DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 6750

My Portfolio Startup, BeepTool, Unveils Products To Connect Rural Nigeria Via Satellites

5

Our vision in BeepTool is to connect every village in Nigeria to the world wide web. From rural health clinic to farming communities, we have the BeepTool satellite to make that connectivity happen. And our most affordable smartphones and tablets will empower people to go digital. These tablets and phones are engineered to turn GSM devices into satellite nodes so that you can go online, affordably, via satellites even when GSM operators like MTN and Glo are not present. Yes, we turn GSM phones through proprietary apps to work on our satellite systems.

The BeepTool solution is an innovative rural satellite connectivity network that enables robust, low-cost satellite services for a large number of users throughout Africa. The BeepTool custom and proprietary satellite Wi-Fi hotspots terminals loaded with the BeepTool Satellite firmware and the  BeepTool Satellite app beaming data connectivity wifi to more than 100 devices at the same time within the radius. The BeepTool proprietary satellite Wi-Fi hotspots terminals are built with speciation payload that can connect to any GEO and LEO Satellites network on KU, KA and S-band.

Your village, schools, health centers, etc need to be online irrespective of the location in Nigeria. Yes, with the telehealth system, you can have a “doctor link” in a room in your company, your church, your mosque, or your village where workers, members, villagers, etc can go in and consult with expert medical professionals from around the world in real time. Lafiya telehealth will transform our communities. Lafiya interfaces with Medcera – the world’s only location-agnostic electronic health record system with modules for doctors, labs, imaging centers, insurance, patients, etc.

BeepTool infrastructure is security-hardened and we cover many industries including logistics, agriculture, healthcare, financial services, defence/law enforcement, and more. Our proprietary software which makes GSM phones to “function like satellite phones” using our BeepTool firmware is reducing costs of connectivity for law enforcement and other players at scale. Our cost model is multiples lower because we have solved many challenges at new protocol layers.

The pricing is fully optimized to help the excluded, unconnected, unbanked, and underserved rural and remote low-income Nigerians and  Africans to the move of digital economy. We have worked hard to make this happen and today, we are taking orders.

Email sales@beeptool.com for your orders.

Telehealth system connected via BeepTool
BeepTool use cases

 

Oyi 1 smartphone

 

Ndubuisi Ekekwe Takes Equity And Joins BeepTool Board (Photos)

Replicating biNu’s datafree Business Model with MTN, Glo, Airtel, and 9Mobile in Nigeria

1

bINu makes it possible for customers to browse websites data-free. In other words, when you visit a website, you can browse even when you do not have mobile (data) credits. BiNu is a pioneer in this business model and has just partnered with MTN in South Africa to open the web for many people, across industrial sectors and business categories, from banking to SMEs.

MTN and #datafree pioneer biNu  … announced a partnership that will enable mobile subscribers in South Africa to access websites and apps #datafree.

Rather than using their own mobile data to visit and interact with sites or apps, mobile subscribers in South Africa can now have their data paid for by participating digital content and application owners, thanks to biNu’s pioneering reverse billing model.

MTN is now offering biNu’s platform to its enterprise client base. By zero-rating their digital touchpoints, organisations will be able to expand their reach, increase engagement – and lower communication costs by moving customer engagement online from call centres and shops/branches. A large number of enterprises are also using this technology to enhance their digital training value proposition to staff members.

Because many African customers cannot afford data, digital companies continue to struggle to move experiences online. If you are looking for a business model to run in Nigeria, what biNu is doing is a great one. It is simply an orchestration where you use algorithm to predict how much it could cost you to serve your clients, and how much the telcos will charge you. Some telcos already offer this service to banks in Nigeria via reverse billing where banks send cheques, paying for their customers’ mobile data bills while visiting their websites.

I expect entrepreneurs to move in this line in coming months in Nigeria; it is already maturing in South Africa.

This trajectory supports my thesis that we will reach broadband parity by 2022 where internet usage in Nigeria will become readily affordable and then open massive opportunities for digital (online) companies.

