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Electronic Oasis


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  • January 28, 2013
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Electronic Oasis

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by

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Paul Salopek
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Dalifagi village, Ethiopia, 10°37'34.8'' N, 40°18'43.9'' E
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Water is gold in the Afar Triangle of Ethiopia. No surprise. It’s in one of the hottest deserts in the world. Walking for three days recently near the western scarp of the Rift Valley, guide Ahmed Alema Hessan and I found one smear of muddy rainwater to ease our camels’ thirst. But we stumbled across a new type of waterhole a day later—a coveted oasis of electrons, the village of Dalifagi.

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Apr 10
cesar ceballos cesar ceballos (Apr 10 2014 1:20PM) : what Paul is talking about is the afar triangle desert is the hottest desert in the world and what he saw in the desert
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Apr 10
Devonte Brown Devonte Brown (Apr 10 2014 1:39PM) : Water is gold everyone need it you need to drink water every day. more

It’s important because in that paragraph it talked about water and how its important.

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Oct 6
Vontay Farmer Vontay Farmer (Oct 06 2014 9:14AM) : Of course everybody water is key more

I feel that this article explains alot because this is what people have to go through every day.

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Oct 9
Noah Burton Noah Burton (Oct 09 2014 2:02PM) : i will like to ride a Camille more

i did not now that there was Camille in other places expect for Europe one day i will love to go there and have fun riding it and i like to go to eurpe also

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Nov 3
Kevin Meadows Kevin Meadows (Nov 03 2014 1:33PM) : What Happens If You Drink The " Golden " Water ? Is He Going To Get Sick ? What Will Be The Out Come If He Drinks The Water ? [Edited]
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Apr 10
Justin Perez Justin Perez (Apr 10 2014 1:36PM) : in this sentence he spoke about where he walked for three days in the rift valley
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Photograph by Paul Salopek

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The immense saltscapes that straddle the borders of Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Eritrea weren’t even mapped until the 1920s. For centuries, the martial Afar pastoralists who ruled the area resisted all incursions by the outside world. Today, though, they embrace the information revolution with a vengeance. “It has given them power,” says Mulukan Ayalu, 23, an Ethiopian government technician who maintains the tiny power plant at Dalifagi. “They can call different goat traders. They can choose their selling prices.”

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cesar ceballos cesar ceballos (Apr 10 2014 1:27PM) : this paragraph is about that old places that was not in the map onto the 1920 and how they was look for information revolution with a vengeance
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The diesel generators of Dalifagi don’t throw much shade. And they offer meager habitat for weaverbirds or gazelles. But the Chinese pistons chug out a 220-volt current for six hours a day. In the process, they’ve transformed an end-of-the road outpost that was pristine desert just 20 years ago into the latest hub of the information revolution—a magnet for Afar pastoralists who walk from miles around, desperate to slake their cell phone addiction with a battery charge.

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cesar ceballos cesar ceballos (Apr 10 2014 1:39PM) : this paragraph is about different animal habitat like the weaver birds and the gazelles
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Oct 9
Noah Burton Noah Burton (Oct 09 2014 1:57PM) : they really did that more

i did not now that they did that i thought that no other country has power now i now that more people got electric power NYC broadly gave them power to use

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Apr 10
Justin Perez Justin Perez (Apr 10 2014 1:21PM) : in this he spoke about a desert and something about the end of the road.

Mulukan Ayalu, who may be the busiest man in Dalifagi. Photograph by Paul Salopek

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As well master of the electronic oasis, Ayalu recharges nomad cell phones for a few cents. On Mondays—market day—trail-worn Afar pastoralists line up at his office door with the folds of their sarong-like shirts laden with dead cell phones of faraway neighbors. Customers who drop off their phones for recharging are given a handmade token. The numbers now rise into the hundreds. Some purveyors of scarce electrons on Africa’s information frontier get even more creative. In the nearby Afar town of Asaita, one local entrepreneur has jigsawed together a Frankensteinish apparatus that quick-charges clients’ phones in minutes.

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Oct 9
Noah Burton Noah Burton (Oct 09 2014 2:20PM) : other thing more

i want to now what are those thing that on the floor what i thing is that they use that for WiFi for what ever they use that for

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Apr 10
Justin Perez Justin Perez (Apr 10 2014 1:42PM) : he spoke about a guy named Ayalu and how he charged with cents.
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Oct 9
Noah Burton Noah Burton (Oct 09 2014 2:17PM) : let me tell you some thing more

that how you can tell that that’s not america because you now how we use the multiple plugs they use the same thing but littler and theirs plugs on all sides

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Nov 7
Kevin Meadows Kevin Meadows (Nov 07 2014 1:51PM) : What Is The Hand Made Coins For ? Do They Buy Special Goods ? Who Made Them ?
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Photograph by John Stanmeyer-VII

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At night, when the power is on, the residents of Dalifagi engage in a new cultural practice that didn’t diffuse from Manhattan—the power dinner, with cell phones clamped to ears. When two Afars meet in the desert, they often conduct a dagu, a formal exchange of news with a lengthy call-and-response greeting. “Now we dagu, dagu, dagu all the time on the phone,” Ahmed Alema Hessan says.

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Oct 9
Noah Burton Noah Burton (Oct 09 2014 2:07PM) : that allot of plugs more

why do they got so many plugs and just like i said from last time were are they getting all this power there is no energy in the county that he is in out there they have no phones or laptops to use all that power they don’t even have tv to use all that power

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Nov 7
Kevin Meadows Kevin Meadows (Nov 07 2014 2:00PM) : What Is A Dagu ? Who Is Ahmed Alema ? Where is He From ?

As oases go, the electronic waterhole at Dalifagi would never draw adventure tourists, much less inspire the verse of caravan poets, but it is the real story in sub-Saharan Africa. Nine hundred million people. A headlong sprint into the digital age that leaps over a century of analog technology. Exploding aspirations. Consequences unknown.

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Oct 14
Justin Perez Justin Perez (Oct 14 2014 2:33PM) : where is Dalifagi located more

is Dalifagi a special place is a very well known place or is it just there for show.

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In Ethiopia, the government is aggressively expanding its state-run mobile network. Last year, cell use ballooned by an astonishing 30 percent, to more than 17 million subscribers. In isolated Dalfagi, even the frontier rusticity of the communal wall plugs will fade. Next year, fixed power lines arrive. “Twenty years from now? There will be a different Afar people,” said Haji Boddaya Qibad, a local political leader of the nomads. “Life won’t be camels and sheep anymore.”

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Oct 9
Noah Burton Noah Burton (Oct 09 2014 1:49PM) : i like this \\ more

this is cool because he visited a country that nobody seen and that is cool a i don’t now how he can walk around the world i wont like to try to do the no forget it i cant ever go to my house

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Apr 11
Justin Perez Justin Perez (Apr 11 2014 1:10PM) : in this sentence he spoke about how a government had expanded its own state run mobile networks.
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Nov 7
Kevin Meadows Kevin Meadows (Nov 07 2014 2:02PM) : Why Is The Government So Aggressive ? Who Is Governor ? Is The Governor From Ethiopia ?
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Photograph by Paul Salopek

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DMU Timestamp: March 21, 2014 21:54

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