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Campina Grande

Campina Grande, in the badlands of Paraíba, is cited in American magazine "Newsweek" as one of the emergent technological hubs of the planet

The original article from Newsweek:

"In the dry badlands of north eastern Brazil lies on an oasis of rain and oportunity. Half a century ago, merchants of Campina Grande imported early cotton presses to build a leading textile conter. Now this path of nowhere hosts 50 firms making everything from software to display panels. Campina Grande sets the tech-industry standard for Brazil. The key is the Federal University of Paraíba. In 1967, Paraiba scholars persuaded locals to buy a $500,000 IBM mainframe, creating a computing tradition that now draws students from across Latin America. Paraíba set up a Technologic Park in 1984 that has spawned 60 tech enterprises, from shrimp farms to Internet portals. Spinofs born in the dorm rooms include Light Infocon Tecnologia S/A, which makes software police use to track drug traffickers. Local talent also draws giants like Coteminas, Latin America´s most sophisticated fabric maker. Technology accounts for nearly 20 percent of the city´s $650 million economy, and explains why local incomes average $2,500 per year, twice the northeast norm. Technology pays, even in the middle of nowhere."

 
 
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