Maximum Social Impact : Dept of IT, Govt of Rajasthan : PensionAID/e-Sanchar
Maximum Social Impact : Dept of IT, Govt of Rajasthan : PensionAID/e-Sanchar
Saturday, July 04, 2009
Extract: http://pcquest.ciol.com/content/implementation2009/2009/109070407.asp
Pension department of the Rajasthan govt dispatches pension to the pensioners under various schemes/categories. These are Widow/Physically-Handicapped/Old-Age Pension, etc through postal money-orders or by direct credit in bank accounts on a monthly basis. Most of these pensioners are located in rural areas and do not have definite means of knowing when the dispatch/credit was made. Therefore, they remained clueless and kept waiting for the pension to reach them. At times, they even do not know that pension has been credited into their bank account and kept waiting for the money-order to reach them.
The biggest challenge faced was the choice of communication medium. Sending intimation by letters was prone to the same delays as faced by a money-order. Since most of the beneficiaries were illiterate, they would again depend on someone else to read them. Eventually it was decided to use telephones and mobiles for reaching out to pensioners. To enhance the transparency in the process and empower the pension beneficiaries with timely information, the department decided to provide personalized information to them about their pension sanction and credits on a monthly basis. So, this project for Automatic Information Dissemination was conceptualized that would require the system to dial each pension beneficiary who had a mobile or telephone number listed with the department and play a message in Hindi stating the recipient's name and relevant pension details. This process would be repeated each month.
Tanmay Kumar
PS IT & C, Govt. of Raj

QWhat was the technical complexity involved in implementing this project ?
The main technical complexity involved in the project was to avoid pre-recorded messages and to come out with a Text to Speech Converter in Hindi. Pre-recorded messages would have meant having a human interface! Once the technical team at DoIT&C and Data Infosys got convinced, the Director of Treasury & Accounts, NIC officials, Social Justice and Empowerment Department, Collector Jaipur, Sub-Divisional Officer Shahpura, Sub-Treasury Officer, Shahpura � where the pilot project was implemented and officers of Thar Gramin Bank were contacted and all worked as a close knit team to translate the concept into reality within a record time of 100 days.
Q Kindly tell us about the potential of this project ?
Apart from being fully automated, and providing a direct and personalised communication with individual beneficiaries, the project also helps in creating awareness about other beneficiary programmes. For example, the e-SANCHAR application can be linked with individual ration-card holders residing in the catchment area of a ration shop to inform them about allotment of wheat, kerosene, etc on a real-time basis just when the allotment order is issued for that particular shop by the District Supply Officer. Similarly, beneficiaries under various scholarship schemes can be told about the release of scholarship by integrating sanction of scholarship with the mobile/landline numbers of the beneficiary or the acquaintance of their choice. Moreover, government can utilize the directory of mobile/landline numbers so generated to send pre-recorded voice mails / social messages to suit the target audience.
For making phone calls and at the same time to save costs, they decided to use technology instead of call center executives. And as a result they contacted a Jaipur based IT company called Data Infosys to develop a text to speech engine which can read through the database and call up numbers and read out the data, amount and information to the pensioners. For this, Data infosys used open source technologies to save costs. Festival tool was used as the base for the text to speech engine. The biggest challenge was to read the database in English and speak out the information in Hindi. But, as text to speech conversion was using open source techniques, they were able to customize the code and add their own keywords in Hindi.
After the successful PoC test, the project was finally implemented as a client/server software consisting of a very lightweight Web-based GUI front-end from where the treasury operator can upload the database of recipients with relevant pension details & mobile/telephone numbers of people who should receive the AID call. The database is in a simple text format and can also be ZIPped to conserve bandwidth. The front-end allows the operator to schedule the calling immediately (in a few minutes) or the next day. He may also stop/resume the calling process anytime, or upload the next database, as required.
Company Scenario
Before Deployment
* There was no mechanism to intimate pensioners about the despatch and status of their pension amount by the state government.
After Deployment
* Pensioners get to know, in around a days time, the status of the dispatch of their pension amount and by when should they expect that money to reach them.
Implementation Partner
Dr Ajay Data and Nitin Walia
Data Infosys
At the back-end the server components were used to store data on to an RDBMS, serve the Web pages for the front-end, Hindi TTS engine to convert names and words from Roman text to Hindi and an auto-dialer system to pick recipients from the database, dial their mobile/telephone numbers and playback the customized message to the recipient.
The backend server for this is a quad-Xeon with 2 GB RAM, 40 GB HDD, FastEthernet NIU, fitted with a Tormenta ISDN PRI/E1 PCI card, housed in a data center with an Internet leased line and an ISDN PRI/E1 line from a leading telecom provider. The front-end is a regular PC with an Internet connection. The server is running on Linux and using Apache as the web server.
The key challenge which they faced in this deployment was the format in which the recipients' names should be provided. The department was maintaining names only in Hindi using the format supported by the IST software they use for the purpose. The department was notified that they would need the names in Roman-Hindi mapping using the iTrans3 format. But their Roman data entry was done based on common spellings, without using any phonetic standard. This again posed quality issues with TTS synthesis of names and workarounds had to be incorporated in software as well as TTS.
