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The world’s latest operating system after Windows, Linux, iOS, Android, is ….Alexa

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The CES has confirmed that we have a new operating system that works via voice and that OS is Alexa. The number of devices supported by Alexa dominated the CES.

In the less than two years since she debuted as the artificial intelligence housed within the Amazon Echo smart speaker, Amazon’s voice-activated virtual assistant has seen her popularity — and her prominence — skyrocket. The Echo is one of Amazon’s top-selling gadgets, a frequent sellout, and Alexa doesn’t show any signs of slowing down in 2017, either.

Alexa is a “virtual assistant,” which isn’t a new concept in tech. Chances are you’re already familiar with Siri, Cortana, Google Now or Watson — or with any of the countless fictional virtual assistants we’ve seen portrayed in the last half century or so’s worth of sci-fi flicks.

But right now, the key one for voice is Alexa and it is winning. So after Windows, Linux, iOS, Android, we have Alexa as a new OS.

Why Alexa for your application development?

Alexa, the voice service that powers Echo, provides capabilities, or skills, that enable customers to interact with devices in a more intuitive way using voice. Examples of these skills include the ability to play music, answer general questions, set an alarm or timer and more. Alexa is built in the cloud, so it is always getting smarter. The more customers use Alexa, the more she adapts to speech patterns, vocabulary, and personal preferences. With Alexa, developers can build new voice experiences and take advantage of the following benefits:

Visit this link to begin developing on the new OS Alexa.

This is to how to prepare for the biggest career opportunity in Nigeria right now

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Prepare or gift a new career in 2017. Cybersecurity and digital forensics are careers in high demand and First Atlantic Cybersecurity Institute, Pittsburgh USA (www.Facyber.com) provides the education needed to enter these fields.

Our online learning programs are flexible and affordable and come with a (first week)100% money back guarantee.

Learn about:
– Cybersecurity Policy
– Cybersecurity Management
– Cybersecurity Technology
– Cybersecurity Intelligence and Digital Forensics

Each program category is phased as Certificate (online 12 weeks), Diploma (online 12 weeks), and Nanodegree (1 week live). Our programs are relevant for engineers, lawyers, policymakers, law enforcement, health professionals, students, investors, bankers,insurers, etc as they cover all areas of cybersecurity – from policy to technology to management.

Start today and you can finish your program in a few months with real world skills you can use on the job. Alternatively, gift it to someone you love (cousins, friends, students, children, etc). He/she can begin a new journey to a new career.

Paypal, debit & credit cards, and bank transfer supported across Africa.

The Program Catalog and detailed Table of Contents.
We’re looking for local partners and students across Africa to help promote our programs. For more, contact Audrey Kumar via info@facyber.com

How a cashless system can speed up rebuilding of Northeast Nigeria

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Editor’s Note: This piece was written by Emmanuel  Okoegwale

For the first time in years, residents of the North East of Nigeria are enjoying relative peace, thanks to the renewed efforts of the Nigerian military in routing the Boko Haram, one of the world’s deadliest terror groups, from most of their strongholds in the region.

As the North-East transits to post insurgence era, rebuilding efforts is commencing gradually by the Nigerian government with billions of dollars pledged by the World Bank, United States, United Kingdom and many other international development partners.

The North East is historically one of the least educated and developed regions in Nigeria with very poor financial services infrastructure which were priority targets for the insurgents in the early stages of the bloody insurgency. The region is clearly without a functional, effective and efficient financial services system that can support the rebuilding efforts considering the sheer volume of intervention programs such as cash transfer programs, feeding programs, education grants, health, re-integration etc, covering extensive distances in the region with Bornu state alone estimated to cover over 70,000 km2!

The rebuilding efforts will create an entire new industry in the region covering diverse stakeholders like vendors, suppliers, beneficiaries, contractors, service providers to be paid using cash or exploring digital options to reduce or remove the inefficiencies that are usually associated with the use of cash.

Gaps in the use of cash in rebuilding efforts in North East, Nigeria:

Security

Despite the fact that peace is gradually returning to the region, it will take years to complete mop-up operations, establish civil protection programs and institutions, achieve pre-conflict security level status and de-radicalize the insurgents.

It will take years of planning, implementation and sustained budgets to provide adequate security in the states. With cash based operations, cash security will have to be extended to extensive coverage of cities, towns, communities, but with cashless operations, cash security may be limited to wholesale cash movement while payouts are made in digital form.

Banking infrastructure

Banks branches were fixed targets for the insurgents in the early days and they suffered huge losses. Most Bank branches had been looted, burnt and destroyed during the attacks. Few bank branches operate skeletal services in some parts of the state capitals in the North east and do not venture out into the towns and rural communities as these are low-hanging targets for insurgents.

Rebuilding banks branch network within the affected states will take longer to achieve without any state support. Expanding services into the hinterlands or unbanked communities will not be a priority in the short term without compelling incentives.

Cost of cash

Cash movement, staffing cost and time required to disburse cash is significant in any given clime and much more expensive in an insurgency ravaged region. The inefficiencies that come with the use of cash is also high, due to the fact the beneficiaries travel long distances and  physically present themselves to collect cash at collection points with long waiting hours thereby costing them time that could be used for their businesses.

Cash disbursements are open to abuses and theft from the middlemen by charging beneficiaries higher fees, pilfer cash, etc. Moving to digital payment eliminates these challenges and ensures direct payment mechanism to intended beneficiaries in full value.

Pertinent considerations before going cashless

Telecommunications infrastructure is in a very bad state across the region due to the fact that the insurgents destroyed and looted many of the base stations. The implication is that whatever digital options to be considered, availability of mobile network should be a factor in product designs, end-user technology, user of data services etc.

