Gram Vaani Community Media
Encyclopedia
Gram Vaani is a social development organization based in India, building open-source technologies for community media in rural areas. Their flagship product is a radio automation called GRINS (Gramin Radio Inter-Networking System), specifically designed for rural areas of developing countries. Gram Vaani is also expanding its offerings to video and content distribution systems, to enable distributed applications for agriculture, healthcare, and education in rural areas.

History

Gram Vaani was a winner in the 2008 Knight News Challenge for its proposal to enable community media services through radio. Operations began in early 2009, following which GRINS has been deployed at a number of community radio stations in India. Active development is continuing.

GRINS

The GRINS box is a plug-n-play server to run a community radio station. It enables radio station operators to schedule broadcasts, preview programs, make and receive phone calls, record live transmissions, and maintain an extensive semantically searchable library, all through a single user-interface. GRINS has been designed specifically for community radio stations in remote and rural areas, to keep costs low, provide extremely robust functioning, and enable rich features for greater community interaction. Existing or new radio stations only need to order a GRINS box, plug it into their mixer and sound system, connect the cables, and just switch it ON to enjoy an altogether new generation of radio! Some of the key features of GRINS that distinguish it from other radio broadcast platforms are as follows:
  • Single management console: Radio stations have many moving parts, especially if rich features such as phone calls and conferencing have to be supported. GRINS simplifies the management and running of the radio station by providing a single console to archive conversations, schedule programs, receive phone calls, and search and manage content. This sets GRINS apart from any other commercial or open-source broadcast system available so far.

  • Commodity hardware: GRINS does most processing in software to eliminate the need of buying expensive audio hardware, and yet imposes very low processing overhead on the system. For this reason, GRINS can be run off commodity PCs and single board computers, significantly reducing the costs of setting up community radio stations.

  • Service oriented design: All functionality provided by GRINS is handled by different services, such as the Audio Service for playout, Archiver Service for recording, Library Service for storage, etc. Each of these services can be run either on a single machine, or off multiple machines. This makes the deployment of GRINS extremely flexible to be able to fit into any kind of a radio station setup.

  • Application development platform: The open API of GRINS allows third party developers to build their own radio applications using the various underlying services that GRINS provides. For example, you can build specific applications for the broadcast of educational programs or health programs, that allow quick search and playback features for the respective topics. In the future, once GRINS begins to support the video and Internet planes, these applications can even be multiplanar in nature.

  • Easy to use UI: The GRINS user interface has been especially designed keeping in mind the target population of rural areas in India and other developing countries. The use of large icons and simple navigation makes GRINS easy to use even for radio operators who are new to computerized systems.

  • Diagnostics: A key feature of GRINS, the system can actually detect any network faults or audio cable errors or poor audio quality through Digital Signal Processing (DSP), and guide the operators on how to fix the problem locally. This reduces the down-time of the system so that radio stations located in remote rural areas do not have to wait for a technician to visit them and fix small problems.

Components

GRINS has been tested with the following hardware:
  • Via mini-ITX for running GRINS
  • Asus soundcards for quality playout
  • Linksys ATAs for telephony


Alternative hardware will also work.

Deployments

GRINS has been deployed at the following community radio stations:

  • Tashi Delek Radio, Tibetan Children's Village, Dharamsala (HP)

External links

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