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Archive for April, 2006

Speaker: John Wilbanks

Friday, April 28th, 2006

Seminar location:
Corudra 100, Stanford University

Seminar time:
3:00pm-4:30 pm

Speaker bio:
John Wilbanks is the Executive Director of Science Commons at Creatie Commons. He comes to Creative Commons from a Fellowship at the World Wide Web Consortium in Semantic Web for Life Sciences. Previously, he founded and led to acquisition Incellico, a bioinformatics company that built semantic graph networks for use in pharmaceutical discovery. Before founding Incellico, John was the first Assistant Director at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School and also spent time in Washington, DC, USA as a legislative aide to U.S. Representative Fortney (”Pete”) Stark. John holds a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy from Tulane University.

From creativecommons.org

Seminar: Heather Hudson, From Rural Village to Global Village: ICTs in Development

Thursday, April 27th, 2006

Seminar details:
Thursday 27 April 2006
3:30-5:00pm
DV Lounge, 2nd Floor Cordura Hall
Stanford University

Seminar speaker:
Professor Heather E. Hudson is Director of the Telecommunications Management and Policy Program in the School of Business and Management at USF.

She received her MA and PhD in Communication Research from Stanford. She is the author of From Rural Village to Global Village: Telecommunications for Development in the Information Age (January 2006) and several other books including Global Connections: International Telecommunications Infrastructure and Policy, Electronic Byways, Rural America in the Information Age, Communication Satellites: Their Development and Impact, and When Telephones Reach the Village.

Dr. Hudson has planned and evaluated communication projects in northern Canada, Alaska, and more than 50 developing countries in Africa, Asia and the Pacific, the Middle East, the Caribbean, and Latin America. She has consulted for government agencies, consumer and indigenous organizations, telecommunications companies, and international organizations including the World Bank, the ITU, UNDP, UNESCO, USAID, CIDA, International Development Research Centre (IDRC), and the Commonwealth of Learning. She has published many articles and presented numerous conference papers and expert testimony on telecommunications applications and policy issues such as universal service, information infrastructure, and telecommunications planning for socio-economic development.

She has been a Sloan Industry Fellow at Columbia University’s Institute for Tele-Information (CITI), a Fulbright Distinguished Lecturer for the Asia/Pacific and an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Hong Kong, Senior Fellow at CIRCIT (the Centre for International Research on Communication and Information Technologies) in Australia, and Fellow at the East-West Center in Hawaii.

Seminar abstract:
Connectivity and Development: Strategies to Increase Access

Access to telecommunications as a means to obtain and share information is critical to the development process. The good news is that access to voice services has improved dramatically in recent years in developing countries, thanks largely to newly available and more affordable wireless (mobile) services. The bad news is that Internet access is still very limited, and that broadband, a key requirement for productive use of many Internet resources and other services such as IP telephony (VOIP), is still largely unavailable and/or unaffordable. These conditions could severely hamper developing countries’ competitiveness and limit exploitation of the Internet’s potential for social and economic applications – in commerce, education, health and other public services.

This presentation examines the current status of Internet and broadband access as well as wireless (mobile) access in developing regions, with data from Africa, South and Southeast Asia and the Caribbean. It then examines lessons learned from the growth of wireless that may be relevant for broadband including the impact of competition on innovative services and pricing, the enormous pent-up demand for communication services, and the irrelevance of past regulatory distinctions. The presentation then proposes strategies to increase investment in Internet access including broadband through such means as limiting exclusivity periods in licenses, encouraging resale, facilitating use of broadband wireless technologies, reducing local barriers such as permits and fees, and using incentives and targeted subsidies to extend service to schools and rural and isolated communities.

Brij Kothari in The Times of India

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006


2004 Fellow Brij Kothari was feature in The Times of India for Google’s aid to his literacy project, PlanetRead. Kothari said the support from the world’s most preferred search engine on the Internet “lends tremendous credibility and visibility” to the project and “allows us to dream about its implementation in all languages in India and in other countries too” Read the rest of this entry »

Khalid Quadir’s BRAC begins operating digital business centres

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006

With the advancement in the technology, it is now crucial for any individual to have access to the latest communication technologies to face the challenges of the modern world.

