reality

The foremost reason is the ineffective public investment being made in rural areas which is not allowing rural areas to develop as rapidly as their urban counterparts. The disparity in rural-urban infrastructure, in terms of roads, power, transport and telecommunications is a severe bottleneck. It hinders private investment in rural areas and fails to provide rural population with key ingredients required to modernise agriculture, and more importantly establish other economic enterprises (including non-farm based enterprises). Consequently rural areas continue to be characterised by agrarian economies, and large section of rural population continue to be employed in agriculture, with high levels of disguised employment. In most developing countries, far greater percentage of population is employed in agriculture than what is required to provide with the current levels of agricultural productivity. And this is because of factors including, lack of alternate job opportunities in rural areas, especially for younger population, and absence of technological revolution within agriculture which means that farmers continue to labour all day and yet fail to get adequately remunerated for their efforts. 

When tomatoes get sold in neighbourhood markets in Delhi (the capital of India) for Rs. 10 (less than USD 0.20) per kg (December 2005 prices), it does not take much imagination to understand that the farmer who is actually growing tomatoes on his/her fields is probably not getting more than Rs 3 (USD 0.07) per kg for his/her efforts and this is a dismal situation and provides an insight of the rural realities and how development interventions have still a long way to go to change the economic picture of rural areas. But on the other side, it is also an open challenge for all of us to make a difference, including for the public sector, the entrepreneurs, the private sector, and the NGOs who consider themselves to be in the business of "doing good".  It is a challenge because rural development in developing countries requires pro-active action on a large scale, so that millions can be lifted out of poverty and be engaged in productive employment not restricted to agricultural sector.

Thinking from a different angle

It is not an area for the faint-hearted and one needs to think innovatively. It starts from thinking from a new angle: Rural areas need not be and should not be characterised solely as agricultural belts and agrarian population. Instead, they should be considered as a human resource: a resource of young people, of skilled artisans, of innovators, and of entrepreneurs, that is waiting to be tapped to accelerate local and national development. A rural youth may be a son or daughter of a farmer but need not be a farmer herself/himself. Instead s(he) can be a software developer, a call-centre employee, an e-entrepreneur, a lawyer preparing cases for foreign firms, or a potential employee for new forms of employment which have not yet emerged.

Once we start thinking from this angle, we will realise that we need to correct our development-oriented policies and actions. A case to point out is that of the ICT intervention. The impact of ICT in rural areas and particularly on rural poverty is very limited despite its penetration into urban areas. And even when ICT projects are taken up in rural areas, they are limited to agricultural sector. 


The focus on agriculture is correct one, but restricting the focus of ICT to agriculture only is incorrect, when we adopt the new line of thinking mentioned above. Instead ICTs in rural areas have several important roles to play. The foremost is bringing developments in the outside world closer to villages and small towns. This new knowledge about new types of information sources, such as emails and Internet, and about new ways of doing businesses, such as e-Commerce via credit cards would allow rural entrepreneurs to scale up their businesses or think of new business opportunities. This in turn will attract more rural people and create more employment opportunities in rural areas.

Secondly, ICTs should be integrated within the education curriculum within government, government-aided and private schools, and public and private institutes in rural areas. This will ensure developing countries become a repository of not only the young but young and IT-trained population. Here it needs to be underlined that IT is not an end in itself but over the time, it would be a skill required, and even become a pre-requisite to undertake most jobs including government jobs, jobs in engineering, health, law, economics, management, accounting, journalism and tourism.

An IT-trained rural population (even a modest 10%) would be an immense resource, as this skilled labour along with other qualifications can quickly be integrated into newer types of job opportunities which are opening up, including call centres, backend accounting and legal services. It will also ensure that developing countries have enough in-house IT-trained human resources to carry out digitisation of their own governance processes and in setting up IT and knowledge-based enterprises. More importantly, these new skills will spur entrepreneurship and innovation, as this rural but trained labour force would be better positioned to transform rural areas and the larger rural population from predominantly agricultural labour force to that engaged in other employment opportunities. 

