Humanitarian Frontiers

From Prototype to Planet

Chris Hoffman Season 2 Episode 1

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0:00 | 52:39

When connectivity drops, power is limited, and the stakes are life-and-death, “cool tech” isn’t enough. In Episode 1, Chris Hoffman is joined by Camille Crittenden (Executive Director, CITRIS & the Banatao Institute at UC Berkeley) and Carlos Pignataro (former CTO at Cisco, Founder/Principal, Blue Fern Consulting; tech-for-good inventor) to talk about what it really takes to build resilient, offline-first technology for humanitarian response.

You’ll hear why the best systems are designed for reality: messy environments, unreliable networks, frontline workflows, and rapid change. Camille breaks down practical principles for offline data collection, delayed sync, usability under pressure, and responsible deployment. Carlos adds hard-won lessons from field experience and the importance of co-design with the people who will actually use the tools—so solutions don’t fail at the last mile.

What we cover:

  • Edge computing + offline-first design for humanitarian operations
  • Co-design (top-down architecture + bottom-up user reality)
  • Security, resilience, and trustworthy data in crisis settings
  • Building tech that scales without breaking communities

Links:

keywords: humanitarian innovation, edge computing, offline-first, crisis tech, resilient systems, co-design, digital transformation, humanitarian operations.