An identification protocol for beneficiaries should not necessarily be the Nationally acceptable National Identification card for Know-Your-customer purposes since most of the displaced people had lost most of their personal effects during the insurgency. A new identification that addresses their documentation requirements can be deployed and factored into the cash transfer programs of the governments and international development agencies.

As the Nigeria keeps pushing the frontiers of cashless transactions driven by the determination of the regulator, increased telecommunications networks and  adoption of mobile technology, uptake in the adoption of cards and e-commerce, will the North East of Nigeria leverage on the rebuilding efforts  to move away from cash and  leapfrog to digital payments? Only time will tell.

Emmanuel  Okoegwale is a Principal Associate, MobileMoneyAfrica

How to Accelerate Innovation And Sustainable Economic Prosperity In Nigeria

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Nigeria is on the move. It is making progress. Though there are many challenges, the new team of economic experts assembled by the President is poised to redesign the nation and move it to the path of prosperity. In this report, Tekedia offers insights and perspectives which if considered could put Nigeria towards growth and sustainable progress.

We identified industrial clusters in the nation and we recommend that Nigeria focuses the development efforts around them.

  • Transportation and logistics
  • Health systems and healthcare
  • Business services
  • Energy services
  • Agriculture and food processing
  • Chemical products and plastics
  • Entertainment and tourism

Nigeria must come with a diversified strategy where each state or region must develop a plan that will work for it. We cannot run a fix all approach because each of the regions has different strategic opportunities. So, we want to examine  the development efforts based on specific regions.

Transportation Hub

The middle belt of Nigeria offers a opportunity to build a transportation as they link the South and North. Plateau state should be transformed into a hub that can enable an advanced transportation network in the country. Most of the luxury buses pass through this region of middle belt and most of the goods move through them. With better facilities, the state can become a domain that will generate revenue and boost economic growth in the nation.

Industrial Clusters

Tekedia recommends efforts to facilitate formation of industrial clusters in the state.  Harvard Business School Professor, Michale Porter, coined the term “industry cluster” on the idea that once an industry achieves a critical mass of businesses, it will give the region an advantage over other areas in the given sector. That way other businesses will come to that region.

Tekedia sees the necessity of developing modernized clusters in Aba for shoe, Kano for leather , among other areas. The government must carefully look at all the regions and enable the creation of the right ecosystem that will help them succeed. Lagos has taken the position for ICT, we can get Sokoto to become the powerhouse of the solar systems development sub-sector. Other regions will focus on sectors they have natural competence.

It must be emphasized that jobs base camps must be developed to have the right manpower in the nation. The country must understand that each of the regions have unique opportunities. Expertise must be locally matched.

Top federal universities in the country must be anchors for new ideas and growth and the nation could play a role to invent and sustain the clusters.

Energy and Sustainable Energy

Our universities could play major roles in this area. There is also an opportunity in the Northern part to help jumpstart solar technology business. Government should expand the focus of government labs to making them innovation platforms where research outputs are taking to the market.

 

Healthcare

Nigeria has an opportunity in this sector. The national university teaching hospitals must be anchored to drive innovation and build a cluster of health focused private companies in the region. We need to get beyond services to encouraging local product development and design.

 

Inciting Innovation

Nigeria must develop and implement what is called INCITE Initiatives. INCITE means INnovation, Commercialization, Investment, Technology, and Entrepreneur. We recommend a modernized and better executed StepB Nigeria project that does not focus on federal agencies and institutes to any organization with innovation capacity, including private. Tekedia recommends $500 million to help drive this project, nationwide. Entrepreneurship and commercialization of ideas must be paramount in any plan.

 

Friendly Ecosystem

Nigeria remains a toxic place for business because the cost of business is high. Nigeria needs to provide basic amenities to help companies have opportunities to prosper. Also, the IPR must be strengthened so that companies can do real creative works with assurances that their works will be protected.

 

Foreign Direct Investment

Nigeria has a duty to make the nation to be seen within the lens as a good place for FDI. Understanding that most of the states are not economically viable without government support, Nigeria needs to invent a new process to make sure that development is not localized within Lagos, Abuja, Ibadan, PHC and other states. We have to use local tax incentives and laws to expand FDI into other regions of the nation.

 

Reviewing Regulations

Nigerian business ecosystem is tough. More companies collapse within ten years than succeed. Multiple taxation is common and excessive bureaucracy is rampant. While it takes few minutes to register a company in some advanced nations, it needs more than three months in Nigeria.

 

No African airline made top 20 safest airlines in the world, according to AirlineRatings

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Australian consumer-aviation website AirlineRatings.com notes that 2016 was the second safest year in the history of commercial aviation, after 2013.

AirlineRatings.com, the world’s only safety and product rating website, which was launched in June 2013, has announced its top twenty safest airlines and top ten safest low-cost airlines for 2017 from the 425 it monitors.

Top of the list for the fourth year is Australia’s Qantas, which has a fatality free record in the jet era – an extraordinary record. Making up the remainder of the top twenty in alphabetical order are: Air New Zealand, Alaska Airlines, All Nippon Airways, British Airways, Cathay Pacific Airways,  Delta Air Lines, Etihad Airways, EVA Air, Finnair, Hawaiian Airlines, Japan Airlines, KLM, Lufthansa, Scandinavian Airline System, Singapore Airlines, Swiss, United Airlines, Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Australia.  –

The carriers on the list hail from Asia, North America, Australia, and Europe, with no carriers from Africa and South America making the cut.