Here too IT can be an advantage, as with an even spread and robut IT-infrastructure and availability of trained human resources, it should not matter whether companies are being set up in rural or urban areas. In fact rural-based call-centres can offer an even competitive option to the urban call-centres which are witnessing high-growth rates but are also finding it difficult to search and retain trained staff. Developing countries need to allocate even more resources to education and skill development in its rural backyard. However this solution is not being applied and this is due to the existing infrastructure bottlenecks which do not make this solution financially feasible, let alone attractive.

The third point about enabling IT policies, requires countries to further its reach of lit fibre and broadband network, and more so, in rural areas. All schools, colleges, institutions, and post offices in rural areas should be connected via broadband network. In the absence of other infrastructure goods, and employment opportunities in rural areas, broadband network and the right kind of education and training can become a lifeline for millions of our brothers and sisters who should not find agriculture as the only employment option to turn to for earning their livelihood. IT can truly be a leapfrogging tool for the young and the unemployed in rural areas, and once this generation merges with the growing IT economy, countries will get an even bigger boost in its GDP from rural areas, and it will not be attributed to just agriculture. 

There is a need to transform schemes and subsidies being given to rural areas. New schemes and projects need to be created which promote rural e-Entrepreneurship. Bank loans and credit lines should be extended to provide funds for rural e-commerce and other e-Services. Developing countries could spur rural IT innovations by initiating district-wide, state-wide and national-wide incubation funds to promote rural enterprises, and start long-term projects on IT on the lines of its forestry conservation, watershed development, and literacy for all campaigns.

Finally, NGOs need to transform too, and move out from a sterile approach to rural development to a more pro-active one where their loyalty shifts towards the people they work for instead of the donors. They should adapt themselves to changing technologies and educate themselves on vast potential of IT in rural areas when applied innovatively for increasing employment opportunities and income.  Often NGOs working for rural development are less progressive than many of the Governments which are building up their capacities in making ICTs work for the rural poor. These non-progressive NGOs are doing more harm than good by not undertaking projects which could create new employment and entrepreneurship options to the rural population, and especially the youths. They end up reinforcing the thinking that rural areas in developing countries is only about agriculture and farmers, and this is what the next generation would be engaged with.

Breaking the traditional perception

There is a need to break the traditional perception and the picture we conceive in our mind when anyone talks about rural areas. We should start envisioning rural areas as potential IT farms where with the right infrastructure and policy support we can raise a new generation of IT-trained youths which will ensure that rural areas provide us with many new products and services, besides agricultural produce.

Empowerment of Women through Digital Governance Networks

Women at War, Women Building Peace: Challenging Gender Norms

Historically, the isolation of women from the mainstream economy and their lack of access to information because of societal, cultural and market constraints have led them to become distant from the global pool of information and knowledge. 

This distance is reflected in the levels of empowerment and equality of women in comparison to men, and has enormously contributed to the slow pace of development in South. It is now a well understood fact that without progress towards the empowerment of women, any attempt to raise the quality of lives of people in developing countries would be incomplete. There is an increasing amount of evidence which substantiates that societies that discriminate by gender pay a high price in terms of their ability to develop and to reduce poverty. Ironically, the importance of bringing a gender perspective to policy analysis and designing of development tools and interventions is still not widely understood, and the lessons for development still need to be fully integrated by the donors and national policy makers.   

In the context of knowledge sphere, the issues of gender equality, equity and empowerment of women become even significant as women have a strategic  role in incubation and transfer of critical knowledge which often forms the blue print of survival for communities to adapt and minimise their risks in the adverse of circumstances. 

Women at War, Women Building Peace: Challenging Gender Norms

Joyce P. Kaufman and Kristen P. Williams

During times of civil conflict and war, why do some women turn to militant action while others seek peaceful resolutions? And why does the answer matter? Tackling these questions in their provocative analysis, Joyce Kaufman and Kristen Williams explore the full range of women's responses to armed struggles. 

