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Amazing Week 1 of Tekedia Mini-MBA – Innovation, Design Thinking & Growth

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We thank our Faculty for an amazing Week 1 (Innovation, Design Thinking & Growth) during the ongoing Tekedia Mini-MBA. The empirical component which we have introduced is producing the desired result. The engagement is deeper and communities are forming in the Hub as members co-share and co-learn.

 

Learn from the best here – Tekedia Institute.

How African Engineers Invented The Future of Amazon

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Amazon has about 7,000 workers in South Africa, and South African engineers actually built the fundamental technology upon which the future of Amazon rests: Amazon Web Services (AWS).  The pioneering technology which made AWS possible – the elastic compute cloud (EC2) – was invented in South Africa. The incoming CEO of Amazon, Andy Jassy, said it brilliantly in 2018: “Having built the original version of Amazon EC2 in our Cape Town development center 14 years ago, and with thousands of African companies using AWS for years, we’ve been able to witness first-hand the technical talent and potential in Africa.” 

The new region is the latest in a series of AWS investments in South Africa. In 2004, Amazon opened a development center in Cape Town that focuses on building pioneering networking technologies, next generation software for customer support, and the technology behind Amazon EC2. AWS has also built a number of local teams including account managers, customer services representatives, partner managers, solutions architects, and more to help customers of all sizes as they move to the cloud. In 2015, AWS opened an office in Johannesburg, and in 2017 brought the Amazon Global Network to Africa through AWS Direct Connect. In May of 2018, AWS continued its investment in South Africa, launching infrastructure points of presence in Cape Town and Johannesburg, bringing Amazon CloudFront, Amazon Route 53, AWS Shield, and AWS WAF to the continent and adding to the 138 points of presence AWS has around the world

Simply, the technology which powers more than 50% of Amazon’s operating profit was invented in sub-Saharan Africa.  Expect Microsoft, Google and Facebook, to repeat this type of testimony in the next coming years as they invest in the best of African talents.

What does that tell us? Talent is everywhere. Like when people begin to compare Nigeria and India, Kenya and China, etc, I try to remind them thus: India is bigger than all the black races combined in population. If you check US data, per capita, Nigeria produces more doctors in the US than India. Nigeria produces more sport-people per capita than either India or China. Also, even in engineering & science, if you use per capita, we are not far. 

India is 7x the population of Nigeria and that means, per capita, one Nigerian doctor should be equivalent to 7 Indian doctors in the United States, and I do not think India has that ratio over Nigeria.

India is 7x the population of Nigeria and that means, per capita, one Nigerian doctor should be equivalent to 7 Indian doctors in the United States, and I do not think India has that ratio over Nigeria. The same applies to science & engineering. Largely, Nigeria is outperforming most nations OUTSIDE its shores – and that is a big paralysis which must be addressed by political leadership.

In other words, where we do lack seriously is here: the brilliance of Nigerian diaspora has not affected their native country, unlike what India, China, Taiwan, etc have done. But on pure making America greater, Nigeria, per capita, is outperforming. Our challenge as a continent is to fix that disconnect and advance the wellbeing of the home continent.

Nvidia’s Rivals Gang Up Against its Acquisition of ARM

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Nvidia’s rivals are riling up against its acquisition of Arm because the deal will harm competition in an area of the industry that is vital to their businesses.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Microsoft Corp. and Qualcomm Inc. are among companies worried about the $40 billion deal and are urging antitrust officials to intervene. Bloomberg made the report citing people familiar with the matter who spoke on anonymity because they are not authorized to speak.

The acquisition would give Nvidia control over a critical supplier that licenses essential chip technology to the likes of Apple Inc., Intel Corp., Samsung Electronics Co., Amazon.com Inc. and China’s Huawei Technologies Co.

Qualcomm told the Federal Trade Commission, the European Commission, the U.K.’s Competition and Markets Authority and China’s State Administration for Market Regulation that it has concerns about Nvidia buying Arm, which is currently owned by Japanese tech giant SoftBank.

U.K.-based Arm is known as the Switzerland of the industry because it licenses chip designs and related software code to all comers, rather than competing against semiconductor companies.

The FTC’s investigation has moved to a “second phase” and the U.S. regulator has asked SoftBank, Nvidia and Arm to provide it with more information, according to two sources who are familiar with the deal.

Complying with the information request is likely to take many months as several large documents will need to be produced, the sources said. During the second phase, the FTC will also engage with other companies who may have relevant information that could help it to make a decision, they added.

The concern is that if Nvidia owns Arm, it could limit rivals’ access to the technology or raise the cost of access.

Nvidia has argued that the purchase price alone means it has no incentive to mess with that neutrality but some rivals and Arm customers are unconvinced.