In today’s videocast, I make a case that Africa will enter the era of affordable broadband internet in 2022. That will be the year we will begin a new dawn of immersive connectivity where you can eat and surf all you can. Industry players will take off the Internet meter and then focus on service, experience and quality. From satellite broadband vendors to the MNCs with balloons and drones, the sector will become very competitive and service will drive growth. This has happened in the past – every decade, Africa experiences a major industrial transformation. We saw that in banking and voice telephony. 2020s, starting at 2022, will be the decade of immersive connectivity.

Internship or Cheap Labour in Nigeria?

0

Many times, I have heard from career coaches and read many articles on career development that encourages fresh graduates to apply for internship roles as a means of career development. They emphasize that it is a good way to get exposure in the corporate world. As much as it is a good idea, especially for fresh graduates who have no work experience, I also think it is exploitative.

”I find it saddening and worrisome when I read some job descriptions for internship placement and I dare conclude that some of these internship placement positions are cheap labour in disguise.” – Mojisola Olurotimi

I often see most of them being presented to fresh graduates with no form of remuneration. Of course, it is an internship and with the employment situation in a country like Nigeria, every fresh graduate would jump at that opportunity. Especially if it is in big companies.

Mojisola further buttressed her point of view by looking up the definition of internship from the dictionary. She said, ”just to be clear, let’s look into the meaning of the word internship from the dictionary.”

“Internship is the position of a student or trainee who works in an organization, sometimes without pay, in order to gain work experience or satisfy requirements for a qualification”.

If we carefully read the above definition and digest it – hook, line and sinker; there’s a key phrase that says, ”gain work experience”, but these days, I read job descriptions ask for some work experience from potential interns.

It definitely irks me to see that some companies out there are actually thriving on the desperation of jobseekers.

 Here’s my plea to all recruiters and hiring managers out there.

“Dear Recruiter,

If you need cheap labour, please do well to hire one and work within your budget but stop enslaving fresh graduates under the guise of “internship” to work for your company for free.

If an intern joins your company to work as an experienced hire, then He/She is NOT AN INTERN!”

I have seen this happen a few times and I find it saddening. To me, it is cheap labour.

If the interns are not learning, improving  or adding a new skill set while working with you, don’t call them your interns. 

It makes no sense to go to school for 4 – years and only to be offered an opportunity that comes with no financial package or intellectual and career benefits. Parents didn’t invest in their children’s university education to work for free.

Just because it is a multinational company is not enough reason to cajole fresh graduates and make them work for free.

I spoke with a friend, Adeola Onatunde. She said, ”I did a year internship at a multinational company after my National Youth Service in 2015. I was not paid a dime. The cost of commuting to the place was approximately 30 thousand naira per month minus feeding. I’d work from 8 a.m – 6 p.m. I endured because I felt I’d gain the needed exposure for my career and also stand a chance to land a role with the company. But it was a total waste of time. I neither got a job or learned anything. In short, it was a broad daylight robbery and cheap labour in disguise.”

Enough of taking advantage of desperate job seekers please!

My interview with Johns Hopkins Engineering Magazine is Live

1

I like the Johns Hopkins University because it still knows how I am doing. Yes, it keeps checking even for the big boys. How I wish Nigerian universities can master the relationships American top universities build with their former students. There is no single day I do not remember the school because my school email is for life, and I still use that email! 

So, when those envelopes arrive, you can put something. Yes, while fellow alumni member Michael Bloomberg is writing his $billions, we support with our $500, as the world’s most celebrated medical institution continues the mission to find cures to diseases.

Click to read the interview

Optimism And The Law Of Probability

0

We all need to be optimistic at one point in time or the other in our lives. Matter of fact, you need optimism to keep you going in whatever you do. While several people have different definitions of optimism, I’d rather be careful to simply say it is the ability to decide not to remain in bad situations. Most times, we are always quick to dismiss pessimists as well tagging them as killers of freaks or perhaps enemies of progress and if you’re a stark optimist, you might as well want to label them as fake friends.

