Kenyan hut dwellers write digital cards in the beach sand

Released on: November 6, 2007, 2:44 am

Press Release Author: Pim Bottenberg / Beachname.com

Industry: Internet & Online

Press Release Summary: Your own name written by hand in the sand of the Kenyan
Bamburi Beach. Your name is written by Moses and Joan Onoo and their team

Press Release Body: Moses Onoo leaves the photo shop in Mombasa with a smile on his
face. The Kenyan proudly shows off his new digital camera to his family and friends.
It cost nearly 350 US dollars. "That's as much as I earn in a year as a night
watchman." "He's holding it as if he has a gold bar in his hands," says Pim
Bottenberg from the Netherlands with a smile. He created the website
www.beachname.com and gave Onoo the camera as part of this "micro-development
project.\"

For a month, Onoo and his team have been filling orders for names written in the
sand of Bamburi Beach. The names are then documented with a digital camera and sent
by e-mail to the Netherlands. Each photo is then printed there and attractively
framed. The gift card is then sent to its final destination by mail or e-mail.

"You can have a Kenyan beach name card made as a nice alternative for a birth
announcement, or use it for an original greeting or Christmas card," Bottenberg
says. The Internet entrpreneur and his family have been going on holiday to Kenya
for years and became friends with Onoo the night watchman. "He earns 25 euros (about
35 US dollars) a month, lives in a hut village and has to support a large family. We
were touched by his life story and daily battle to survive. I have a few on-line
businesses and started looking for a web businesses with which he and his family
could earn a living. That ended up being www.beachname.com. He had never held a
camera before. His own village doesn't have electricity, so he wasn\'t familiar with
Internet and e-mail. I taught him in an Internet cafe, and then we went to the
beach to practice with the digital camera.\"

On his own feet

"It is not simple to write a name well in the sand. There is a lot of stuff on the
beach that has to be cleared away first. You have to make sure that there are
shadows around the letters to make it legible. Every high-relief letter is
'sculpted' by hand. The very bright sunlight makes it impossible to view the LCD
screen to check if a photo has turned out okay. Moses first has to find a place in
the shadow and then view the camera under a cloth.\"

Bottenberg compares his project with the micro-lending programmes that are offered
in more and more developing nations to the disadvantaged so they can start their own
businesses. "The nice thing is that Moses is now completely comfortable with the new
on-line world of e-mailing and uploading photos. He also has other families from his
village help him make the beach names. There are now eight families being supported
by www.beachname.com. Terrific, isn't it?\"

The use of the Internet and digital photography means it does not matter where the
recipient of the beach name card lives. The website is being translated into six
languages and expanded. In just a few clicks of the mouse, people can order a card
on-line. The price is 12,50 euro / US$ 17.50 per card and the card is sent
worldwide, both digitally and by mail, at no additional charge. "It's an original,
global gift that makes a name for Moses' village in more than one respect," says
Bottenberg.





Web Site: http://www.beachname.com

Contact Details: Beachname
Mr. Pim Bottenberg
Ramsbeekweg 6
7152 JT Eibergen
Netherlands

+31 545 477142
+31 545 477153 (fax)
info@beachname.com

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