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As iflix arrives Nigeria, iROKOtv must match iflix telco-driven distribution model

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This video streaming service market is getting more competitive and Africa seems to be an interesting destination.

Iflix, a video streaming service with customers mostly in Southeast Asia, raised US$90m in a round led by Liberty Global and  Zain. It plans to take on Netflix and Naspers, which owns ShowMax, in Africa and the Middle East, Techcentral reports.

Iflix is promising a lower-cost alternative video-on-demand service and will be launched in Nigeria by June. This is likely to put it on a collision course with the Naspers-owned ShowMax, with also focuses on emerging markets.

Iflix offers customers in nine countries a mix of Hollywood fare like the film Iron Man and TV series Homeland along with local programming for a monthly subscription fee. The company has signed up more than 5 million customers — more than analysts estimate Netflix, the world’s largest paid video service, has in Southeast Asia.

The partnership with Zain mirrors how Iflix has grown in Southeast Asia. The company has relied on telecoms providers to sell Iflix on top of their phone packages. That way, Iflix doesn’t have to spend much money recruiting customers, and mobile providers can use Iflix to keep customers from defecting to rival carriers.

For Nigeria VOD pioneer, iROKOtv, iflix arrival will be a competitive challenge. If iflix succeeds is convincing one of the big telcos like MTN, Airtel, Glo or Etisalat to carry its contents, it could be a huge blow to iROKOtv. The reality is that the biggest challenge in the industry is broadband costs and if the telco-led model is replicated in Nigeria, by iflix, they will have more success.

Of course, there is an issue of contents which iROKOtv remains the undisputed leader in Nigeria. It has the largest collection of Nigerian Nollywood movies. But do not bank on that. One can have hundreds of Nollywood movies with a budget of $1 million. So iflix can build that business if it sees it as a growth area.

Generally, the competition in emerging markets is ratcheting up. Amazon.com extended its video service to the rest of the world late last year, while Netflix added a feature so people living in countries with inconsistent broadband Internet can download shows to watch later.

As the cost of broadband continues to crash, we expect this market to continue to grow, at least in the number of participants. That will bring cost down and help forge partnerships that will make it economical to watch movies online.

Every local company in this sector should note that the  VOD competitive space is international in scope. This is a global business and Nigeria is right at the center right now.

Imagine if Softbank’s Masayoshi Son can do this in Lagos or Nigeria’s Sovereign Wealth Fund acts techie

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Imagine if we can experience this type of energetic deals in Nigeria. Possibly, recession will be history by now.

Softbank is poised to sell 25 percent of ARM — roughly $8 billion — to a new, Saudi-backed $100 billion investment fund, the Financial Times has reported. The Japanese shelled out $32 billion to purchased ARM only six months ago.

The move is likely to guarantee greater influence for Mubadala, an Abu Dhabi state-backed investment group, in the global semiconductor industry. Mubadala, which owns 100 percent of Globalfoundries, reportedly wanted the $100 billion Vision Fund to own a portion of ARM.

$100 billion Vision Fund
Japan’s Softbank announced last fall an ambitious plan to create the Softbank Vision Fund — a financial vehicle that would allow CEO Masayoshi Son to invest in the technology sector globally. The Fund, set up to raise $100 billion, aims to become “one of the world’s largest of its kind,” said Softbank last year.

While Softbank expects to pump at least $25 billion into the fund over the next 5 years, its biggest investor is Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, which last year committed to contribute up to $45 billion.

My Son, our Abuja airport is closed, but the Lagos one is open. We need this type of deal making. We do hope he could get the Nigeria’s Sovereign Wealth Fund to begin to see technology as an industry it could pump capital even as it invests in infrastructure.

Sure, it is likely that Nigerian startups may not have the scale Son requires, but we could get him to do a pivot. The telecoms sector is decent enough. There is need to have someone who could be a deal-maker like him to show interests in Nigeria.

