Equal Access

Equal Access International (EAI) is an international not for profit organization (501(c)(3)), headquartered in Washington, D.C. and working in Asia, Africa and the Middle East. A communications for social change non-governmental organization that combines the power of media with community mobilization, EAI creates customized communications strategies and outreach solutions that address the most critical challenges affecting people in the developing world such as women & girls’ empowerment, youth life skills & livelihoods, human rights, health and civic participation & governance.

Equal Access International
AbbreviationEAI
Formation2000
FounderRonni Goldfarb
Founded atWashington D.C.
Typenot for profit organization
Location

The organization was founded in the belief that people everywhere are entitled to Equal Access to information and education and should have the opportunity to join the dialogue as both recipients and contributors of that information.

Equal Access International works with local NGOs and community leaders in Nepal, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Cambodia, The Philippines, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Niger, Chad, Cameroon, and Kenya as well as with developmental agencies, foundations, governments, local media talent and the private sector in the design and delivery of its communication initiatives.

In 2014, Equal Access International launched Arewa24, a 24/7 television channel based in Kano, Nigeria, broadcasting a range of programming in Hausa.[1]

Equal Access International receives support from the Ford Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Asia Foundation, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the United Nations Population Fund and the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the United Nations World Food Program and the World Bank.

Ronni Goldfarb founded Equal Access in 2000 and is now on the Board of Directors. She worked with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) to create the Equal Access/UNDP Digital Broadcast Initiative and to launch an Asia Pacific Regional Information and Education Network, the Equal Access Asia Development Channel.

External reference

gollark: AMD and Intel CPUs have for some time been JITing x86 into internal RISC microcode.
gollark: Wrong. The ISA is old, but the microarchitectures of high-performant x86 CPUs are absolutely not ancient. They internally do a ton of optimization tricks to pretend to execute code in order with flat undifferentiated memory as fast as possible, even though the CPU is executing things out of order and aggressively caching and prefetching.
gollark: However, you can just not use it and will probably save a lot of time and segfaults.
gollark: Performant because it contorted the design of all modern CPUs to fit its model, useful because all the low-level APIs use it.
gollark: You will spend too much time on annoying memory things.

References

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