Archive for October, 2008

iPerson.mobi: Instant Phone-Enabled Ride Sharing On Demand

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Your idea’s name

Instant Phone-Enabled Ride Sharing On Demand

Please select a category that best describes your idea

Environment Environment: How can we help promote a cleaner and more sustainable global ecosystem?

What one sentence best describes your idea?

Imagine Couchsurfing meets Ridesharing, but instant:location-aware mobile phones connect riders & drivers going the same way to share rides real-time.

11. Describe your idea in more depth.

There are always people driving where other people would like to go.  If those drivers could happily be matched up with those riders real-time and instantly, the world would save billions of car-miles a year, billions of gallons of fuel, billions of dollars, untold tons of CO2.  The world would be a cleaner, happier, more social, less-trafficky place.

Why don’t we do it?  In the end, lack of information, really.

If you were driving to the market and your friend who lives along the way needed to go there, you’d happily give him a ride.  However, if that friend were a stranger instead, and more so, you didn’t know he wanted to go to the market, you wouldn’t be giving him a ride.

The problem is lack of information.  Couchsurfing.com proves clearly that strangers are happy to help each other out - even let them sleep in their houses - we just want some way to first check each other out a bit.

Your mobile phone knows where you are.  Imagine you told it where you want to go and a back-end ride sharing system checked all drivers driving in your area to find which ones were statistically most likely to be passing you and going your way.  You and those drivers would get pinged with each others’ profiles, you could call each other, the driver could pick you up, and you’d share the ride.

The system would note the distance you traveled together and transfer some gas money to the driver to help him cover his costs - and it would be quite safe as the system would always know exactly who traveled with whom, when.

You got a ride, the driver got some gas money, a connection was made, gas was saved, traffic was reduced, our environment got a bit cleaner.

What problem or issue does your idea address?

The world’s car “population” is growing quickly, and traffic and pollution is getting worse, particularly in rapidly-developing countries.  Our environment is under huge stress and we are decades from having a world of clean cars.

Our world’s human population is growing and we all need to get around - going to work, going to market, getting through life.  For lots of people - people with and without cars - getting around is expensive and difficult, but absolutely essential to survival.

Currently, we have lots of cars driving around almost empty, wasting fuel and drivers’ money, while lots of other people without cars going the very same way are spending lots of time, money, and effort themselves.

This is a huge inefficiency caused by nothing more than a lack of information shared, and a lack of trust.  With the world’s 4 billion location-aware mobile phones, we can end this inefficiency and solve these problems.

If your idea were to become a reality, who would benefit the most and how?

If Instant Phone-Enabled Ride Sharing On Demand (iPerson.mobi) became a reality, almost every single person on earth would benefit!

Anyone with a car who wanted to save gas money by sharing rides would benefit.

Anyone who needed to get somewhere quickly and easily without their own car would benefit.

And since iPerson.mobi would reduce car-miles, and the number of cars on the road, and thus traffic, fuel consumption and pollution, everyone who breathes the air, or doesn’t want our polar ice caps to melt, or would like less traffic, or wants a cleaner planet for future generations would benefit.

Plus all the other living creatures on our planet would benefit from us humans living a bit cleaner…

What are the initial steps required to get this idea off the ground?

To launch the Instant Phone Enabled Ride Sharing On Demand system (iPerson.mobi), we would have to:

- develop the on-phone apps
- develop the back-end ride-sharing system that would:
– register the location and destination of the riders
– register the location and movements of the drivers (probably identifiable as drivers by their location and speed at which they are moving)
– statistically predict which drivers were most likely to be passing the relevant rider and then pass his destination
– match riders and drivers and their profiles
– note them meeting up, track their travel together and transfer the gas money
- develop the appropriate financial transactions partnership to power the gas money transfer process
- secure relationships with the various carriers to get necessary data access
- establish a privacy regime to ensure an acceptable level of privacy for users
- develop a marketing and public relations/education campaign to rapidly build to critical mass in selected first-market countries

Describe the optimal outcome should your idea be selected and successfully implemented. How would you measure it?

The optimal outcome would be a wide adoption of the iPerson.mobi system with millions of rides being shared on a daily basis.

The system should be self-sustaining, and even profit-generating via a revenue stream coming from a small percentage of each gas money exchange transaction being charged by iPerson.mobi.