How can you get Saudi Arabia to invest in Nigeria? You need someone who is a mad genius in making deals and winning. And if we have 2-3 of such, the country will be transformed.

Four reasons to secure your website with HTTPS

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If you sell something online, you need HTTPS on your domain. It is very important for the security of your site.

SSL Certificates protect your customer’s personal data including passwords, credit cards and identity information. Getting an SSL certificate is the easiest way to increase your customer’s confidence in your online business.

In a few years (or hopefully much sooner), EVERY website will be secured through SSL and that’s a very good thing. So if you’re not moving to HTTPS now, you’re going to get left behind fast.

Here are 4 quick compelling reasons to move your  website to HTTPS:

  1. SECURITY — SSL protects your website’s data and visitors. It encrypts data transferred over the web, like form submissions and credit card transactions.
  2. SEO — Google says it’s past time to move your sites over to HTTPS. They are now giving an SEO ranking boost to secure sites. Simply put, you’ll rank better in SEO.
  3. ECOMMERCEIf you’re taking any payments on your website, SSL is non-negotiable. SSL is an absolute must for ecommerce and membership websites.
  4. AFFORDABILITY — In the past, SSL certificates could get expensive, but the rapidly transforming web landscape has made switching to SSL practical and affordable.

You can get one here.

This post is sponsored.

Review of NVIDIA Jetson TX2 – Embedded AI is here and Prepare to learn new things

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For a few years now, NVIDIA has been offering their line of Jetson embedded system kits. Originally launched using Tegra K1 in 2014, the first Jetson was designed to be a dev kit for groups looking to build their own Tegra-based devices from scratch. Instead, what NVIDIA surprisingly found, was that groups would use the Jetson board as-is instead and build their devices around that. This unexpected market led NVIDIA to pivot a bit on what Jetson would be, resulting in the second-generation Jetson TX1, a proper embedded system board that can be used for both development purposes and production devices.

This relaunched Jetson came at an interesting time for NVIDIA, which was right when their fortunes in neural networking/deep learning took off in earnest. Though the Jetson TX1 and underlying Tegra X1 SoC lack the power needed for high-performance use cases – these are after all based on an SoC designed for mobile applications – they have enough power for lower-performance inferencing. As a result, the Jetson TX1 has become an important part of NVIDIA’s neural networking triad, offering their GPU architecture and its various benefits for devices doing inferencing at the “edge” of a system.

Now about a year and a half after the launch of the Jetson TX1, NVIDIA is going to be giving the Jetson platform a significant update in the form of the Jetson TX2. This updated Jetson is not as radical a change as the TX1 before it was – NVIDIA seems to have found a good place in terms of form factor and the platform’s core feature set – but NVIDIA is looking to take what worked with TX1 and further ramp up the performance of the platform.

The big change here is the upgrade to NVIDIA’s newest-generation Parker SoC. While Parker never made it into third-party mobile designs, NVIDIA has been leveraging it internally for the Drive system and other projects, and now it will finally become the heart of the Jetson platform as well. Relative to the Tegra X1 in the previous Jetson, Parker is a bigger and better version of the SoC. The GPU architecture is upgraded to NVIDIA’s latest-generation Pascal architecture, and on the CPU side NVIDIA adds a pair of Denver 2 CPU cores to the existing quad-core Cortex-A57 cluster. Equally important, Parker finally goes back to a 128-bit memory bus, greatly boosting the memory bandwidth available to the SoC. The resulting SoC is fabbed on TSMC’s 16nm FinFET process, giving NVIDIA a much-welcomed improvement in power efficiency.

Paired with Parker on the Jetson TX2 as supporting hardware is 8GB of LPDDR4-3733 DRAM, a 32GB eMMC flash module, a 2×2 802.11ac + Bluetooth wireless radio, and a Gigabit Ethernet controller. The resulting board is still 50mm x 87mm in size, with NVIDIA intending it to be drop-in compatible with Jetson TX1.

