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Broadband Innovations, Part 2: Fiber Optics Reaches the Tipi

In Part 2 of our four-part Broadband Innovations series, see how the Ktunaxa Nation of Canada uses fast broadband to save its indigenous language and culture from extinction.

Kajsa Linnarsson, PC World

Demystifying the Box 8 of 15

An important part of getting people to use the new technology has been the creation of community learning centers in each of the four Ktunaxa communities in British Columbia. Each learning centers has high-speed Internet and videoconferencing equipment.

Here, people can come to familiarize themselves with the technology, take educational classes online, or receive technical assistance from learning center staff--in this case, Nigel Warden, technical lead at the center in St. Mary's.

Training in the Ktunaxa language is also provided through the online language application FirstVoices--a free database that hosts interactive community-built dictionaries, story and song libraries, phrase collections, and online language games. People can use FirstVoices to look up words or phrases and to hear how they are pronounced.

So far, members of the Ktunaxa Nation have entered 2487 words and 849 phrases into the database, making it a wonderful resource for learning their language.

With the cooperation of the College of the Rockies in Cranbrook, British Columbia, online language courses for credit will be available starting this fall.

[Photo: Kajsa Linnarsson]

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