To equip better of the semi-urban and rural population with the modern communication amenities, BRACNet has started operating with an aim to bring Internet and data connectivity to the masses by building “digital business centres,” says a press release. Read the rest of this entry »

Michael Chertok selected for second round of BiD Challenge

Wednesday, April 26th, 2006

Michael Chertok’s plan Digital Divide Data in Motion was selected for the final round of the BiD challenge. Read the rest of this entry »

Seminar: Jim Forster, Cisco

Thursday, April 20th, 2006

Seminar details:
Thursday, 20 April 2006
3:30pm-5:00pm PST
Cordura 100

Seminar speaker:
Since earning his B.S. degree in computer engineering from Rutgers University in 1976, Jim Forster has spent 29 years in the computer industry, specializing in communication, networks and operating systems. After working for two Silicon Valley startups that failed he joined a “completely different” fledging company with about two dozen employees, Cisco Systems, in 1988. Forster wrote Cisco’s first OSI implementation in 1989 and subsequently managed engineering development or led architecture in various areas of router software, including routing protocols, X.25, Frame Relay, ISDN, ATM and DOCSIS Cable Routers. He is currently working on wireless Internet Access systems for developing countries.

Forster is an author RFC-1613, “X.25 Over TCP”, has been awarded several patents, and is a Cisco Systems Distinguished Engineer.

Seminar: Kevin Crean, OneRoof

Thursday, April 13th, 2006

Seminar details:
Thursday, 16 March 2006
3:30pm-5:00pm
Cordura 100

Seminar speaker:
Kevin Crean is Vice President of OneRoof, a “social franchise that provides essential goods and services in rural communities of the developing world.

Our aim: to demonstrate that entrepreneurs who are highly ethical, locally savvy and globally networked can significantly alleviate poverty in their communities—and can do so in a profitable, scalable way that will enable us to expand our franchise to all corners of the developing world.”

Kevin is a graduate of the College of William and Mary and of the Texas Tech University School of Law. After practicing for two years as a commercial litigator in Houston, Texas, Kevin moved to Bangkok, Thailand, where he became an International Legal Consultant for a prominent international law firm, Siam Premier International. During 1992, Kevin practiced as an international lawyer primarily in the areas of foreign direct investment, joint ventures, international banking, leasing, lobbying, and construction. Over the past several years, Kevin has practiced law in Seattle, Washington, where he has taken significant responsibility on large, complex litigation matters, including primary responsibility for the development of Plaintiff’s technical case in Auvil et al. vs. CBS “60 Minutes” (the Alar class action litigation). Over the course of his career, Kevin has gained extensive experience working with experts in a variety of scientific and technical fields, including medicine, risk assessment, and engineering. He has worked with World Corps in 2005 on program development and on legal matters related to the transition to OneRoof. Kevin lives with his wife and two young daughters in Seattle.

Taken from the One Roof website.

Seminar: Tom Byers, Stanford Technology Ventures Program

Thursday, April 6th, 2006

Seminar details:
April 6, 2006
3:30pm-5:00pm*
Cordura Hall, room 100

Speaker biography:

Tom Byers is a professor at Stanford University where he focuses on high-technology entrepreneurship education. He is founder and a faculty director of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program (STVP), which serves as the entrepreneurship center for the engineering school. STVP includes the Mayfield Fellows work/study program, Educators Corner website of teaching resources, and global Roundtable on Entrepreneurship Education conferences. Tom is also a faculty director of the AEA/Stanford Executive Institute, a general management program for technology executives. Tom is co-author of the textbook called “Technology Ventures: From Idea to Enterprise” (McGraw-Hill, 2005). Tom also holds a visiting professor appointment at the London Business School and University College London.

Please click here to read more.

*Please note: This seminar begins at 3:30pm.

Panelis: Nat Goldhaber

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
Nat Goldhaber
Managing Director and Co-Founder
Claremont Creek Ventures

Nat Goldhaber brings two decades of experience as an investor and executive in Silicon Valley. Before co-founding Claremont Creek Ventures, Nat was most recently the founder and CEO of Cybergold, Inc., which he took public and subsequently sold to MyPoints, where, as a board member, he helped engineer a sale to United Airlines. More

Claremont Creek Ventures: Claremont Creek Ventures is a venture capital firm investing in early-stage information technology companies. Our investment professionals are experienced managers and proven venture investors. Our team shares a deep commitment to helping entrepreneurs build successful companies from the ground up. We focus on IT sectors where we have deep domain expertise, including – but not limited to – mobility, healthcare, and security markets.
http://www.claremontvc.com

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Panelist: Margarita Quihuis

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
Margarita Quihuis
Founder and President
Indigo Financiera

Currently a social entrepreneur and founder of Indigo Financiera, Margarita Quihuis’s career has ranged from developing high-end aerospace systems to gender-focused design to leading the pioneering Women’s Technology Cluster business incubator and most recently as a venture capitalist and Reuters Fellow at Stanford.

Her current efforts include financial innovation for the unbanked both in the United States and in developing countries and encouraging technological innovation on behalf of humanitarian needs. In 2004, she was recognized by Women’s eNews as one of their ‘21 Leaders for the 21st Century’ for her efforts in increasing access to capital for women entrepreneurs and was named as one of WITI’s Women to Watch in 2003.