There lies in a truth and a reality in their own positions as well, and I will analyse it in this piece. The mind of the optimist and pessimist runs in different directions, and taking a microscopic look at the different stances, you’d see a connection, and it will also help you scale faster. While I’m so aware nobody or probably a few persons might have analysed something similar to what I’m writing, I have not read any so far which means this is from just mere observations and critical thinking and the moment you see the big picture in the analysis, it can help you accelerate your progress in life or whatever you do.

I believe Nigeria will be a better country and that Africa will be a better continent. This is my optimistic side speaking. At the same time, I do not believe in Nigeria, neither do I believe in the future of Africa being a great continent. It is a 50/50 and before you begin to tell at why I decided to let you know my opinion, I will explain everything clearly in order for you to see why we either need to give up or keep pushing.

I will give a scenario and this is the basis of my point;

Nigeria has about 180 million people and out of these 180 million people, only 11 players are selected to play for the Super Eagles, national football team. Let’s say out of this 180 million citizens, 10 million are qualified to stand a chance to play for the Super Eagles and out of the ten million, only eleven will be picked. This means that you stand an eleven out of ten million chances of playing for the super eagles.

Let’s also say that we have another country whose citizens are just five million and the number of people that stand a chance for their national team is one million. It shows that anyone competing in such a country stands an eleven out of a million people to be qualified to play for the national team. You might want to ask if my analysis makes sense or is needed in the first place.

Yes, it does. This analysis is the boundary of optimism and under ideal condition, once it exceeds such boundary, it is rather safe to be pessimistic in order to keep moving forward. My analogy is quite simple. It simply means that in order for you to be chosen to play for our country’s football team, you need to be as qualified in 11/10 million which is different from the other person at 11/ 1 million.

Most times, we tend to compare countries together, compare people together, compare events together and even compare wishes together without paying attention to the law of probability. We hardly take measurements in whatever we do. I had to raise this so that you will henceforth begin to pay attention to numbers, to metrics. What will this do to you?

  1. It will increase your drive: When people compare players together, they basically done wrong neglecting all these factors. Same thing with companies. If you really want to play for the national team, you need to understand you have  11/ 10 million chance unlike 11/ 1 million to match up to being qualified on the same level to enter the national team.

If it requires the person in the country with fewer population 2 hours of training daily to be able to have the strength to match up to be among the eleven, you should understand that you need more than two hours under ideal conditions because you have more people on the line. It is a game of odds.

  1. It makes you more optimistic: How weird this is. This is the point if you haven’t gotten me all the while. The moment you understand the odds, you become more optimistic that you can succeed because you begin to get more certain. Now, this doesn’t just apply in football, it applies in every area. Matter of fact, I have used this principle in establishing my companion which keeps me more optimistic and motivated understanding the odds and seeking how I will daily advance to keep myself within the perimeters of success.

I however understand that this is not a one hundred percent principle towards success in whatever endeavor and this is because there’s a dark side called uncertainty or I can say there’s something called luck. In my previous post about the Billionaires Bible, I analyzed how one can know he or she is on a journey to becoming a billionaire. What people were quick to attack me on was on the fact that it wasn’t only depend on the certain part and I quite agree.

Sometimes, you may not have trained up to 1/ 11 million times that a coach just shows interest in you and picks you to play for the national team. Yes, I actually believe in luck. I don’t believe that everyone who succeeds did it all through hard work. There was a moment of luck, of uncertainty. However, like I said, most times, it still depends on the certain part and that means that in order for you to have been spotted by a coach, you must have been a good player so far in many of the cases. In order for your company to have raised that amount in funding, it must have had traction. The moment of luck lies in the fact that even though you had traction, the investor might still have said no but said yes. That’s luck!! That’s uncertainty!!

What should this piece do to you?

It should help you pay attention to metrics first, that is odds before you pay attention to chances. That’s to be on the safer side. This will not only keep you in check, it will help you measure each of your love and help you take the right quantity of effort you need to achieve your goal.