Introduction
The international Tamil Internet 2002 Conference and
Exhibition (TI2002), the fifth in the series, was held from 27-29
September 2002 in San Francisco, California, US. It was the first time
that a conference in this series was convened in the US. TI2002, with
the theme "Bridging the Digital Divide" was co-organised by the
International Forum for Information Technology in Tamil (INFITT) and the
Center for South Asia Studies and the Chair for Tamil Studies in the
University of California, Berkeley.
The offer by the American members of INFITT to host this
event was first made at the end of TI2001, held in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia in August 2001. The mood and the spirit in US then were so very
different from what they became just two weeks later: the 9/11 terrorist
attacks shook the nation to its core. Adding to the deep sorrow and
gloom, the Silicon Valley, where this conference was scheduled to be
held, suffered from unprecedented "dotcom" failures. Yet the US
Organising Committee of TI2002 led by Mr Mani Manivannan and Professor
Steve Poulos could not be deterred from their resolve to hold the event
as scheduled. It is a testimony to the Tamil Americans' can-do spirit.
Purpose
The primary purposes of TI conferences are threefold: To
provide a platform for exchange of views and ideas through the
Conference Hub, to help bring local communities together and create
awareness of Tamil Information Technology's benefits to the public
through the Community Hub, and to enable business growth and networking
through the Exhibition Hub. The conference in California continued that
tradition against all odds and achieved considerable success under the
circumstances.
Conference Hub
The conference was attended by about 200 delegates from
Canada, Germany, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Switzerland and
US. Some 50 speakers addressed a wide spectrum of issues as in the past
conferences, some ongoing and some new ones. They focused on technology,
content, community and business developments. They included Linux
operating system in Tamil, E-Government, teaching of Tamil through IT,
Tamil Unicode interfaces and implementation, latest developments in
Tamil language based technologies such as optical character recognition
(OCR) which is now ready for public use, search engines, machine
translation, speech synthesis and handwriting recognition. In addition,
the conference addressed opportunities for building Tamil cyber
communities and business networks. The meeting also became a lively
forum for interaction among Tamil IT-related scholars, technologists and
end users. One of the most surprising outcomes was the revelation that
quite a number of experts in their own field were not aware of the
considerable inroads Tamil language has made in the world of computing.
The conference deliberations led to a number of
initiatives covering a wide range of applications in Tamil:
Tamil Web Search
This project will produce a seamless interface with
which a user will be able to search for web content in Tamil. While
interacting with the user in Unicode, the search will also include Tamil
sites in TAB and TSCII encoding. This is in line with the INFITT's
policy of supporting only these two 8-bit schemes.
Ready Made Software for Tamil School Computer Labs
This project will produce a ready to use software
package based on open source technologies. It will include the Tamil
Linux operating system, networking software and desktop tools such as
word processing, graphic creation and Internet facility. With this
package Tamil schools will be able to set up computer labs, very quickly
and at very low costs.
Web-Based Tamil Email
This project will produce a set of tools that will help
web sites to include Tamil email services to their customers. Web
administrators will be able to set up and configure these tools with
their existing mail servers. For the user it will eliminate the need to
configure the email environment for Tamil.
The above three projects will be developed adapting Open
Source framework.
Tamil Unicode
TI2002 provided the opportunity for INFITT to meet with
the top officials of the Unicode Consortium to exchange views on issues
of mutual concern. Both parties agreed to have a closer liaison with
each other through specific representatives. The conference papers and
discussions on this subject from some of the leading experts in the
field demonstrated the viability of Tamil Unicode in Internet and
database applications.
Discussion Group on Collation
In view of the importance of collation in Tamil Data
Processing, INFITT has decided to start a Discussion Group to examine
the details.
Discussion Group on Tamil Digital Libraries Network
Another Discussion Group will be launched to explore all
the methodologies to link digital libraries with Tamil collections
around the world. E-commerce opportunities on Tamil books will also be
explored.
Project Madurai
In terms of content development, the already
well-established Project Madurai (PM) made a strategic decision during
this conference to place greater emphasis on Tamil diasporic writings.
Millions of Tamils have now migrated to different parts of the world and
have carved out their own singular identity and aspirations, and their
writings have both broadened and deepened the contours of Tamil
writings. Singapore, Malaysia and Europe have been identified as target
areas for the initial efforts in this new direction.
Tamil Heritage Foundation
A new e-archiving of Tamil cultural and heritage related
materials was first discussed at TI2001 in Malaysia and the Malaysian
Minister of Works, Dato' Seri S Samy Vellu seeded the project with a
grant of US$10,000. The project had now reached a sufficiently steady
state to be publicly celebrated. The Tamil Heritage Foundation (THF),
led by Dr N Kannan of Germany, was officially launched at the California
conference. This digital resource centre for Tamil culture and heritage
has gathered a considerable amount of items of scholarly as well popular
interest in the last one year alone.
Community Hub
The Community Hub was the focal point of web
familiarisation and hands-on practice for everyone ranging from children
to teens to adults.