Indigo Financiera: Indigo is a radical proposal to develop a micro-private equity fund whose source of capital comes from profits generated by a remittances service business targeted toward the US Mexican diaspora. Inspired by Working Assets, the remittances service provides a sustainable business model that allows the Indigo fund to invest in SMEs and take more risks in this underserved market.
http://www.indigofinanciera.com/

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Panelist: David McClure

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
David McClure
Unitus Board Member; VP, Product Development, SimplyHired.com

Dave McClure has worked in the high-tech industry for over fifteen years. Dave is actively engaged in promoting microfinance awareness and involvement through the Silicon Valley Microfinance Network. He is also a member of the Full Circle Fund, a San Francisco-based non-profit formed by SF Bay Area entrepreneurs addressing local issues in affordable housing, education, and technology access.

After graduating from Johns Hopkins University in 1988, Dave worked as a programmer and database consultant for several Silicon Valley companies, including Intel and Microsoft. In 1994, Dave started Aslan Computing, an Internet and e-commerce consulting firm, which was later acquired by Servinet / Panurgy in 1998. Dave has also helped develop and bring to market a variety of Internet and e-commerce businesses and continues to be an active advisor and angel investor in several new startups including Feedster, HealthUnity and WellFund. From 2001 to 2004, Dave was director of marketing for PayPal Developer Network program. In January 2005, Dave joined SimplyHired.com as their director of marketing. SimplyHired.com is a “vertical search” startup which runs the world’s largest search engine for jobs. SimplyHired was named by Time Magazine as one the Top 50 Coolest Web sites for 2005. Dave is also founder and co-chair for the SDForum Search SIG, a technology user group covering emerging topics in the internet search industry.

Unitus: Unitus is a global microfinance accelerator that acts as a social venture capital investor for the microfinance industry. Unitus identifies the highest-potential microfinance institutions (MFIs) in developing countries and helps accelerate their growth through capital investments and capacity-building consulting, thus empowering them to help exponentially more poor people worldwide. In doing so, Unitus aims to demonstrate that MFIs can be run as profitable, large-scale, poverty-focused businesses with links to local capital markets. As of March 2006, Unitus had eight MFI Partners worldwide serving more than 540,000 poor clients. Based in Redmond, Wash., USA, and with an office in Bangalore, India, Unitus relies on innovative financial instruments and the financial resources of like-minded individuals and foundations to fulfill its mission. Unitus received the 2006 Fast Company / Monitor Group Social Capitalist Award for taking an innovative, entrepreneurial, business-minded approach to alleviating global poverty.
http://www.unitus.com

Panelist: Bhairav Trivedi

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
Bhairav Trivedi
Co-founder and CEO
PayQuik

Bhairav Trivedi, founder and CEO of PayQuik, has over 19 years experience working with banks and financial institutions, in areas of profitability, strategy development and product/market development. Prior to starting PayQuik, Bhairav worked at McKinsey and Company in New York, where he served banks and financial institutions on strategic issues related to globalization of their portfolios. Before joining McKinsey, Bhairav headed up a group of strategy consultants serving Total Systems (TSYS) customers at Fair Isaac, a specialty consulting firm. He was responsible for providing strategic advice to some of the largest card issuers in maximizing revenue and managing credit risk exposure on their portfolios. Prior to Fair Isaac, he worked at Providian Bancorp, where he helped develop the Secured Credit Card product and grew it to one of the largest portfolios in the industry. Bhairav has an MBA from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and a Masters in Engineering Economic Systems from Stanford University. He also holds an undergraduate degree in engineering from India.

PayQuik: PayQuik provides infrastructure and services to financial institutions, money transfer agent networks and others engaged in the global cross-border money transfer industry. PayQuik has developed an industry standard platform to provide transaction processing in a manner fully compliant with Patriot Act and Bank Secrecy Act regulations in the USA and with regulatory environments in several countries worldwide. The Company offers a proven, turnkey, end-to-end, fully compliant, outsourced money transfer solution as an alternative to building and maintaining an in-house platform. The solution provides full compliance and fraud/risk management modules, other money transfer processing infrastructure and fully integrated back-end customer service and technical support at a fraction of the cost it an organization would incur to develop a comparable system internally. The Company offers a “shared network” in which participating customers can elect to utilize the money transfer originating and receiving locations of other PayQuik customers. This creates a “network effect” and provides customers with greatly expanded geographic coverage and multi-channel global origination and delivery capabilities. This shared network offers potential entrants the first viable opportunity to compete realistically with the current closed system market leaders. The PayQuik
platform is expected to be deployed in over 70 countries by year end 2006. http://www.PayQuik.com

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Panelist: Gabriel Manjarrez

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
Gabriel Manjarrez
Co-founder, EVP
Progress Financial Corp (Progreso Financiero)

Gabriel Manjarrez is a co-founder of Progress Financial, a financial services firm focused on providing unsecured consumer loans to the unbanked and underbanked Hispanic community. The loans are originated, underwritten, serviced and collected entirely through Progress Financial and its proprietary systems and processes. All customer interactions and documentation are in Spanish. The target population for the service is the large segment of the Hispanic market for which traditional unsecured consumer credit facilities are unavailable and/or usuriously expensive. Progress Financial started loan operations in March 2006, with current results far outpacing demand and repayment projections.

