

From Tirunelveli in the south to Ladakh and Kashmir in the north, DEF has been designing and implementing digital innovations that are providing communities with access to information, entitlements, rights, education, healthcare. Read More












Digital Evaluation of Students An Initiative of "Department of School Education, Chhattisgarh"
The NICler app conducts MCQ quiz and captures all students’ answers without personal electronic devices. Students are given NICler IDs, which are printouts of ArUco markers. Students can answer an MCQ by placing NICler IDs in the proper position and showing it to the teacher. Teachers can capture the answers from more than 20 feet away by identifying the position of the NICler ID.
ChalChitra Abhiyaan produces a range of video formats like documentary films, news features, interviews, and live broadcasts. They try to bring to the fore local issues that concern different marginalised communities in their own voices. These issues are often glossed over by the mainstream media because of corporate control, the stranglehold of strong political parties, or caste, class, religion, and gender biases. They extensively use social media to circulate their stories
Digital Inclusion of Young Aspirants An Initiative of "Anudip Foundation for Social Welfare"
Anudip Foundation’s Digital Inclusion of Young Aspirants (DIYA) is a technology-driven skills development program for at-risk unemployed youth and vulnerable women to build sustainable incomes and dignified lives. The program is structured around digital-age learning experiences and new-economy career opportunities for career aspirants from socially-excluded locations.

Lepcha language is a language spoken by the Lepcha people in Sikkim, West Bengal, Nepal, and Bhutan. Despite several spirited attempts to preserve the language, Lepcha has already effectively been lost in most places. Gideon Tasa, a linguist joins us in a conversation about his attempt to revive, popularise and mainstream the language.

“Arrey yaar! Network aa hi nahi raha hai! (oh man there is no network)” groaned Saurabh, my colleague as we started our journey from Turtuk to Leh. The 200 km journey is amongst the most scenic roads I have been on. I was relying on his mobile hotspot since even with two sims I was disconnected; I had a prepaid Airtel sim (prepaid doesn’t work in Ladakh) and a postpaid Jio sim (the Turtuk region doesn’t have Jio towers).
We are expanding our reach to serve the most marginalized communities across India. Donate to our Digital Daan initiative and help us expand to unreached and unconnected communities.
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