International Web Competition
Prior to the conference, the US organisers of TI2002 had
initiated the first ever international web page design competition in
Tamil. Held over a two-month period, it attracted about 40 of
submissions from 4 countries. The international competition created not
only an awareness among the younger generation of Tamils that their
language is "cool" but also an espirit de corps among the Tamil school
communities of different countries.
Youth For Tamil IT (YFTI)
The above initiative from California had now led to an
even more ambitious project that would combine language, technology and
community welfare into a global effort to bridge the digital divide
among the less and more fortunate.
Christened the "Youth for Tamil IT" (YFTI) project, this
new initiative announced at TI2002 will bring together youth from
different countries around the world to develop a Tamil language based
IT program that will bring benefits to the underprivileged communities
among the Tamils. An international team of youth will bring their own
technical, business and linguistic abilities to create and implement
this community project. YFTI will be launched within months of this
conference and its first offering is expected to be implemented by the
next Tamil Internet conference in 2003.
Exhibition Hub
The exhibition of Tamil software and related materials
attracted a total of 2,000 visitors over three days. The economic
downturn and the sombre mood throughout the IT industry affected the
participation of the business community from both within America and
abroad. However, for the American Tamils this was the first time that
they had seen such a wide variety of Tamil-based software. The event
provided a rare opportunity for them to realise how IT savvy Tamil
language has become. The exhibition included many innovative software
products in Tamil such as digital dictionaries, computer games, Tamil
Front-End interfaces, and multimedia educational software.
US-India-INFITT Collaborative School Education
Project
One significant initiative, supported by the business
community in the U.S emerged from this conference. This is a
collaborative scheme between the American Indian Foundation (AIF) and
the Tamil Nadu Foundation (TNF) to expand the school education
initiative to cover a larger number of underprivileged sections in Tamil
Nadu. The suggestions that were discussed in TI2002 relating to IT and
school education will be suitably incorporated in this initiative.
Conclusion
Since the settlement of the Tamil keyboard and the
encoding issues in the last few conferences, the focus of this
conference had turned more towards other technology developments as well
as community development and content development issues. Much of the
deliberations at the California conference was emphasising the need for
connecting with community needs be they technological or content
developments. Another salient theme at this conference was how could
diasporic Tamils benefit from Tamil IT. In an increasingly English
dominated and globalized world, the role of Tamil and Tamil IT seemed at
odds to many of the younger generation participants. However, at the end
of the three-day event, there was much greater confidence that the power
of the Tamil IT can be put to effective use for the propagation and
preservation of Tamil culture and heritage and for the betterment of the
Tamil community worldwide.
Recommendations on INFITT
INFITT had been registered officially earlier this year
in California, USA and it had launched a membership drive, as agreed at
TI2001. Due to the very short time available to recruit sufficient
membership, the Constituent Assembly held on the last day of TI2002 (29
September 2002) concluded that elections be held only when the
membership reaches three times the number of the General Council
members, i.e. about 150 members in total, but with a reasonable
geographic spread. The current The Executive Committee was asked to
carry on its responsibilities until the elections, which are expected to
be held in the next three months.
It was agreed that the INFITT would also explore
opportunities to link with other international organisations in addition
to MINC and Unicode Consortium whose functions are compatible with the
objectives of INFITT.
Next Tamil Internet Conference
The Director of the Tamil Virtual University in Tamil
Nadu had conveyed an offer by the Tamil Nadu government to host Tamil
Internet 2003. The Executive Committee (EC) of INFITT decided to accept
this offer with gratitude. The INFITT Secretariat was tasked, as usual,
to coordinate the organisation of the conference with the assistance of
the Tamil Internet Steering Committee (TISC) of Tamil Nadu, which is an
affiliate of INFITT.
In view of the long delays experienced in getting
started with both TI2001 and TI2002, which subjected the conferences to
tremendous pressures towards the end, the EC had decided to begin the
preparations for the next conference (TI2003) immediately after the
conclusion of TI2002.
To that end, EC appointed Dr M Anandakrishnan as the
Chair of the International Organising Committee (IOC) and Dr K
Kalyanasundaram as the Chair of the Conference Programme Committee (CPC)
to start the planning for TI2003. The EC would also request the Chair of
TISC, Tamil Nadu to be the Chair of the Tamil Nadu Organising Committee
(TNOC) and Deputy Chair of the IOC. Another Tamil Nadu representative
would be requested to be the Deputy Chair of CPC. Other members would be
announced within a month.
Acknowledgement
The California conference concluded successfully and on
a high note with many new initiatives to bridge the digital divide,
which was the theme of the conference. INFITT recorded its deep
gratitude to the US Organising Committee under the leadership of Mani M
Manivannan for its members' unstinting support for this conference.
INFITT also thanked Prof Steve Poulos of the Center for South Asia
Studies and Prof George Hart, Chair for Tamil Studies in the University
of California, Berkeley. INFITT owes a debt to all the sponsors, the
media, volunteers and each and every one who made this conference
possible and fruitful.
Mani M. Manivannan,
Chair, Tamil Internet 2002 |