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Nigerian Youth Could Spark An Era Of Innovation – Evidence From International Competitions Shows We Have Thinkers

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By Olubode Olatunji

David Olaniyan, Taiwo Orogbangba, Toluwanmi Kolawole and Alaba Oluwafemi, do these names sound familiar? May be and maybe not. These were the guys from Federal University of Technology Akure, (FUTA) who flew the Nigerian flag in the recently concluded global students’ technology Imagine Cup competition organized by Microsoft, an American public multinational corporation. 183 countries started out in the Imagine Cup competition and these guys’ medical solution software was voted fifth amongst the lot in New York, the United State of America.

 

The news is pleasant to the ears and warm to the heart. They have made us proud. We need to give them a blast. Roll out the drums. Pop the Champaign. They deserved to be celebrated. I am a firm believer that this generation of young people has a rendezvous with destiny.

 

The team designed a medical app named Medicare. The software application is aimed at achieving the UN Millennium Development Goals to Reduce Child Mortality; Improve Maternal Health; Combat HIV/AIDS, Malaria and other diseases; and Ensure Environmental Sustainability. This is very novel.

 

The national competition that threw up Medicare as the winner also produced Click Synergy from Covenant University which digitizes educational materials with an app named ePaq and Brain Media from Obafemi Awolowo University students, that can help transmit class lectures via radio. The app name is schooltwo.

 

Our education system may be in a terrible state of rot but these students have proved that all hope is not totally lost. There is a silver lining behind the heavy dark cloud hovering over our institutions of learning.

 

I am equally aware that several home grown inventions litter our universities and research institutes. I recently came across a report published by Federal Ministry of Science and Technology as far back as 2004 titled ‘Profiles on Selected Commercialisable Research and (R&D) Results’. There you will find over 60 items that were developed by Nigerian Researchers that can be produced using almost 100 percent local contents in process technology, design and manufacture of equipment/machinery, raw materials, plants maintenance and repairs. These and several others are wasting away. We definitely cannot afford this waste.

 

How do we keep the fire burning in our youths and researchers if at the end of the day the products of their efforts and toils are not helped to see the light of the day? How do we then hope to become competitive, grow and develop as a country? There is no other way other than to encourage invention and build a bridge with innovation. It is innovation, real innovation that produces economic and social values.

 

To build a prosperous country, there is no alternative to an innovation based development model. We dare not continue in this state of inertia otherwise, we shall be left at the periphery of the world economy; giant in population size and natural resources but dwarf in economic significance. One sure way to do this is to build a virile innovation ecosystem. How do we go about this? We must collaborate. And this requires openness, active cooperation, communication and feedback among scientists, engineers and designers. We must build linkages with inventors together with entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and innovators.

 

We must nurture exploration, engage with local knowledge and local issues, hold science fairs, and innovation contests. Our teachers must be re-trained to orient them towards innovation. We must re-design our course curricula to foster learning, application and experimentation. We must change our grading system; include case studies, projects and problem-solving exercises. We must foster trial, failure, and re-trial through formal schooling, organizational and societal means. These have been tried in other economies and have produced tremendous results.

 

We must harness the power of our youth to enable the realization of the demographic dividend. This will not only tame but also prevent major social disruptions. These young ones have given us hope. They have proved that they are not inferior to other breeds from other climes. What they need is an innovation enabled environment.

The Era Of Homogularity – Dawn Of Human Electronic-Driven Immortality

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In this IEEE magazine article (Neuromorphs: replaceable organs of the future?), we made a case on why human organs could be built with electronics, efficiently. Now, we are extending that by introducing Homogurailty– an era when man can attain electronic immortality.

 

In this era, a new wave of computing will emerge where man will become the created and the creator and humans will be Internet nodes with drugs assigned internet IPs because everything will converge on the web. Your today’s computers will be obsolete.

 

Yes, those primitive machines of today will give way to spiking computing and only few supercomputers will be needed under cloud/grid topology. Computers as we shop them will cease, we will rather buy ‘access nodes’ as all thoughts and ideas will converge on the web. Internet search engines will not just mine data, they will search human thoughts; man will be an extension of Internet. Do not worry, social websites will provide data to model people’s lifestyles and behaviors using algorithms.

 

This is  Comgularity- computing with machines attaining self-consciousness and spiking evolution.

 

NB: we did not say digital computing because we think it is primitive and ineffective. We think computing that mimics the brain/nervous system is the future.

Airtel Nigeria Appoints Rajiv Seghal, Vice President: Enterprise, SMEs And Postpaid

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This is a long awaited move. It is not going well in Airtel Nigeria. And recently they announced that Rajiv Seghal has been appointed VP of Enterprise, SMEs and and Postpaid.  This is actually a very lucrative business segment than the prepaid one which has become commoditized.  The problem is that Airtel underestimated the challenges  they will face in Nigeria when they bought over Zain. Africa as a whole is a different business climate from India and now they seem to understand that, we hope they get it right, with new ideas.