CONTENTS

  • Challenging Gender Norms.
  • Women, Conflict, and Political Activism.
  • Women's Political Activism in Northern Ireland: Protestants and Catholics.
  • Palestinian Women's Activism in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict.
  • Women's Political Activism in Sri Lanka: Tamil Tigers.
  • Imagined Peace.

Employment and e-govt "Rural Businesses: doing good, doing it profitably"

Written By Mike Ntobi on Monday, October 28, 2013 | 10:05 PM

Being a rural dweller is not easy.   



The state of roads and transport makes it difficult to reach rural areas. And once you are there, the unreliable state of electricity, water supply, communications and limited opportunities within and outside of farming does not give a feeling that you have arrived.  And it does not get any better.   

“Going rural” is viewed as a punishment posting in the public sector, a far from prized posting within the corporate, and barely registers as a career option for millions of educated youths entering the job market each year.  Juxtaposed with the image conjured of rural areas as backward and poverty-afflicted, lacking good education and health facilities, it makes it difficult to attract talent, investment and opportunities. It should come as no surprise that three-fourths of the 1.2 billion people who live on less than what a dollar a day can buy live in rural areas.    

For too long, rural areas remained artificially closed as they were under the exclusive purview of the government. Participation of other actors, apart from handful of government-approved industries and agro-processing units, was not encouraged, indeed dismissed. This model clearly did not work. It failed to transform the rural areas and its denizens. And it did nothing to modernise farming or diversify the rural economy.    

The private sector had eyes only for urban markets and densely populated cities in emerging economies. Where it did enter rural areas, it was for extractive industries like mining, logging and building hydro-electric dams that were directed to using rural resources to satisfy urban demands and potential, rather than capturing and transforming rural markets. The rural entry points for private companies continued to be shaped by urban markets and trends.   

Then, increased competition in urban areas and saturation of demand in big cities forced companies to look for customers elsewhere. Rural areas in proximity to cities seemed a natural extension for their products and services. In tandem with the notion of “bottom billions” which sees rural people as potentially profitable customers, rural markets started to make more sense and there was a strategic shift to tap them. More number of companies started to look at rural areas as potential markets in their own right, independent of urban demands and trends.   

Some companies simply extended the distribution chains of their existing products, while others added new features to their product lines to better serve rural markets. For instance, Nokia launched a basic mobile phone with a torch, and followed it up with Nokia Life Tools to provide farmers with sms - based agriculture and weather related information. The customer retention improved and Nokia expanded this model from India to Indonesia, Nigeria and China.   The opening up of the rural sector timed perfectly with the rapid rise and ubiquity of cheap information and communications and mobile technologies (ICTs) and their improved availability in rural areas. It started the trend towards “white collarisation” of this sector and let loose a new breed of rural entrepreneurs and innovations. Suddenly it does not seem odd to find a management graduate or a multinational company working on rural enterprises.    

A growing number of investors and angel financers have also entered the bottom-of-the-pyramid businesses, of which by far the most popular one is microfinance - providing small loans to people ignored as too poor by the traditional banking system. Microfinance has spread like wildfire across the globe, including in India, and is making horizontal linkages with agriculture, healthcare, housing, education and other aspects of the rural economy, and in turn opening expanding rural markets for products and services in each of these categories.   

There is a lot to be said for the changes happening in rural areas, but it is important not to get carried away.  There is still a steep learning curve ahead for most companies: businesses thrive when societies prosper. Rural areas, with their extreme poverty, have their own development needs, and it is in the interest of the private sector to look for solutions which can bring prosperity and broaden their markets. Even farmers need roads to drive cars. And you need electricity before you can sell a washing machine to a rural housewife.    

