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A multilingual FEMA app for fishermen is coming soon!

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CIOL Writers
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CIOL Fisher Friend Mobile Application (FFMA)

There are two kinds of apps. First, which are downloaded with great fervor and excitement and then forgotten about amidst hundreds of such apps in our smartphones. To the second category belong the apps that are built with some deep social intent. TraffickCam is one such app, I came across yesterday and the other which I am writing about now also falls in the same line-Fisher Friend Mobile Application (FFMA)

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The app, which was piloted by the MS Swaminathan Research Foundation (MSSRF) in partnership with Qualcomm and TCS in 2013, is a boon for fishermen who get a wealth of information from exact geographic coordinates of shoals of fish, real-time data on wavelength and wind speed.

"After the tsunami of 2004, we got the only 1/10th of the harvest we would get earlier. The movement of fish turned unpredictable," says Anjaapuli. But, nowadays, the veteran fisherman knows exactly where the fish are, thanks to the FFMA app. Anjaapuli is among 10,000 fishermen families across Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Kerala who make daily use of this android app to earn their living.

In addition to information on the movement of fishing shoals, which is updated once every 24 hours, the app also marks danger zones like coral reefs and sunken ship wreckages. Other details like wind speed and wave height are updated once every 6 hours.

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CIOL Fisher Friend Mobile Application (FFMA)

FFMA has boosted fishermen catch and thereby incomes. The app has also reduced travel time and expenses, say fishermen. The technology for tracking fish shoal movement is simple. Fish shoals tend to congregate around waters that have vast colonies of phytoplanktons, which are basically microscopic algae.

The Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS) — an autonomous body under the ministry of earth sciences which tracks everything from potential tsunamis to wave forecasts —captures satellite images and passes them onto MSSRF which in turn processes and uploads the information to the app. The fishermen usually use the data from the app to set the course before they set out on a fishing expedition.

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"We have also helped MSSRF in training fishermen to use the Android app," said AnirbanMukerji, senior manager government affairs, Qualcomm, adding that the company helped integrate Google analytics onto the app to get information about the usage data for all the features on the app.

A very popular feature of the app is an alarm that starts beeping as soon as a boat approaches international water boundaries. In the past, fishermen from Tamil Nadu have been arrested or worse, shot at, when they have strayed into Sri Lankan waters.

"Over the course of the last four years, 93 fishermen have been rescued," says Dr. S Velvizhi, programme coordinatorat MSSRF. GPS coordinates of the International Boundary Line (IBL) from Dhanuskodi to Nagapattinam has been embedded into the app. An alarm is triggered when the location of the boat is within the threshold range of 5 km from the IBL. There are also plans to integrate Gujarat-Pakistan boundary information on to the app.

Presently, the app provides information in Tamil, English, Telugu and Malayalam and MSSRF plans to extend its reach. "The PAN India FFMA application is currently being developed by MSSRF team and is 75 percent complete. The full-fledged app will go live by August 2016," said Dr. S Velvizhi, adding that the MSSRF has set up its own in-house team to take the app to the next level. The PAN India FFMA will be available in Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, and Marathi.

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