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There Is A Limit To National Wealth Creation Without Technology

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Over the last few decades, new technology applications have become very central to the process of socioeconomic development of nations.  Successful ones like information and communication technologies have accelerated productivity by integrating people, processes and tools cheaply and efficiently. They continue to revolutionize all aspects of human existence, both in the public and private sectors, by connecting individuals, organizations and countries electronically in mutually dependent global relationships.

 

Increasingly, the world is experiencing new dimensions in knowledge acquisition, creation, dissemination and usage. Microelectronics, the engine of modern commerce and industry, directly or indirectly, is enabling these revolutionary changes. When this technology advances, a dawn emerges in global economy in speed, efficiency and capacity. Yet, despite its pervasive impacts on daily lives and businesses, it remains to be diffused in Africa. A vision of knowledge workers cannot be achieved in this continent without a creative microelectronics program.
Though software technology has been advancing in the developing countries, the hardware is largely non-existent. Inability of these nations to develop competence in hardware has stalled their institutional capacities to compete in the world.

 

Around the world, technical education has become a vital instrument for wealth and national prosperity. In any developed nation, this education occupies a key strategic position. It is understood that new (successful) technologies are important to a healthy economy. Consequently, technical education is well funded to drive innovation in the economy.

 

Arguably, it is hard to see any successful economy without a sound educational system. No wonder, some of the most innovative and revolutionary technologies are created in the university dorms: the Google, the Yahoo, the Facebook, the Microsoft, the Dell, and so on and on. University is the epi-center of raw dreams where minds are liberated and prepared to shape the world. It remains an organic system that sustains national policy and vision and no succession plan can survive without those students and professors.

 

Today, there is a limit to national wealth creation without science and technology. Experiences have shown that natural resources in form of crude oil, diamond, tin and others may not create the needed national growth for stability and prosperity in many African nations.

 

An alternative would be to support technological innovation if the continent must survive the intense competition of the 21st century fueled by globalization. Technology diffuses only when it is developed or acquired. For many years, Africa has been slow to the development of the most pervasive industry of our time- semiconductor. The major challenge has been the human capital to drive the industry.
At AFRIT, we are engineers who major in semiconductor related areas. We understand the concepts which are used to build computer processors and other cutting edge technologies. We are poised to facilitate the diffusion of new technologies in Africa through quality training and consulting. Providing this service bridges the knowledge gap. This is not IT, which in many African nations is synonymous with technology. With all its glory, IT is an offspring of semiconductors.

 

It cannot exist independently of semiconductors. Above all, the IT in Africa is not the creative IT, but the consumptive IT. We need the wealth that comes from  IT creation and that is what AFRIT stands. We stand that Africa should have technology policy that would have broad perspectives involving medical, geophysical, agricultural technology, semiconductors and other technologies and not just information technology which has been promoted by the media and governments disproportionally.

 

Our operational logistics is very simple. Invite us to develop a curriculum in your institution; organize a workshop/seminar, educate your students/staff on the use of VLSI CAD tools and software, program robots, design in FPGA, VHDL and many more. With our skills, we would train these students/staff with current and comprehensive programs which would enhance performance and capabilities. We understand the spirit of this century. It is a century where “Technology will rule Nations and Algorithms will be the Constitutions”.

 

Imagine firms outsourcing jobs to Africa in 2020 because we have talented labour force with the advantage of competitive wage structure when compared with India and China. It cannot be wished; someone has to make it happen. Join us; and let’s get our young men and women back to the labs

Call for Tekedia Articles: Global Redesign And Innovation Virtual Conference (GRIVC 2011)

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Introduction

In the last few years, the world has morphed into an electronically connected interdependent atomic economic unit where a disruption in one marketplace affects the others. Consequently, it has become naïve to appraise the competitive challenges and opportunities for nations or indeed a continent without looking at the big global picture. Recent financial crises have shown in no small measure that the world is interlinked and the global commerce and industry has been transformed by the extraordinary powers of information and communication technologies.

 

Increasingly, individuals are having much power either in the capital markets, governments or entertainments and the era of centralized political power is progressively giving way to citizen’s power. Indeed, our world is being redesigned and new waves of innovation are evolving to disrupt our modern economic structures. And this trend is expected to continue as the powers of microprocessors continue to improve and information gets cheaper.

