November 9, 2007 By Indrajit Basu, International Correspondent
FX3X runs education programs in 80 secondary schools in Macedonia on the basics of animation and uses those schools for developing the talent pool it needs to expand. Back in 1997, when Misko and his friend Kristijan Danilovski started their visual effects and 3D animation venture in the Balkans, they had to be content serving just the local markets. "Although we wanted to serve the global markets, there was hardly any infrastructure and not enough talent to support our ideas," says Misko "But thanks to USAID and the Macedonia Connect (MK) project, FX3X has been growing at over a hundred percent each year for the last two years. The wireless infrastructure that MK incorporates has not only given us the opportunity to build a talent pool in Macedonia but also an opportunity to tap the global markets."
"Two years ago we hardly had any foreign clients," added Misko. "Today with MK, big data transfers are not a problem any more. We have reached a point where we derive just 10 percent of our total revenues from local clients while the balance comes from global clients."
Indeed, it is hard to imagine that a country -- formerly part of Yugoslavia -- which until about six years back was an ethnic trouble spot torn by the conflict between government and ethnic Albanian rebels. Today, it easily serves as a role model for other developing states as the first wireless country. But courtesy the nationwide wireless project MK, that has brought broadband Internet access to almost 95 percent of the country's residents, Macedonia can now look forward to moving from a conflict-torn region to an economy moving forward on information, communication and technology (ICT).
Funded partly by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and partly by the Macedonian Government, the $5 million (shared equally by the two), Macedonia Connects is a three-year program which is providing broadband Internet connectivity to almost 545 elementary and secondary schools, research institutes, universities and dorms throughout the Republic of Macedonia.
"The impact of the project has been enormous as Macedonia now enjoys the benefits that a broadband wireless network generally brings to a developing country," says Glenn Strachan, a former USAID contractor who directed the MK activity and is now an independent contractor. But besides the fact that MK increased Internet penetration dramatically (from 4 percent to almost 33 percent), which has enabled most residents of Macedonia -- who migrate from their small villages and move to the capital city of Skopje to find employment -- to start a business outside Skopje and communicate with new clients around the world (like Misko, many apparel companies, and even lamb farmers, who for the first time, have found markets outside Macedonia by opening a website) MK stands out from similar other projects.
For one, says Strachan, MK has ushered in competition in a monopolistic telecom environment
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