Given these upgrades to the core hardware, unsurprisingly NVIDIA’s primary marketing angle with the Jetson TX2 is on its performance relative to the TX1. In a bit of a departure from the TX1, NVIDIA is canonizing two performance modes on the TX2: Max-Q and Max-P. Max-Q is the company’s name for TX2’s energy efficiency mode; at 7.5W, this mode clocks the Parker SoC for efficiency over performance – essentially placing it right before the bend in the power/performance curve – with NVIDIA claiming that this mode offers 2x the energy efficiency of the Jetson TX1. In this mode, TX2 should have similar performance to TX1 in the latter’s max performance mode.

Meanwhile the board’s Max-P mode is its maximum performance mode. In this mode NVIDIA sets the board TDP to 15W, allowing the TX2 to hit higher performance at the cost of some energy efficiency. NVIDIA claims that Max-P offers up to 2x the performance of the Jetson TX1, though as GPU clockspeeds aren’t double TX1’s, it’s going to be a bit more sensitive on an application-by-application basis.

NVIDIA Jetson TX2 Performance Modes
Max-Q Max-P Max Clocks
GPU Frequency 854MHz 1122MHz 1302MHz
Cortex-A57 Frequency 1.2GHz Stand-Alone: 2GHz
w/Denver: 1.4GHz
2GHz+
Denver 2 Frequency N/A Stand-Alone: 2GHz
w/A57: 1.4GHz
2GHz
TDP 7.5W 15W N/A

In terms of clockspeeds, NVIDIA has disclosed that in Max-Q mode, the GPU is clocked at 854MHz while the Cortex-A57 cluster is at 1.2GHz. Going to Max-P increases the GPU clockspeed further to 1122MHz, and allows for multiple CPU options; either the Cortex-A57 cluster or Denver 2 cluster can be run at 2GHz, or both can be run at 1.4GHz. The board can be pushed further, beyond the 15W Max-P mode, with GPU clockspeeds topping out at just over 1300MHz, but NVIDIA notes that this is getting well outside of the Parker SoC’s efficiency range.

Finally, along with announcing the Jetson TX2 module itself, NVIDIA is also announcing a Jetson TX2 development kit. The dev kit will actually ship first – it ships next week in the US and Europe, with other regions in April – and contains a TX2 module along with a carrier board to provide I/O breakout and interfaces to various features such as the USB, HDMI, and Ethernet. Judging from the pictures NVIDIA has sent over, the TX2 carrier board is very similar (if not identical) to the TX1 carrier board, so like the TX2 itself is should be familiar to existing Jetson developers.

With the dev kit leading the charge for Jetson TX2, NVIDIA will be selling it for $599 retail/$299 education, the same price the Jetson TX1 dev kit launched at back in 2015. Meanwhile the stand-alone Jetson TX2 module will be arriving in Q2’17, priced at $399 in 1K unit quantities. In the case of the module, this means prices have gone up a bit since the last generation; the TX2 is hitting the market at $100 higher than where the TX1 launched.

 

Farmers, Change that “Guesswork Technology” with Data-driven Technology: Get Zenvus Insights

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We want African farmers to change strategy on how they farm. Agtech pioneer, Zenvus, wants these farmers to use smart farming over guesswork in their farming processes.

Data from Zenvus Smartfarm and Zenvus Yield which are collected from farms are sent to our servers where our computational models help make sense of them. The Web App is where the data is made actionable for farmers to access.

 
The Web App is a place where farmers / investors:
  • Register and activate their Yield and Smartfarm devices (each product comes with a unique code which makes it impossible for stolen ones to be re-used).
  • Login and understand what is happening in their farms.

Two Products are available:

  • Zenvus Insights: This helps farmers understand the soil conditions of their farmlands through sensors that deliver appropriate data to their phones or computers. With this, farmers can effectively manage fertilizer application, irrigation and in general take guesswork out of farming.
  • Zenvus Insights Pro: This is Zenvus Insights for investors who may want to get real-time insights on farms they have invested.

Become a Zenvus Farmer.