Arab Times

By Rina Chandran

Uses simple words

-

Attic. Caramel. Truth is not a crossword puzzle. It is the address of India’s most famous monument – the Taj Mahal – on a mapping app that aims to help millions of slum dwellers, rural residents, refugees and those in need of emergency aid.

As smartphone­s become a common sight in developing nations and mapping technologi­es get more advanced, apps such as What3Words, CitoCode and Google’s Plus Code are making it possible to locate even the world’s most remote areas on a map.

But it is particular­ly useful in a country like India, where more than a quarter of the urban population lives in informal settlement­s which may lack street names and house numbers, said Giles Rhys Jones, chief marketing officer at What3Words.

“The lack of a formal address can be very limiting – from difficulty in receiving post to being unable to open a bank account or vote,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from London.

“Having a uniform system is a potentiall­y radical shift, as it enables digitisati­on of databases of addresses, land administra­tion geoportals, and accurate disaster and emergency service responses,” he said on Friday.

What3Words divides the Earth into 3 metre x 3 metre squares and assigns each box a unique threeword address. It is available as a mobile app in 36 languages, including five Indian languages introduced earlier this year, with plans for more.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross in the Philippine­s uses the system in disaster zones where buildings may be flattened and roads washed away.

In Mongolia, home to a large nomadic population, it is used in government documents and is recognised by many banks.

In a pilot for postal services in three Indian states last year, What3Words was faster than traditiona­l sorting methods, Jones said, adding that it would take less than five days to provide everyone in the country a three-word address.

More than a billion people live in slums and informal settlement­s, according to the United Nations, and they are often denied government documentat­ion and benefits because they lack a formal address.

“Accurate identifica­tion of a housing unit enables inhabitant­s to demand, access and pay for services such as electricit­y and water easily,” said Vikram Jain, director of social consultanc­y FSG in Mumbai.

“Rights can be accessed when an individual can be linked to a property accurately, which allows the individual to use, transfer and inherit rights confidentl­y,” he said.

For slum dwellers in the Indian city of Kolkata, Dublin-based nonprofit Addressing the Unaddresse­d uses GPS navigation system coordinate­s to create a 10-character word code that can then be located on Google maps.

“It has the potential to help a large number of people around the world,” said Google spokesman Dusan Farrington, referring to Plus Code.

“Our goal is that everyone, regardless of who they are or where they live, can be found on Google maps.” (RTRS)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait