Because I Am A Girl

To avoid any confusion I am not a girl.  Because I Am a Girl is a program of Plan Canada that is trying to raise the quality of life for girls in the developing world.   My friend Gina introduced me to this program.  I was amazed at what happens when you give a girl a chance.

Men hold almost all the power in the developing world.  This means that girls and women have fewer choices.  The latest issue of National Geographic pointed out that in some places women spend hours each day collecting water.  In some cultures women who let men carry water are regarded as lazy.  This leads mothers to leave their 4 year olds in charge of their younger siblings so their mother can fetch drinking water.  Some parents around here won’t even let their 10 year olds walk home from school.   So what really is the price of water in a society?

One of the keys to helping the developing world is breaking the cycle that prevents women from unleashing their true value in society.  Women are more than baby factories.

What happens when a girl gets a chance?

  • When a girl in lhe developing world recieves seven more years of education, she marries four years later, and has 2.2 fewer children
  • Educated girls grow into educated women, who – research shows – have healthier babies and are more likely to educate their children.
  • An extra year of primary school boosts girls’ future wages by 10 to 20 percent.
  • An extra year of secondary school boosts girls’ future wages by 15 to 25 percent.
  • When girls and women earn income, they reinvest 90 percent of it into their families, as compared to only 30 to 40 percent for a man.

… and what happens when she doesn’t.

  • 70 percent of the world’s 130 million out-of-school youth are girls.
  • One girl in seven in developing countries marries before age 15; 38 percent marry before age 18.
  • One-quarter to one-half of girls in developing countries become mothers before age 18.
  • Pregnancy is the leading cause of death among girls ages 15 to 19 worldwide.
  • Seventy-five percent of HIV-infected youth in Africa are girls.

I am a father of two girls.  I’m glad my girls live in a society where they are valued as a human and not just a woman.  Girls need a chance to grow up to contribute more of their brain power to society rather than their physical power.  Let’s let girls be girls.

DRM Sucks

I don’t care if it’s music or software or videos, locking access to the product only hurts the customer.  People that are going to steal your intellectual property are going to find a way to steal it regardless of how you try and protect it.

I was having some hardware problems the other day and after a while of fighting with the problem I decided it would be easier to bring my laptop back to a factory install and go from there.  I was only half right.  The hardware problem went away but I introduced a number of problems all in someway related to some kind of digital rights management.

First it was my music.  My computer was no longer authorized by iTunes.  It’s the same computer as last week but because I reinstalled the OS Apple thinks I have a new computer, I wish!  So I now have three of my five available computers authorized even though there are only two computers involved.  In a house of four people, where everyone has at least one computer, five authorizations may not be enough.   It took over 6 hours to re-transfer music and audio-books that I already had on my iPod.  Apple, smarten up!  That’s not fair, it’s not Apple’s fault.  It’s the music industry that has it’s head in the sand.  By and large the music on my iPod is music I bought either on CD or from the iTunes store.  As a result I had “licensing” problem.  I can get around these problems by doing what almost everyone else does and download my music from the Internet.  Is that really what the rights owners want me to do?

Then came the software for my GPS.  The original disk I bought a few years ago has not faired well.  It is scratched to the point where my computer will not read the disk.  Sure I can download a version from the support site but it needs the original software installed before it can do an update.  I was able find a work around but that only solved part of my problem.  I still don’t have my map files installed.  I can’t get replacement media from Garmin so I guess I’ll have to go with an opensource solution for the maps.

I even had problems with my Adobe Acrobat software.  I’ve been using Acrobat 7 pro for a few years.  It works fine.  It turns out that Adobe no longer supports Acrobat 7, they are on to version 9 now.  As a result I can no longer download version 7 from the Adobe website.  Luckily I was able to find a version on my machine but it wouldn’t work on Vista.  There is apparently a known compatibility issue.  I got tired of fighting with that and upgraded to version 9.  Maybe that was part of their strategy?

I just can’t help thinking that the only people that are affected by all these hoops or the people that are trying to abide by the rules.  My experiences over the last couple of days are really making question why I should.