Though Vietnam ranks among the top 20 countries for access to the
internet, there remains a widening gap between users in urban and rural
areas, IT experts said.
According to the Vietnam Internet
Association (VIA) around 30 million out of nearly 90 million people in
the country use the internet. Yet, most internet subscribers are
concentrated in cities.
Association president Vu Hoang
Lien attributed the situation to internet service providers not
understanding and failing to meet farmers’ needs.
“Many
farmers still do not know the benefits of the internet,” he said,
adding, “Some believe the internet to be less interesting than TV game
shows.”
Association vice president Nguyen Long said he was
not worried by infrastructure and internet connection equipment in
Vietnam .
It was the content that service providers
should utilise to attract farmers who account for over 70 percent of the
country’s population, he said.
Recent years have seen programmes bring computers and internet access to rural and mountainous areas free of charge.
Yet, Long said, there remained little relevant content for farmers.
“So what is the point of bringing computers?” was the question posed to
participants at a recent workshop entitled “The Future of Internet in
Vietnam ” in Hanoi .
IT experts at the workshop agreed
that the explosion of the internet in recent years mainly centred on
entertainment services and on-line games, while practical content that
served farmers, like training and health information were almost
neglected.
Deputy General Director of Dong Duong Telecom
Pham Van Chien said due to limitations in foreign language proficiency
among farmers it was important to encourage the use of Vietnamese
language in internet contents.
Deputy Director of the
Vietnam Internet Network Information Centre Tran Minh Tan said it was
essential to customise information on the internet as much as possible
by using Vietnamese domains.
He cited the name of an
on-line newspaper VnExpress that many farmers usually typed it wrong.
Using Vietnamese domains would help farmers connect more, Tan said.
Other internet service providers called upon the VIA to build more
content in Vietnamese to prevent farmers from having to access foreign
websites.
Earlier, Long said while many companies were
willing to supply equipment and infrastructure to rural and mountainous
areas for free, others remained indifferent to the programme.
Director of FPT Telecom Corporation’s Northern Infrastructure
Development Centre, Nguyen Cong Toan said telecom enterprises like FPT,
Viettel and Vietnam Post and Telecommunications Group (VNPT), had a
relatively similar internet coverage strategy nation-wide.
Yet, they had not worked together to build content, each still working for itself, he said.
Chien of Dong Duong Telecom, meanwhile, said transmission lines and
internet connection equipment were also important in addition to
content.
He said wireless technology would be the most
suitable solution for rural and mountainous areas. The State and private
enterprises must supply wireless access to help farmers reach beyond
their homes, Chien added.
Association president Vu Hoang
Lien stressed a need for educational and entertainment resources to
farmers. He said these areas would attract attention to other aspects
like health and the application of science and technology in
agriculture.
He cited the case of farmer Dang Vu Dai in
Central Highlands Gia Lai province’s Kim Nang hamlet whose family has
become one of the most successful in the region thanks to the
applications of knowledge supplied by the internet to agricultural
cultivation.
About his experience, Dai recalled he found much of the advice on-line “absurd” compared to traditional farming methods.
“Yet, I persisted and applied the advice fearlessly,” he remembered.
Dai has become a “lecturer” and guided other farmers in his hamlet on how to apply the internet to their production./.