Measurement would be a simple matter of noting the number of rides shared and the number of miles traveled by multiple parties in one vehicle.  Based on this information and the location of these trips, the environmental, societal, and economic impact of the venture could be clearly assessed.

Additionally, the activity in social network of profiles, feedback, recommendations, etc. would provide an additional treasure trove of information to assess and analyze the human impact of the project.

If you’d like to recommend a specific organization, or the ideal type of organization, to execute your plan, please do so here.

I would recommend Google for the technology infrastructure and international telco partnerships, PayPal for the electronic financial infrastructure, EFF for the privacy regime, and of course, Abraham Harrison, LLC for the management and the public relations efforts :-)

Thank You All Who Supported International Medical Corps!

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

On behalf of the International Medical Corps and Abraham Harrison, thank you so much for all of your support over the last four weeks to get the vote out to help get the International Medical Corps into the top-five of the Members Project and then for securing the $100,000 from American Express, to be used to feed hungry children worldwide. Here’s a thank you video blog entry from Paige Strackman, who was the PaigeS who submitted IMC in the first place under the title, Saving the Lives of Malnourished Children.

Here’s the official, final, press release you can read, directly from International Medical Corps:

International Medical Corps Wins $100,000 Grant from American Express to Save Malnourished Children

October 14, 2008, Los Angeles, Calif. –International Medical Corps (IMC) has been awarded $100,000 through the American Express Members Project. The grant will be used to treat malnourished children worldwide. IMC is one of five organizations to receive funding in the nationwide campaign where American Express Card members submit and vote for projects that are meant to bring people and organizations together for positive change.

The funding will be used to implement the project, ‘Saving the Lives of Malnourished Children.’ Submitted by American Express cardmember Paige Strackman, the project focuses on treating malnutrition through nutrient-rich, ready-to-eat food, which International Medical Corps provides to more than 35,000 children every month through a network of 215 supplementary and therapeutic feeding sites in some of the world’s most food-insecure environments, including Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Somalia. The project was selected by an elite panel out of 1,190 others and received more than 14,000 votes in the final round of competition.

“I submitted this project because, as a mother, I cannot ignore that five million children under five die every year due to malnutrition,” says Paige. “This funding will save thousands of malnourished children around the world who otherwise may not have been reached. I am so grateful to everyone who supported this project and helped make it a reality.”

While the project was submitted by one individual hoping to make a difference, it gathered public momentum. The project’s message was shared in the media from Los Angeles to New York, on nearly 200 blogs across the Internet, through thousands of emails and on social networking sites, including Facebook, My Space and Twitter.

The grant from American Express comes at an opportune time when rising food costs are driving millions deeper into poverty everyday while trying to afford basic staples. As a result, hunger and malnutrition kill more people each year than HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria combined.

“We are incredibly grateful to Paige for not only submitting the project, but also for fueling it with the passion to make it so successful,” says Rebecca Milner, Vice President of Institutional Advancement. “There are approximately 178 million children around the world who are malnourished and only 3 percent get treatment. This funding makes it possible for International Medical Corps to reach more of those children who desperately need our help.”

In Democratic Republic of Congo alone, International Medical Corps’ supplementary feeding centers admitted 3,500 new children in the past two months. At one center for severely malnourished children, IMC has a 35-bed capacity, but is accommodating 82. Another 30 children await treatment. This trend is symptomatic of the food insecurity affecting East Africa and much of the developing world. The World Food Program estimates that 15.7 million of those in need are in East Africa, and another 8.6 million are in Afghanistan.

With a mission that focuses on training, International Medical Corps works to empower individuals and communities, providing education on how to treat malnutrition, identify warnings signs, and intervene before malnutrition worsens. Health care workers and parents are educated on proper diet and hygiene, and communities are equipped to grow their own food and reduce their vulnerability to rising prices.

*The ‘Saving the Lives of Malnourished Children’ project can be viewed here: http://www.membersproject.com/project/view/OZH1P1
**Videos of children’s dramatic recoveries from malnutrition can be seen on International Medical Corps’ YouTube Channel: http://ca.youtube.com/user/IMCMembersProject

For more information visit our website at www.imcworldwide.org.
Also, thank you to every single blogger and social media maven who was so generous as to help us spread the word out and get as much attention as possible for both the Members Project as well as for International Medical Corps as well. You were all more than generous and all of us at IMC and AHLLC would love to thank you for being so generous and selfless.