It is necessary for businesses to adopt a long term vision for rural areas, to make investment in hardware (infrastructure and technology) and software (research and development, education and skills). Emphasis should be on coupling innovations and business models with local needs to create scalable solutions instead of immediate and excessive profits. A case can be made for the fair-trade model, where companies (like Starbucks) invest in agriculture supply chains to ensure farmers are fairly remunerated.   Equally, companies must adhere to global standards when they enter rural markets. This means following nationally and internationally accepted norms on environmental standards, human rights, minimum wages, and child labour.   

The private sector itself has to be flexible and innovative, and explore different kinds of arrangements to enter, serve, and maintain a long-term presence in rural markets. This could take shape of public-private partnerships- the government is still a major player in the rural sector and should be engaged. It could mean setting up rural franchises to promote local ownership and generate local employment opportunities, which in turn will increase rural incomes.  It could even mean innovative home-grown models such as that of the Anand Milk Union Limited, better known as “Amul”, a profitable cooperative which brought together rural milk producers and spurred ‘White Revolution’ in India making it the largest producer of milk and milk products in the world.   

Doing business in rural areas provides us with a wonderful opportunity to serve the people, and to do so in a profitable way.  And that may make the lives of rural dwellers a little bit easier!

Rural Entrepreneurship "Marketable Products/Services"


Am I turning back the course of modern civilization when I ask the villagers not merely to grow raw produce, but to turn it into marketable products and thereby add a few more pies to their daily income?



There is a big divide between rural and urban areas in developing countries. Rural areas lack infrastructure such as roads, electricity and telecommunications, and institutions such as schools and hospitals. A large section of rural population remains engaged in agriculture and related sector.  This is largely because there are very few other opportunities for livelihood. Industries and private sector enterprises are largely absent in the rural landscape.

For younger population, the lack of employment opportunities in villages is a serious issue and there is a large-scale migration from rural areas to urban areas in search of jobs. However the jobs are scarce even in the cities. In absence of education and skills, they end up working as daily labourers in construction sites, as household labour or doing other odd jobs.

Such unorganised labour pay barely enough to subsist. They are unable to afford rents and end up staying on streets, in slums or unauthorised colonies, and are unable to save or provide decent food, education and healthcare for their families. They hit a hurdle again in terms of livelihood opportunities and their situation barely improves, and often becomes worse than what they started from.

Migration to cities cannot be an answer for all underemployed or unemployed rural citizens. There is a need to create employment opportunities on a large scale in rural areas so that people can earn decent livelihood without being forced to leave their fields and families behind in search of work. 

This requires a change in mindset and vision, followed by good planning and implementation of that vision.

To start with:
1. We need to start thinking of rural areas and people living there as assets

By investing in their education, training and skill development, rural people and their children can perform the same task as those being done by people in urban areas. The daughter or brother of a  farmer need not be farmer. S/He could be a doctor, an engineer, a scientist, an IT professional or an artist. It will mean millions of young and hard working people can join the modern knowledge economy and contribute to it. This would lead to greater innovations and productivity gains and will benefit everyone. The rural people will themselves come out of poverty and also generate surplus welfare gains for all.

2. Revival of Industries in Rural Areas

We need to stop looking at rural areas as bowls of natural resources, to be consumed and then discarded. Instead we need to bring industrialisation and technology to the villages, so that they can improve their agricultural practices, bring value addition to their farm produce, and diversify their economies. At the moment, most farmers simply sell their farm produce raw, and often to the middlemen and have to withstand fluctuation of prices. Industrialisation and value addition will allow them to increase their income and get assured returns.

It will also open greater employment opportunities in farm and non-farm sector, such as product research and designing, meterology/weather services, marketing, trading, advertising, EIA/studies and other skilled jobs.

Here technology can play some leap-frogging role. When we think of industrialisation, we need not think of big factories with polluting chimneys. Instead industrialisation can be at the level of households (such as grading machines) or at the level of cooperatives (such as grinding and processing) or at level of entrepreneurs (such as e-commerce for direct marketing of farm produce to consumers in urban and semi-urban areas). And yes, it can also be in the form of modern industries such as call centres, software development, indigenisation of technologies, and more.

3. Enabling Environment

To achieve the above, we need to invest in rural roads, electricity, transportation and communications. In addition, it requires availability of vocational institutes, workshops and training centres, and these should be staffed by good teachers, professionals and good managers.

Government departments such as agriculture centres, industrial development and enterprise support units, and other institutions such as banks need to be there and functioning properly.

Support of these institutions is required to to provide an enabling environment to rural entrepreneurs and youths and to encourage interested professionals to come and provide training and support in rural areas. This will allow more economic activities to be carried out in villages,  develop expertise and capacities within these villages, and increase employment opportunities and household incomes in rural areas.

    Facebook in Indonesia: 64 Million Users, But No Facebook Office

    Facebook in Indonesia
    Sam-poo-kong


    Indonesia is one of the top five countries worldwide in terms of Facebook users, and recently, rumors have spread that the California-based company is gearing up to open an office in Indonesia later this year.

    Charlene Chian, Facebook's head of communications for Asia-Pacific, says the social media site now has 64 million monthly active users in Indonesia. Dan Neary, Facebook VP for Asia-Pacific, shared at the recent IDByte conference that Indonesia as one of the key countries to help Facebook reach the next billion in its user base. Chian explains how they plan to reach out to more users in Indonesia:
    Given that Indonesia is one of our top five countries with most users (as of October 2012), we are definitely looking at how we can help Indonesians be able to benefit more from our platform. For a start, we are looking at working closer with digital media agencies through creative workshops to help them gain better skills and knowledge to better help their clients.
    SEE ALSO: A Peek Inside Facebook Office Singapore

    Despite the tremendous user base in Indonesia, Chian says, "No, we currently have no plans to set up an office in Indonesia." For now, that leaves Indonesia as the only country in the top five without its own office.

    Image courtesy of siska maria eviline/Flickr
    This article originally published at Tech in Asia here

    U.N. peacekeeper of TPDF" killed by M23 Rebels

    Ex Lt Ahmed Mlima (TPDF)

    Report By: Kenny Katombe and Chrispin Mvano
    KINSHASA (Reuters) - 

    A U.N. peacekeeper was killed and another injured during a third day of fighting between government forces and rebels in eastern Congo on Sunday, as the army pressed toward the rebel stronghold of Rutshuru. 

    The U.N. mission in Congo (MONUSCO) said, the Tanzanian peacekeeper was killed during fighting with M23 rebels in the town of Kiwanja, north of the regional capital Goma, the largest city in eastern Congo.


    "The soldier died while protecting the people of Kiwanja," Martin Kobler, the head of MONUSCO, said in a statement. The previous round of clashes between the army and rebels in late August killed at least two Tanzanian peacekeepers.


    Following two months of relative calm in the region, fighting flared up on Friday after peace talks in Uganda broke down when M23 pressed for a full amnesty for its leaders. Each side blamed the other for starting the fighting.


    President Joseph Kabila, who last week threatened a return to military action, said an unconditional amnesty not an option.

    A Congolese army officer on the front line said the army took Kiwanja and Kalingera from M23 on Sunday, a day after wresting the strategic town of Kibumba near the Rwandan border from the insurgents.

    Fighting was continuing at Kiguri, 25 km (15 miles) north of Goma, he said.
    The army had also opened a second front to the north of M23 positions and was moving southward to Rutshuru, officers said.

    "We are consolidating the zones we have conquered," army spokesman Colonel Olivier Hamuli told Reuters near the front line. "Very soon we will take Rutshuru. Those who disarm we will accept, the others we will pursue."

    M23 said in a statement on Sunday it had withdrawn its troops from Kiwanja, accusing the army of sending in fighters in civilian clothing to try to draw U.N. troops into the conflict.
    M23 threatened to withdraw its delegation from the stalled peace talks in Kampala unless there was an immediate end to hostilities. It said it would then launch a large-scale counter-offensive.

