India's Aadhar Bhalinge has bagged ‘m2Work’, a World Bank-sponsored online competition in quest for the finest ideas for goading the job-creation potential of mobile phones.

His tool would crowd source maps at a very low cost in developing nations by employing fleets of rickshaw drivers to feed live traffic updates into a subscription service, according to a World Bank media release.
Bhalinge and the five other finalists all received business coaching during the finals. The other finalists' ideas touched on environmental conservation, access to health care and education, and social publishing.
The competition organized by Nokia and infoDev, a World Bank innovation and technology entrepreneurship programme, drew a total of 939 ideas, 96 percent of which came from developing and emerging economies.
"m2Work", which stands for mobile microwork, aims to expand microwork to the five billion mobile phones in the developing world. Currently, millions of people supplement their income through microwork-small digital tasks they can perform online.
"The diversity of ideas submitted demonstrates that we are beginning to tap into the potential of combining access to technology in the developing world with innovative ideas to help solve critical development issues," said Stephanie von Friedeburg, the World Bank Group's Chief Information Officer and chair of the jury.
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Source-IANS