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High tech oasis in the dry badlands
Campina Grande, in the inward of Paraíba, is cited in American
magazine as one of the emergent technological hubs of the planet
by Sérgio Adeodato
"The first attempt was to raffle an ox, later sacrificed in a barbecue degusted
by the local society. Months later, one zero-kilometer bettle.
After successive campaigns, beneficient bingo and teas, the leaders of the
movement had reached the objective: to obtain US$ 500,000 to give a
computer to the city of Campina Grande, in the dry badlands of Paraíba.
The ultramodern machine arrived in 1967. It was the first computer in the
Brazilian Norhteast - starting point for investments in the formation of
professors in the region.
Gadget, today scrap iron in the bilges of the Federal University of
Paraíba (UFPB), became a revolution's relic.
Famous for organizing one of the biggest parties of Saint João in the
country, Campina Grande is today a prosperous oasis. Not accurately for the
Saint John's party tradition, but for the technology. Cited by the American
magazine Newsweek as one of the most promising technological hubs of
the world, the city hosts a dozen computer and electronics
industries and has local income average per year twice the
Brazilian Northeast norm.
The university is the cradle of the technological hub. The State
of São Paulo has a professor with master or doctor degree by 1.356
inhabitants. In the installations of the UFPB in Campina Campina work 416
masters and doctors - one for 865 inhabitants. More of the half of them is
in the areas of engineering and computing. In these sectors, 250 new
professionals graduate annually. 470 attend a post-graduation course. The local
market does not absorb all the work force, exported to the capitals. But it does
not lack creativity to develop projects and to diminish the exodus of
"brains". Since 1997, the course of "entrepreunership" became mandatory in the
resume of computer science for the UFPB undregraduate students. More than
1,400 pupils already had passed for the
training and 13 of them today occupy the rooms of the Poligene, nursery of
software companies and jobs kept by the federal government.
Rodrigo Figueiredo de Albuquerque, 22 years old, will receive the
degree of computer science in the next week and works in the automation of
bakeries. "We are changing the head of the traders", affirms the researcher,
that developed a software to reduce wastefulnesses and to control with
efficiency the establishments. The plan of Rodrigo is to invoice R$ 13,000
monthly with the partner, William Dantas, 25 years old, colleague of the
university. In the room to the side, electronic engineer Rosângela
Vilar, 47 years old, moved from Maranhão to Campina Campina. By the Internet,
the system analyst met the carioca Marcos Espínola, 34 years
old, who moved to Paraíba two years ago. They got married, and had started
together the company Solution Info, directed toward information collection
over the Internet.
"The companies are born already thinking about conquering other markets",
explains the engineer Alexandre Moura, 40 years old, owner of the Light
Infocon Tecnologia S/A, the first software company installed in Campina Grande, in 1983.
From Pernambuco, moved to the city in fetching of good level education.
Today it uses 30 technicians and has a invoice of R$ 3,5 million per year. It
produces software for management of sound, image and text. "In technology,
it's important to be close to the abundant work force, not consuming market",
says the entrepreneur. The abundance of professionals attracts big companies
consumers of technology that generate more than US$ 100 million annual invoice
in Campina Grande. Coteminas keeps in the city the biggest textile park
of Brazil. In the decade of 40, the city was the biggest commercial hub of
cotton in the world, behind only of Liverpool, in England. The culture was
decimated by the plague of the boll weevil. By the agricultural technology,
the production of plume is being retaken. And a piece of news: ten companies
had been congregated in trust to produce clothes using
cotton that already is born colorful. Technician of the Brazilian Company of
Farming Research in Campina Grande had geneticaly improved the quality of
staple fibres, making possible the industrial processing in wiring machines.
Ecological for not using inks, the clothes confectioned in the Paraíba will
have the stamp of the Greenpeace. The first remittances of pyjamases and
t-shirts will be exported in the second semester of this year.
The city becomes cosmopolitan. In the Bodocongó neighborhood, the Street João
Julião Martins shelters the families of the biggest part of the 16 professors
from India. Ramama Tantravahi, a remote sensor specialist, is
coordinating the courses of graduation in the university. His wife,
Arundhati, has an English school. His daughter, Pallavi, 21 years old, is
in the last year of computer science course, and is an intern in a software company.
The academic culture matches the families. The neighbor Hans Gheyi, 59
years old, after working in european and American universities, chose Campina
Grande. Researcher of methods to recoup ground ruined by the salinization,
common in the drylands, the professor found ample field of work in Paraíba.
UFPB collects prizes. In April, the pupil Allysson Diniz, 22 years old, was
the first national place in Provão 2000 in Mechanics Engineering. In the same
month, five pupils of Electric Engineering had gained from Motorola R$ 40.000,00
for the design of an intelligent antenna. The device reduces the
impact of the cellular electromagnetic waves in the human body and
magnifies the useful life of the battery. In briefing, the technology
generated in the northeastern wasteland will be available in cellulars of the
entire world."
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