 

While the redesigning process is global, the innovation race is not. Many developing nations are not adapting fast enough because of deficiency in knowledge and infrastructural capability. And the developed world will not wait for them because the competition is intense and the global economic health fragile. New technologies will continue to disrupt markets while some like nanotechnology has the capacity to destroy African commodity markets.

 

This poses security threats if plans are not developed to retrain those that will be displaced from the industries. The debts and financial crises in the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain) are showing that a single currency is not a panacea to all economic problems. As it offers a larger market, single currency also could damage a weak continental economic structure.

 

Focus and Thematic

In the midst of the challenges above, there are also opportunities during this redesigning process. Consequently, the objective of this Call is to establish a prestigious compilation of research advances, discussions and reviews on the challenges and opportunities as they affect Africa.

 

We are looking for papers on the following areas: Technology, Finance, Health, Government, Trade, Immigration, Environment & Sustainability, Education, Currency, Energy, Risk and Security, Welfare, Poverty, Employment,  Corruption, Terrorism,  Economic Growth, etc. Your ideas will be packaged for the African Union where they would be used to shape the future of the African continent.

 

We invite papers from the academic, non-governmental, professional and business communities to submit a maximum of two-page paper on what you think is the most important challenge facing the world and how that will affect Africa. You can also look at it from the other side; what is the most important challenge to Africa and how will the world affect it.

Simply, we seek:

–          Describe one major challenge or opportunity in the world

–          Explain how that challenge or opportunity will affect Africa

–          Propose a solution on how Africa can overcome the challenge or take advantage of the opportunity

Conference Structure: This conference is free and everything will be done on the Internet. No travel and no registration. We are optimistic that we can gather insights on the pulses that will shape Africa and indeed the world in coming years.

Submission Deadline: Nov 23, 2011

Correspondence/Submission: Send the paper (in Microsoft Word) and any inquiry to tekedia@fasmicro.com

Publication:  Accepted papers will be published on tekedia.com

How To Fix Your Worldpress Blog And Make It Load Faster From Just Host Engineers

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After all the troubles, they got the site back. And in the process, we picked some good ideas on how to keep Worldpress blogs alive. You may refer to the last post in the thread. These are the pros writing and we truly enjoyed the email which we followed line, hook and sinker and implemented.

 

Your account has been opened for your IP address.
A high CPU usage can be caused by the number of calls that WordPress or SMF forum  has to make to the database. On a WordPress  or SMF ,  almost all data are taken from the database. Data such as comments, posts, the URL of the blog, the location of the CSS files, and other information needed for your plug-ins.

Some of these database calls are unavoidable but some can be avoided by simply using the WP-SuperCache plug-in. However, database calls will still be needed to generate the static file after a cache is being cleared.

Here is how to check how many database queries your theme/blog is making.

You can insert this snippet of code on your Footer.php file (or anywhere) to make it display the number of queries:

 

<?php echo get_num_queries();?>
(http://codex.wordpress.org/Function_Reference/get_num_queries)

You can get different results from using different themes:

* 1: 25 queries.
* 2: 58 queries.
* 2: 101 queries.

So how can you reduce the number of database queries:

* Reduce the number of plug-ins (Each plug-in usually stores information in the database. Some plug-ins make more calls than the others.
* If you have to use a plug-in, try reducing the number of information it needs to store whenever possible. For example, if you can turn off logging, then turn it off. Most of the time you won’t need it unless when things go wrong. For example, a spam plug-in usually has an option whether or not to show the number of spam comments it has caught in the past. Turn this off! Do you know that it will make a single database query to grab the number?
* Hardcode obvious information such as the URL of your blog (rather than grabbing it from the database / your administration settings).
reduce wordpress database queries css
Find out the absolute URL by viewing the page source and replace it on your theme editor. DON’T hardcode the title and let WordPress generates the title dynamically for SEO.
* Reduce the number of items and widgets on your main page and/or sidebar.

Thank you.
__
Kind regards,
Just Host
www.justhost.com
View our online Video Tutorials here
http://www.justhost.com/video-tutorials
Introduce a friend to Just Host and receive $60! Please visit:
http://www.justhost.com/affiliates

What Happened Yesterday – Why We Were Offline, Temporarily!

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Many of our readers woke up and realized that Tekedia was offline yesterday. In the last few days we have been having traffic surge problems. Little did we know that our hosting company will simply suspend the account as a way of solving the problem.  Of course we told them that using the word “Suspend” was not really a good way of communicating the issue. They would have used “Temporary out of service “. The good news is that we have fixed the problems.

