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Tekedia Congratulates Our Faculty For Winning Microsoft MVP – Business Applications

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The category-king enterprise software maker with a market cap of $2 trillion has honoured him as the 2021 MVP Global Administrator. Yes, Microsoft does not do that easily. You must be really brilliant to receive that honour.

He is extremely amazing at the mechanics of automating businesses. When you talk about the zen-masters of modern productivity and automation in the world, within the Microsoft ecosystem, Tekedia Institute faculty Olanrewaju Oyinbooke, MCT, mMBA is the king.

A first class graduate of statistics of the University of Ilorin, he brings uncommon perspectives to basic simple things.  From all of us at Tekedia Institute, we congratulate Olanrewaju,the best.

Congratulations Faculty. Many college students appreciate the course you developed on workplace productivity and automation.

Beyond The World Bank’s Alarm on Nigeria – Lost Decade of Economic Growth

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It is a very tough call by the World Bank: “The international bank made it known that the country’s gross domestic product is likely to approach its 2010 level by the end of the year thus reversing a full decade of economic growth.” But that is not the full story before you begin to blame Buhari.

Two things: (1) there is no need for finger pointing on the World Bank’s latest Nigeria Development Update (2) while President Buhari has a partial blame for driving Nigeria into a mild recession due to his exceedingly and unnecessarily delays to appoint ministers in 2015/2016, he cannot be held responsible for all the paralyses. 

The fact is this: Nigeria is at war and during wars, especially when fought in your homeland, you struggle.  While our researchers are yet to do the needful, my layman’s estimate is that Boko Haram insurgency has, through its cumulative effects, subtracted at least 3% per year in Nigeria’s GDP since 2014. That 3% comes via opportunity cost, moving money from education and infrastructure to fighting wars, and also through massive displacement of farming communities. Agriculture remains the mainstay of our economy and accounts for the largest share of the GDP. So anything which distorts farming will affect the economy.

If our near-term GDP suddenly falls back to 2010 number, in US dollars of course, it means poverty will be scaled since our population has grown over the same period. So, if economic opportunities are growing or shrinking when the population is growing, we will suddenly find ourselves in the Rev Malthus quagmire (remember you secondary school economics).

My suggestion is this: Nigeria needs to refresh its economy through investment in the future, and if we do that, we can ignite growth. From my angle, there are many ways we can do this. But I will simply share one: commit to purchase military and other necessary things from Nigerian companies. If we commit to that, we can develop new industries and magically as we fight these wars and insecurity, we can capture “value” by seeding companies of the future which can serve Nigeria and Africa in general. Today, the opportunities which the war has offered us to innovate and think differently are not being utilized. That is a bigger war we are losing!

The Nigeria Development Update (NDU) report by the World Bank estimated that despite the country’s gradual recovery from the 2020 recession, Nigerian masses will continue to suffer the adverse effect of the economic downturn.

A new report authored by the World Bank says a full decade of economic growth in Nigeria is likely to be lost by the end of 2021 under President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

The international bank made it known that the country’s gross domestic product is likely to approach its 2010 level by the end of the year thus reversing a full decade of economic growth.

The bank in its bi-annual Nigeria Development Update (NDU) report series said that there will be a constant decline in the country’s GDP per capita despite recovery from recession, projecting the country’s population to grow faster than its economy.

The NDU report by the World Bank estimated that despite the country’s gradual recovery from the 2020 recession, Nigerian masses will continue to suffer the adverse effect of the economic downturn.

Cambrian Moment is Here for Digital Entrepreneurial Capitalism in Rural Africa

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‘On Wednesday, during a keynote speech Elon Musk gave at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, the SpaceX founder and CEO, Elon Musk announced a major update on the rollout timeline for his low-Earth orbit high-speed broadband internet service, Starlink: “In August we should have global connectivity in everywhere except the poles”’, reports Samuel Nwite

Ladies and gentlemen, a new cambrian moment is here for digital entrepreneurial capitalism and rural Africa is going to benefit. Reading the report from Samuel, you can see that he is cutting prices in multiples. Please if you are not building because there is no internet connectivity, I am telling you to begin to build. This is going to change the market and bring a new basis of competition.

From state monopolies (land lines) to CDMA, from CDMA to GSM, and possibly, we will move from GSM to satellite broadband. If that happens, the market cap of most telcos in Africa would be recalibrated. I am not telling you to call your stock broker to dump your holdings, but watch the price point Starlink  arrives at, because as he noted in that statement, he wants to unleash $30 billion into the sector.

If he does, that would be an asymmetric playbook in the likes of Jio, with global flavours! Yet, the execution goes beyond technology: national regulators could even decide how all plays out. Be watching for GSM-led satellite last mile argument over what many would desire which is unbounded agency module, with or without GSM license.

Elon Musk Announces August for Starlink Launch

German Ministries to Quit Facebook Over Privacy Concerns

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The relationship between governments and social media keeps deteriorating around the world. From Nigeria to India to Russia, the brawl is taking different turns daily. While the bone of contention has been governments’ desire to control what people post on social media for some countries, it has been centered on privacy concerns for others.

Last month, Nigerian government announced its decision to outlaw the use of Twitter following the microblogging app’s removal of president Muhammadu Buhari tweet that violated its policy. Russia also passed a legislation mandating social media platforms to register in the country by January 2022 or face punitive measures. In India, the government introduced new rules governing social media platforms, requiring them to appoint an India-based grievance officer, who would be responsible for acknowledging the complaints or requests from the government, or from ordinary users, within 24 hours. Failing to comply could result in criminal prosecution.