Before founding Progress Financial, Gabriel was Senior Vice President, National Hispanic Segment Executive at Bank of America in Charlotte, NC. He was responsible for developing and overseeing the execution of the company’s Hispanic marketing, sales and retention strategies across all the consumer product groups, which included Deposits (checking and savings), Card Services (credit and debit), e-Commerce, Remittances, Insurance, and Consumer Real Estate. As overall segment leader he also drove national Hispanic employee hiring strategies across the 6,000+ retail branch network, as well as product development, service and fulfillment, and other initiatives that impacted the bank’s Hispanic consumer market acquisition. He was directly responsible for setting and overseeing the bank’s Hispanic consumer account sales and retention goals, with over $30m in annual marketing investing, as well as additional ongoing related technology and research spending. Hispanic customer acquisition at Bank of America grew 5-fold during Gabriel’s tenure as segment leader.

Gabriel was also actively involved with the Bank’s efforts at promoting financial services access to all sectors of the population. He testified before the U.S. Congress on behalf of the Bank on the subject of helping bring financial services to the unbanked and underserved communities.

Before joining Bank of America in early 2003, he was founding managing director for RedLatino, Inc., a Hispanic-focused subsidiary of Redf, one of the largest marketing services and marketing strategy firms in the southeastern United States. There, he helped financial services clients develop and execute key Hispanic marketing strategies for checking, debit cards, money remittances and mortgages.

In 1995 Gabriel founded and managed Cendant’s Latin American operations, which he subsequently sold to a marketing firm in Mexico City. Gabriel began his career in the early 1990s as a consultant for McKinsey & Company, Inc., serving clients in Mexico and India.

Gabriel is a Board Member of Club Arca, a CA-based successful venture targeting the Hispanic consumer in the US with a value-added membership program.
Gabriel received a master’s degree in business administration from the Stanford Graduate School of Business and a bachelor’s degree in business from Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) in Mexico City. He was a founding member and president of ITAM Association of Collegiate Entrepreneurs as well as president of the Mexico City chapter of the Stanford MBA alumni association.

He enjoys Southeast Asian cooking, traveling, snow skiing, water skiing and scuba diving.

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Panelist: Segeni Ng’ethe

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
Segeni Ng’ethe
Founder and President
MamaMikes

Mama Mikes is an online service that enables immigrants in Europe or the United States to send gift vouchers for a variety of practical and thoughtful items to their families and friends in Kenya and Uganda. Vouchers can be purchased for groceries, bedding, and airtime (phone minutes) for mobile phones. Before MamaMikes, an immigrant had only one option: visit a money transfer service, transfer the money (less the service charge) to their relative, and hope that this relative will use these funds for practical purchases. With MamaMikes, the immigrant is able to send the funds directly to a designated vendor to ensure that the purchase is made in accordance with their wishes.
http://www.mamamikes.com

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Moderator: Danny Ayala

Saturday, April 1st, 2006
Daniel Ayala
Senior Vice President and Group Head
Wells Fargo Global Remittance Services

Daniel Ayala is Senior Vice President and Product Management Manager of Wells Fargo’s Global Remittance Services division.He is responsible for developing, executing, and managing the bank’s global consumer remittance product strategy. His team is primarily focused on the development of consumer remittance products for Latin America and Asia. Danny and his team manage the InterCuenta Express, Dinero al Instante products focused on consumer remittances to India, the Philippines, Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador.

Daniel is a global payments systems expert with over 14 years of experience. Previously, he has been responsible for product management, marketing, and sales management activities for Citibank, BankOne, and Bank of America.

He graduated from DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois with a Bachelor’s Degree in Computer Science and received his MBA from Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Ayala is also a Certified Cash Manager (CCM) with the Association for Financial Professionals. In the past, he has lived in Bogota - Colombia, Caracas - Venezuela, Chicago - Illinois, and Miami - Florida. He and his family currently live in the San Francisco Bay Area in California.

Wells Fargo: Wells Fargo is a diversified financial services company with $422 billion in assets, providing banking, insurance, investments, mortgage and consumer finance to more than 23 million customers from more than 6,000 stores and the internet across North America and elsewhere internationally. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. is the only “Aaa”- rated bank in the United States.
http://www.wellsfargo.com