 

Here is the letter, just to assure you all that we did not get into any trouble from here that warranted any suspension.

 

Hi,

As you probably aware, here at Just Host we proactively monitor all our servers to ensure that our clients websites are loading as fast as possible at all times. During this routine monitoring we have found that your account is utilizing an excessive amount of system resources, and we have been forced to suspend your resellers account  tekedia tekedia.com as per our terms and conditions ‘10% CPU/MEM/MySQL Policy’

 

For your reference, here is a copy of your account usage report:
##########

User Domain % CPU % MEM MySQL Processes

tekedia         3.30     17.40     3.3
tekedia         12.6     /usr/bin/php /home/tekedia/public_html/index.php
tekedia         12.0     /usr/bin/php /home/tekedia/public_html/forum/index.php
##########
Just Host offer unlimited hosting space and unlimited bandwidth, but as per our terms we will suspend any website which exceeds our 10% CPU/MEM/MySQL policy. We hope that you understand our position in
ensuring that we provide the best possible service. In order to continue to provide this high quality service, you will need to upgrade to a dedicated server, which will give you an abundance of additional resources and speed up your website.

 

 

As a loyal Just Host customer we have arranged for you to receive a special deal on a dedicated server with SingleHop, (our trusted dedicated partner) who will assist you with everything you need to make your switch a smooth transaction.

 

 

Please visit this link to upgrade to a dedicated server:
http://www.justhost.com/godedicated

 

 

Sorry for any inconvenience, and we hope you understand our decision. Once you have made the switch to dedicated, feel free to contact us at billing@justhost.com for a refund of your current Just Host account. On behalf of everyone here at Just Host, we wish you all the best with your online ventures.

 

PS: We strongly recommend you consider making the switch to dedicated, as you will experience a vastly improved service, and avoid being suspended again in the future – http://www.justhost.com/godedicated

Kind regards,
[      ]
Just Host
www.justhost.com

View our online Video Tutorials here:
http://www.justhost.com/video-tutorials

Introduce a Friend to Just Host and receive $60!
http://www.justhost.com/affiliates

South Africa’s Road To The Knowlege Economy Passes Through Investment In Emerging Technologies

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The honorable minister of science and technology in South Africa recently stressed the importance of stepping up investment in science and technology, if they are to remain competitive in a fast changing world. In her words “The funding of Science and Technology must be improved if we are to realize our ambitious national goal of building knowledge based economy.

 

One of the areas that must be addressed is increased support for post graduate study and for senior researchers plus a more stable funding model for all our research performing institutions” .  South Africa is one of Africa’s most developed nations. Today South Africa is following the steps of the US in trying to build a knowledge based economy where economic growth is driven by information and knowledge creation and easy transfer as provided by a strong ICT platform.

 

The most significant development affecting business operations in the second half of the twentieth century has been the emergence of the new economy or knowledge economy. The new economy, speaks of an economy where wealth is generated by information technology and knowledge. It is an open economy affected by globalization, rapid changes in financial markets, deregulation, the expansion of communications, innovative financial engineering, improvements in technology and increased market volatility. New economies are based on the production and distribution of knowledge

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Technological developments after the Second World War, such as the development of the transistor, microprocessors, satellites and the computer, led to new capabilities in the provision of information. The capture, analysis and dissemination of information have altered the ways in which businesses operate . The South African Government as a matter of policy supports the formation of ICT clusters in different regions as well as advances in science technology and innovation since it gained independence.

 

South Africa is the economic powerhouse of Africa, leading the continent in industrial output and mineral production and generating a large proportion of Africa’s electricity.

 

The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in South Africa expanded 4.8 percent in the first quarter of 2011 over the previous quarter. From 1993 until 2010, South Africa’s average quarterly GDP Growth was 3.27 percent reaching an historical high of 7.60 percent in December of 1994 and a record low of -7.40 percent in March of 2009.

 

South Africa has a two-tiered economy; one rivaling other developed countries and the other with only the most basic infrastructure. It is therefore a productive and industrialized economy that exhibits many characteristics associated with developing countries, including a division of labor between formal and informal sectors and an uneven distribution of wealth and income. The primary sector, based on manufacturing, services, mining, and agriculture, is well developed .

 

Not only is South Africa itself an important emerging economy, it is also the gateway to other African markets. The country plays a significant role in supplying energy, relief aid, transport, communications and investment on the continent. Its well-developed road and rail links provide the platform and infrastructure for ground transportation deep into Africa.