P2P Comes To Aid Relief
By Christopher Nickson
June 18, 2007
The new iCare peer-to-peer file sharing network won't work for music fans. Instead, it's going to come to the help of victims of natural disasters.
There’s a new P2P network coming. But it won’t be file-sharing this time. The new iCare network, invented by a pair of UC Berkeley students, will make for a much faster flow of disaster relief in the United States.
Anand Kulkarni and Ephrat Bitton, both working on their PhDs, were inspired by Hurricane Katrina and its nightmare aftermath. Communications were virtually impossible, and the logistics of relief became a nightmare in New Orleans.
Under their iCare system, which is currently in development, it would be come much easier to pair needs and supplies so survivors of disasters can start to reassemble their lives.
Survivors would list their needs, using cell phones or computers in aid centers. The system would then automatically send their requests to companies or organizations with the supplies to fill them. Maps showing the locations of victims are built into the system.
Of course, that’s only half the battle – the other part is delivery. However, iCare will have an algorithm program to find free space on trucks owned by companies that have signed up, and which will be go into the affected areas. Not only that, the program will be able to plot the fastest route for the driver to drop off the supplies where needed.
“There's a massive desire on the part of the public to help after disasters, and they just need a good way to transform that desire into something tangible for the victims,” said Kulkarni.
The plan isn’t for iCare to go it alone, but co-ordinate with existing agencies on aid relief.