In the US and Europe, the squabble has been how the social media companies handle users private information. It has resulted in increasing antitrust probes, and now some of the affected countries are taking new steps to register their displeasure.

Reuters reported that German government organizations have until the end of the year to close their Facebook pages after the data protection commissioner found the social network had failed to change its practices to comply with German and European privacy laws.

In a letter to government departments and agencies earlier this month, commissioner Ulrich Kelber said Facebook had provided no way to run pages for institutions, whose feed users can subscribe to by clicking “like”, in an EU-compliant way.

Kelber added that partyline app Clubhouse, video clip app TikTok and Facebook’s Instagram site also appeared to have similar shortcomings, and recommended government organizations stop using them too until his inquiry was concluded.

“We updated our Page Insights supplement and clarified the responsibility of Facebook and website operators at the end of 2019,” a spokesman for Facebook wrote in an email. “Questions related to the transparency of data processing were taken into consideration.”

The German government’s official Facebook page has over a million followers, and the platform has become an increasingly important tool for reaching citizens who are less likely than in the past to follow the mass media where governments advertise.

Kelber said it was impossible to run a fan page in such a way that followers’ personal data was not transmitted to the United States. Under EU law, personal data can only leave the EU for a jurisdiction with equivalently strict data protection rules, something that is not the case for the United States.

The government press office had attempted to get added guarantees from Facebook, but the U.S. company had failed to provide them, he added.

“Given the continuing violation of personal data protection, there is no time to waste,” Kelber wrote to the government organizations. “If you have a fan page, I strongly recommend you switch it off by the end of the year.”

Elon Musk Announces August for Starlink Launch

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On Wednesday, during a keynote speech Elon Musk gave at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, the SpaceX founder and CEO, Elon Musk announced a major update on the rollout timeline for his low-Earth orbit high-speed broadband internet service, Starlink.

SpaceX has increased its push to provide affordable satellite internet globally, amidst competition with Amazon.com subsidiary Kuiper, OneWeb – a collapsed satellite operator rescued by the British government and India’s Bharti Group. Musk said Starlink will launch its global satellite internet services in August, a month earlier than previously scheduled.

“In August we should have global connectivity in everywhere except the poles,” Musk said through video from California during his keynote at the Mobile World Congress, MWC, the telecoms industry’s largest annual gathering, which is being held in Barcelona. This means that the launch is nearly ready.

Starlink President Gwynne Shotwell, had last week said that Starlink would go global this September, Musk’s announcement means the deadline has just moved up a few weeks.

Besides the announcement of the global launch, Musk said Starlink will need $30 billion to execute its satellite tasks and steer the company to profitable business. He talked about plans to augment existing investments that include over 1,500 satellites shot into space.

“With Falcon 9 we achieved the most efficient reusability for any rocket to date,” said Musk. Some rockets are slated to fly 20 or even 30 times. “When you look at the cost of the rocket, you’ve got 60% of the cost in the first stage, and about 10% in the faring,” Musk explained. “So this is really a very good number for a rocket,” he added, referencing the forthcoming Starlink prototype’s space missions in comparison to Saturn V rockets. “It’s about 3.5 to 1 ratio of oxygen to fuel […] instead of helium with the Falcon 9.” Helium is expensive, so the cost of propellant for Starship will be comparable to the cost of a Falcon 9, but with full reusability, Musk explained.

The cost of reusing a Starship will cost a little less than $2 million, said Musk during the keynote. The Starship will also see orbital refueling primarily with oxygen. It’s “the first system that will be capable of building a base on the moon, and a city on Mars.”

“We’re hoping to do our first orbital launch attempt [for Starship] in the next few months,” said Musk. He also said the Starship’s orbital launch site will be ready in the next month or so. “SpaceX is trying to extend the scope of consciousness beyond Earth, and Tesla is trying to ensure that life is good on Earth in terms of sustainable energy,” he added, summarizing his intentions with his companies. “That future includes expanding the scope and scale of consciousness. We don’t really know what the answers are, or what questions to ask.”

He mentioned “two quite significant partnerships with major country telcos” that could help the SpaceX division plug the gaps in fifth-generation mobile and cellular networks.

“This is helpful because a number of countries have requirements that — in order to receive a 5G license, you also have to provide rural coverage. So sometimes urban customers end up subsidizing rural customers,” he said.

Starlink, an array of low-orbit satellites offering high-speed, low-latency connectivity, is already offering a trial service and aims to cover the world. It is operating in about a dozen countries, adding more every month, with Musk forecasting that total customer numbers would reach half a million over the next 12 months, from the 69,000 it has now.

Musk said the company plans to reduce the cost of its services to enable affordability, since many of its Starlink users will be rural dwellers. The terminal costs is expected to be reduced from over $1000 to $300-500 in the next 12 months.

“Our customers will very often live in remote regions. Sometimes they’re up in a cabin up in the mountain that doesn’t even have electricity!” So SpaceX is designing the system so it doesn’t need a lot of maintenance, and it is intended to go online in just five minutes. “You should [be able to] point it at the sky and plug it in,” he said.

Musk noted that Starlink satellites orbit Earth at around 500 km, whereas geosynchronous satellites are at about 1,000 km.

However, huge concern lies on the profitability of the business as $300 and $100 satellite internet is considered unaffordable for rural dwellers who will make up large number of Starlink customers. Experts believe it may deter investors from putting their money in Starlink.