<div class="gmail_quote">.........Learning from our neighbors ???<br><br>Uganda Deal for Up to 300,000 Laptops to Aid Civil Services<br><div style="background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255);"><div style="width: 655px;"><div style="margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt 25px 0pt 0pt; width: 470px; float: left;">
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By Edris Kisambira<br>
April 23, 2008 — IDG News Service — <br>
<br>
An agreement with an international joint venture to supply up to <br>
300,000 laptops mainly to civil-service employees will help the <br>
Ugandan government make its workers more efficient and facilitate the <br>
delivery of services, officials say.<br>
<br>
The venture, Tropix/Founder Computer Co., has supplied a first batch <br>
of 3,000 laptops to the Civil and Corporate Employees Computer <br>
Ownership Programme (CICOCO), a US$106 million project intended to <br>
help the government jump-start its e-government program.<br>
<br>
The thinking behind the laptop project, according to government <br>
officials, is to get the civil service as competitive in the delivery <br>
of services as private sector. The adoption of ICT is expected to <br>
change the way government officials handle public affairs and speed <br>
service delivery.<br>
<br>
"I think the civil service will be improved greatly now that we will <br>
be able to continue with our work even when we are not in the formal <br>
office environment," said David Arinaitwe, a spokesman for the <br>
Ministry of Foreign Affairs.<br>
<br>
"I think that on a larger scale, it is going to change the way the <br>
civil service works government will work better, more transparent, <br>
and [it] reduces cost providing services," Arinaitwe said.<br>
<br>
Tropix/Founder is a joint venture involving investors from the U.S., <br>
Australia and China, with the laptops themselves manufactured in <br>
China. Uganda's ICT Ministry is monitoring the project, which is <br>
funded by the Chinese government through grants from a Chinese <br>
development bank, Exim. <br>
<br>
Each laptop will cost $699 through a loan scheme from a local bank, <br>
Stanbic Bank. The bank will offer loans for the purchase of the <br>
laptops in repayment packages over 12 months, 24 months or 36 months. <br>
A special 48-month package will be reserved exclusively for civil <br>
servants who hold accounts with Stanbic Bank.<br>
<br>
The computers come with a 120G-byte SATA hard disk; 1G byte of RAM; a <br>
14.1-inch WXGA LCD screen; and a 1.6GHz Pentium dual-core T2330 <br>
processor. They also come with a DVD writer, USB ports, integrated <br>
graphics, wireless Internet card, independent web camera, a TV card <br>
and the home edition of Windows XP operating system, among other <br>
specifications.<br>
<br>
Civil servants' children can also purchase the computers under the <br>
same arrangements, but need approval from their parents. <br>
<br>
The government also plans to pursue a computer scheme for students in <br>
the next phase of its e-government program. Such a scheme will be <br>
aimed at covering the needs of students from secondary school-level <br>
to university.<br>
<br>
The laptops are part of a public-sector reform program created to <br>
improve delivery of services, according to Nicholas Sunday Olwor, the <br>
senior assistant secretary to the minister of state for ICT.<br>
<br>
--- End forwarded message ---<br>
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