ARM’s customers, including Apple, Samsung, Qualcomm, Advanced Micro Devices and Intel were worried when the deal began last year and needed assurance that a new owner would continue providing equal access to ARM’s instruction set. It was the concern that led to SoftBank buying ARM the last time it went up for sale, because it is a neutral company.

“As we proceed through the review process, we’re confident that both regulators and customers will see the benefits of our plan to continue Arm’s open licensing model and ensure a transparent, collaborative relationship with Arm’s licensees,” an Nvidia spokesperson said in a statement. “Our vision for Arm will help all Arm licensees grow their businesses and expand into new markets.”

The opposition means that before the deal can close, Nvidia must get through a long review process by antitrust officials in the U.S., U.K., European Union and China. Bloomberg reported that Government agencies globally are in the process of reaching out to those they believe may be affected by the transaction.

The report explained that the changing leadership of the FTC could make winning approval tougher for Nvidia. The commission is generally split 2-2 along party lines at the moment, with Democratic commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter holding the acting chair position. Power will shift to the Democrats when U.S. President Joe Biden picks two candidates to fill an open seat and the seat held by Commissioner Rohit Chopra, who has been nominated to take over the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

Deals like Nvidia’s acquisition of Arm, known as vertical mergers, are typically seen as less worrisome in the eyes of antitrust enforcers because the companies don’t compete head to head. But that view has come under fire from advocates of more aggressive antitrust enforcement who say regulators have downplayed the competitive harm from such deals, Bloomberg said.

Slaughter’s elevation signals a tougher approval process for vertical deals. Before taking over the agency, Slaughter criticized new guidelines issued last year by the FTC and the Justice Department outlining how the agencies would evaluate vertical deals. She said the guidelines overemphasize the potential benefits of such mergers and are “inexplicably mute” about the harms.

In December, Slaughter and Chopra said companies should no longer rely on the guidelines as an indication of how the FTC will police vertical deals.

“Moving forward, we need to aggressively enforce against the harms of vertical mergers,” they wrote. “We look forward to turning the page on the era of lax oversight and to beginning to investigate, analyze, and enforce the antitrust laws against vertical mergers with vigor.”

Qualcomm contacted the regulators because it thinks they will play a significant role in determining whether the deal gets completed or not, according to the people with the knowledge of the matter.

Qualcomm has opposed the Nvidia takeover because it thinks there’s a very high risk that Nvidia could become a gatekeeper of Arm’s technology and prevent other chipmakers from using Arm’s intellectual property, according to sources. It doesn’t think Nvidia will be able to fully capitalize on the acquisition without crossing certain lines that people are worried about, the people said.

With this level of opposition, analysts said NVidia’s acquisition of Arm may likely be halted.

A groundswell of opposition from large tech companies may make it difficult to win approval, delay the process or force concessions that change the value of Arm to Nvidia. This is also a risk for SoftBank, the Japanese conglomerate has been trying to sell some assets to pay down debt and buy back stock.

Trump 2.0 Evolves With The Senate Acquittal

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It was all about history and records, with nothing material on the line, except possible future ambitions. Yes, former President Trump has survived the second impeachment, after the Senate returned “Acquit” through their votes.

The Senate voted on Saturday to acquit former President Donald Trump on an impeachment charge that he incited the deadly insurrection of Jan. 6, marking the close of a trial that laid bare the horrors of the riots and highlighted Congress’ halting efforts to extricate itself from the Trump era.

The verdict was long foreshadowed by Senate Republicans, who said they were unmoved by the House managers’ central argument that Trump’s monthslong campaign to subvert the election results, as well as his incendiary remarks to a Jan. 6 crowd, sparked the violent riots.

But the 57-43 vote marked the first time since 1868 that a majority of the Senate voted to convict a president on an impeachment charge. And the seven Republicans who broke ranks are the most to support the conviction of a president from their own party.

Now, there is a Facebook “Supreme Court” big decision – whether to ban Trump on Facebook – which is coming, and if he makes it, then Trump 2.0 becomes a possibility. With Twitter’s beats muted, that Facebook’s Supreme Court would be consequential. A general’s voice needs to be heard and Mr. Trump needs a platform for that to happen. This is a digital age where demand is the engine for impact, over pure supply.

To the Trump world, rejoice as MAGA 2.0 is now a possibility. America makes great shows; that was just another one. Expect Hollywood movies to follow.

A Testimonial On Tekedia Mini-MBA Editor 4: We are Teknovators

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“This is quite fantastic and week 1 has already given much insights. Creating the mobile app and being able to connect here makes the learning even more interesting. The addition of challenge assignments are great too as it spurs you to try out the theory and put it all perspective. Kudos to the team at Tekedia Institute and Professor Ndubuisi Ekekwe for this great initiative. We are Teknovators!!”

– okeke on the current Tekedia Mini-MBA edition4.

Visit Tekedia Mini-MBA board for more testimonials.