Fighting deadly wars, disease, smartphones on the frontlines



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Guests view the Xiaomi Mi 8 smartphone at a UK launch event in London. Photo: Reuters "itemprop =" image "data-jadewitsmedia =" {'status':' success', 'id': '175383', 'ext': 'jpg', 'thumb': '// en.prothomalo. com / content / cache / images / 110x110x1 / uploads / media / 2018/11/13 / 43e50590d63a4daf5f20802a5bd4a905-Smarthphones.jpg '' path '' media / 2018/11/13 / 43e50590d63a4daf5f20802a5bd4a905-Smarthphones.jpg ',' name ' : 'Guests view the Xiaomi Mi 8 smartphone at a UK launch event in London. Photo: Reuters', 'caption': '', 'pushClass':' jwMediaContent ',' type ':' image ',' width ':' 643 ',' align ':' aligncenter ',' link ':' ' , 'target': '', 'title': 'Guests view the Xiaomi Mi 8 smartphone at a UK launch event in London. Photo: Reuters ',' alt ':' Guests view the Xiaomi Mi 8 smartphone at a UK launch event in London. Photo: Reuters', 'height': ''} "width =" 643 "src =" https://en.prothomalo.com/contents/cache/images/643x0x1/uploads/media/2018/11/13/43e50590d63a4daf5f20802a5bd4a905 -Smarthphones.jpg "/> At the sharp end of conflict in Syria, in a schoolchild's bag in Kenya, whether fighting deadly diseases or studying forestry, the smartphone has become ubiquitous in just over a decade.</p>
<p>This year, the number of users is expected to grow to three billion, and AFP photographers will have a better understanding of the world.</p>
<p>Take Moris Atwine, 25. The Ugandan entrepreneur helped to develop a mobile app to help in the diagnosis of malaria, a worldwide killer, without a need for a blood sample, and transmitted the result in seconds.</p>
<p>Qiao Xi, 21, describes her smartphone as her "boyfriend". From an all-blue studio, the Beijing-based vlogger live-streams songs, dance moves and observations about her daily life to some 600,000 followers on the Huoshan channel.</p>
<p>From the frivolous to the deadly serious, Mohammed Hamroush is a member of the "White Helmets" group, which rushes to help the wounded in rebel-held parts of Syria.</p>
<p>Hamroush's smartphone helps the volunteer to track bombardments, get to where help is needed, and lets his worried wife to know he's safe.</p>
<p>Inna Salminen works in far calm conditions, surveying the forests of Finland, but knows too much that her smartphone can be lifesavers if she gets lost in a remote area.</p>
<p>The 27-year-old conservation expert talks about having a "hazy memory" of life before smartphones.</p>
<p>Aged 13, Imelda Mumbai has no such memory at all. The Kenyan schoolgirl uses her smartphone for fun, of course, but also to help her studies.</p>
<p>Imelda counts on Eneza, an interactive educational app that has about three million users worldwide, plugging her corner of Africa into a global network that has grown from nothing in a few short years.</p>
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