Finally, they had several issues with the efficiency of the TTS process where it was taking too long and blocking the dialer process. They then had to incorporate some smart scheduling coupled with caching techniques to ensure that the TTS process did not delay or block the dialer process.
Saturday, July 04, 2009
Extract: http://pcquest.ciol.com/content/implementation2009/2009/109070407.asp
Pension department of the Rajasthan govt dispatches pension to the pensioners under various schemes/categories. These are Widow/Physically-Handicapped/Old-Age Pension, etc through postal money-orders or by direct credit in bank accounts on a monthly basis. Most of these pensioners are located in rural areas and do not have definite means of knowing when the dispatch/credit was made. Therefore, they remained clueless and kept waiting for the pension to reach them. At times, they even do not know that pension has been credited into their bank account and kept waiting for the money-order to reach them.
The biggest challenge faced was the choice of communication medium. Sending intimation by letters was prone to the same delays as faced by a money-order. Since most of the beneficiaries were illiterate, they would again depend on someone else to read them. Eventually it was decided to use telephones and mobiles for reaching out to pensioners. To enhance the transparency in the process and empower the pension beneficiaries with timely information, the department decided to provide personalized information to them about their pension sanction and credits on a monthly basis. So, this project for Automatic Information Dissemination was conceptualized that would require the system to dial each pension beneficiary who had a mobile or telephone number listed with the department and play a message in Hindi stating the recipient's name and relevant pension details. This process would be repeated each month.
Tanmay Kumar
PS IT & C, Govt. of Raj
QWhat was the technical complexity involved in implementing this project ?
The main technical complexity involved in the project was to avoid pre-recorded messages and to come out with a Text to Speech Converter in Hindi. Pre-recorded messages would have meant having a human interface! Once the technical team at DoIT&C and Data Infosys got convinced, the Director of Treasury & Accounts, NIC officials, Social Justice and Empowerment Department, Collector Jaipur, Sub-Divisional Officer Shahpura, Sub-Treasury Officer, Shahpura � where the pilot project was implemented and officers of Thar Gramin Bank were contacted and all worked as a close knit team to translate the concept into reality within a record time of 100 days.
Q Kindly tell us about the potential of this project ?
Apart from being fully automated, and providing a direct and personalised communication with individual beneficiaries, the project also helps in creating awareness about other beneficiary programmes. For example, the e-SANCHAR application can be linked with individual ration-card holders residing in the catchment area of a ration shop to inform them about allotment of wheat, kerosene, etc on a real-time basis just when the allotment order is issued for that particular shop by the District Supply Officer. Similarly, beneficiaries under various scholarship schemes can be told about the release of scholarship by integrating sanction of scholarship with the mobile/landline numbers of the beneficiary or the acquaintance of their choice. Moreover, government can utilize the directory of mobile/landline numbers so generated to send pre-recorded voice mails / social messages to suit the target audience.
For making phone calls and at the same time to save costs, they decided to use technology instead of call center executives. And as a result they contacted a Jaipur based IT company called Data Infosys to develop a text to speech engine which can read through the database and call up numbers and read out the data, amount and information to the pensioners. For this, Data infosys used open source technologies to save costs. Festival tool was used as the base for the text to speech engine. The biggest challenge was to read the database in English and speak out the information in Hindi. But, as text to speech conversion was using open source techniques, they were able to customize the code and add their own keywords in Hindi.
After the successful PoC test, the project was finally implemented as a client/server software consisting of a very lightweight Web-based GUI front-end from where the treasury operator can upload the database of recipients with relevant pension details & mobile/telephone numbers of people who should receive the AID call. The database is in a simple text format and can also be ZIPped to conserve bandwidth. The front-end allows the operator to schedule the calling immediately (in a few minutes) or the next day. He may also stop/resume the calling process anytime, or upload the next database, as required.
Company Scenario
Before Deployment
* There was no mechanism to intimate pensioners about the despatch and status of their pension amount by the state government.
After Deployment
* Pensioners get to know, in around a days time, the status of the dispatch of their pension amount and by when should they expect that money to reach them.
Implementation Partner
Dr Ajay Data and Nitin Walia
Data Infosys
At the back-end the server components were used to store data on to an RDBMS, serve the Web pages for the front-end, Hindi TTS engine to convert names and words from Roman text to Hindi and an auto-dialer system to pick recipients from the database, dial their mobile/telephone numbers and playback the customized message to the recipient.
The backend server for this is a quad-Xeon with 2 GB RAM, 40 GB HDD, FastEthernet NIU, fitted with a Tormenta ISDN PRI/E1 PCI card, housed in a data center with an Internet leased line and an ISDN PRI/E1 line from a leading telecom provider. The front-end is a regular PC with an Internet connection. The server is running on Linux and using Apache as the web server.
The key challenge which they faced in this deployment was the format in which the recipients' names should be provided. The department was maintaining names only in Hindi using the format supported by the IST software they use for the purpose. The department was notified that they would need the names in Roman-Hindi mapping using the iTrans3 format. But their Roman data entry was done based on common spellings, without using any phonetic standard. This again posed quality issues with TTS synthesis of names and workarounds had to be incorporated in software as well as TTS.
Finally, they had several issues with the efficiency of the TTS process where it was taking too long and blocking the dialer process. They then had to incorporate some smart scheduling coupled with caching techniques to ensure that the TTS process did not delay or block the dialer process.
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