 

Congratulations Rajiv and good luck on your new post. Just note that what works in Ghana may not work in Nigeria and the model in India must be different from what you have to do in Nigeria. Why? Different culture and different business environment. If you try to improve the ARPU (average price per user) aggressively, you will lose most of the SMEs. You have to innovative as you set your prices.

 

Seghal before his new appointment was the Vice President and National Head – Voice and Solutions for Bharti Airtel Ltd. in India. He will be responsible for developing innovative mobile solutions for SMEs and Postpaid consumers across the country just as he will assist Airtel to reclaim leadership position in the SME segment. Commenting on Seghal’s appointment, the Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of Airtel Nigeria, Rajan Swaroop said the appointment demonstrates Airtel’s commitment to realizing its ambition of being the most loved brand in the daily lives of Nigerians as it moves to empower businesses and high network individuals to succeed in their endeavours.

Road To Tech4Africa – Ndubuisi Ekekwe Speaks With South Africa’s Daily Maverick

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By operating as a consumer rather than a developer of ICT, Africa is missing a massive opportunity to position itself competitively in the technology business, says Ndubuisi Ekekwe, founder of the African Institution of Technology. Ekekwe believes Africa needs to start participating in the production of components like microprocessors and nanotechnology. By MANDY DE WAAL.

 

Read the rest of the interview on South Africa’s Daily Maverick website.

 

Ndubuisi Ekekwe will be speaking in October in South Africa at Tech4Africa. He will make a case why Africa needs to move up in technology pyramid( he coined that term) and begin a new era of creating than consuming. He will also deliver a major speech in Chinese Congress of Nanotechnology  in Beijing this October and is scheduled to fly into London to give an expert insights in a strategy session for some Fortune Global 500 CEOs organized by one of the world’s elite consulting companies. Ekekwe’s talk in Vietnam Education Foundation this year was voted the best talk by Vietnamese Fellows and Scholars in the U.S. He spoke on Ideas Build Nations – Send Yours Home. We hope you will make it to Tech4Africa to hear a really fresh perspective on the future of technology and economic redesign in Africa.

ZTE Racer Review – The Budget Android Phone With FM Radio Interface

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In a word or two

The ZTE Racer is a compact and capable budget Android device, ideal for first-time smartphone users.

 

 

The Design

The ZTE Racer manages to live up to its name when it comes to design. The simple, all-black case is complemented by a chrome-effect strip beneath the screen for making and ending calls. Light and small, the Racer does have a slightly cheap feel to it – it is not a weighty high-end smartphone like the iPhone 4, for example – and yet it still looks neat. And if you’re a fan of light handsets, you’ll enjoy the 100g status of the Racer.

 

 

With a 2.8 inch touchscreen, you can type and interact directly onscreen on the ZTE Racer. ZTE naturally needed to make cut-backs to keep the price of this phone so affordable, and the screen is one of these areas – the screen uses resistive rather than capacitive technology. This can make confident presses of small links a bit tricky but overall, once you’re used to handling the mobile, you shouldn’t encounter many typing mistakes. The screen automatically flips to landscape mode when you turn the Racer on its side, making the QWERTY keyboard more spacious and the keys easier to press accurately.

 

ZTE Racer Specifications

The design of the ZTE Racer isn’t the only neat aspect of this phone. Combining communication with entertainment, the Racer lets you stay in touch with friends and enjoy simple features too – all for around £100 on Pay As You Go through Three. The phone comes with pre-installed apps for Facebook, Twitter, Swype and Windows Live Messenger so you can chat with friends verbally and online practically for free. When you make Skype-to-Skype calls or 3-to3 calls, these won’t cost you a penny. Similarly, the social networking and instant messaging can be accessed easily using either the Wi-Fi or 3G connectivity.

 

Run on the Android 2.1 platform, the ZTE Racer comes with Google features too including Maps for navigating your way. There is also Google Mail onboard so you can email as well as instant message friends and family.

 

 

For a budget device, the 3.2-megapixel camera is decent. The fact the Racer is so small and portable enhances this feature as you will likely have your phone to-hand whenever a photo opportunity presents itself. Although there is no flash so you can only take images when the lighting’s good enough, having a better-than-average camera included is a bonus.

 

 

There is also the option to listen to music on the ZTE Racer, whether you select your own songs transferred from your PC or downloaded onto the phone, or the FM radio. And with a battery that supports up to 200 hours on standby or up to 3.5 hours of talk time, you will be able to take your Racer with you and not worry about the battery draining too quickly.

 

Considerations

It is a shame the screen is resistive and not capacitive.

 

Verdict

For a cheap Android, the ZTE Racer has a stylish design and some advanced features for mobile communication and entertainment. If budget is a factor for you, the Racer is worth considering – you’ll be pleasantly surprised by this handset.

 

Buy this device from our UK partner, Best Mobile Contracts