    U.N. BRIGADE
    Congo's army, supported by a new U.N. intervention brigade, scored its first victories against the rebel movement, which has been fighting for nearly two years, in late August, forcing the rebels away from Goma.

    The U.N. brigade has a tough new mandate to eliminate armed groups in the eastern provinces, though it has not been involved in the past three days of fighting.
    The support of the brigade and the weakening of the rebels has fuelled belief that Congo's army - notoriously disorganized, undisciplined and under-supplied - could defeat M23.

    Army sources told Reuters reporters in Goma that M23 had been weakened by desertions, with some 40 rebels taking advantage of a corridor created by the government troops to allow then to flee rebel lines.

    M23 began in early 2012 as a mutiny by soldiers demanding the government implement the terms of a 2009 peace deal signed with a previous Rwanda-backed rebel group, many of whose members had been integrated into the army.

    U.N. investigators and the Congolese government have accused Rwanda of supporting M23, charges Rwanda has repeatedly denied.

    Army spokesman Hamuli said some M23 fighters had fled towards the Rwandan border in the face of the army advance.

    "There are small pockets of M23 resistance in the hills near Rwanda," he said. "We think Rwanda has to prove its good faith and oblige M23 to disarm, or disarm them itself."
    He refused to discuss the possibility of a return to peace talks in Kampala. "We are soldiers," he said. "We will continue to do our jobs as soldiers."

    (Reporting by Pete Jones; Writing by Daniel Flynn; Editing by Alison Williams)

    Dillish Matthews - The winner of BBA The Chase, 2013


    Dillish Matthews, the winner of the last edition of Big Brother Africa (The winner of BBA The Chase, 2013) seems to be adapting to fame and settling well into her celebrity life.

    The 22-year-old Namibian seems to be going down the route of most female celebs who once in a while want to show us they've got a fab body by taking her top off. Sad though, Dillish didn't turn around for a 'full disclosure'.

    Dillish who made a quick trip to Johannesburg but has returned to Nigeria which seems to be the entertainment capital for BBA housemates. Days earlier, Dillish visited Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomole before going to party with fellow BBA housemate Selly at Sofa Lounge, Abuja on October 19, 2013. 

    14 Facebook Tools You Didn't Know Existed

    You know all about Facebook's basic tools. You can post statuses and share articles with the best of 'em. But how often do you check your Activity Log? What is the Browse tool for?
    You're not off the hook either, Brand Pages. You may know that Facebook Exchange targets ads based on user's online activity, but did you know you can create Custom Audiences to share content with?
    For these and other Facebook tools you probably aren't using, check out the gallery. Hone those Facebook skills to get the most of out of world's most popular social site.
    Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.
    Image: Flickr, mkhmarketing

    The Beginner's Guide to Facebook


    The-beginner-s-guide-to-facebook-d3edbb6404
    Against all odds, you likely know someone who still hasn't succumbed to the lure of Facebook. Maybe you’re a beginner yourself. Or perhaps you just haven’t had the gosh darn time to explore every last corner of the world’s most expansive social network.
    Below, we offer a refresher course for those eager to learn more about the basics of Facebook. Let’s take a social stroll through the network’s main features, policies and culture norms.
    Even if you’re a pro, it’s fun to look at the platform through a beginner’s eyes. If you were a Facebook virgin, what would you think of the social network?

    1. Timeline

    Before you begin searching for friends, it’s important to complete your Timeline(aka your personal profile), which includes everything from uploading a profile picture and cover photo to outlining your employment history to determining yourrelationship status (OK, that’s optional). It’s called a timeline because you can include information, important milestones and memories spanning your entire life. Timeline is incredibly nuanced, and encourages you to include as much detail as possible, and many, many people do — so, don’t be shy!
    Check out these additional resources for building the best Timeline:

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