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How We Will Solve Frauds And Crimes In Nigeria – We Will Deploy Technology

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In the United States, when a child is born, he/she is assigned a number. This is the social security number (SSN). That number follows the child till death. That number is unique and captures the child’s life history.

 

In Africa, there is no effective system of identifying citizens. Nigeria has tried many national ID projects and failed. In Kenya, the result is the same. Fraud, lack of records; nothing has worked for ID projects in Africa. Even when birth certificates are mandated, they are not big deals.  Many are born without being registered. Even if you do, does it really work?

 

If Africa asks my opinion, I will tell them that it would be a waste of time and money doing the ID project the ways they have approached it. It is already too late to start any national ID project based on photos and cards.

 

Simply, I will introduce biometric system where all the people will be scanned and a national database will be built from it. In that way, you will zero out the fraud along with multiple registrations and identifications.

 

This is going to be effective as we can just do fingerprints and forget the more sophisticated retina. In short, if you can do this, banking will come out better off. Forget all the checks and signatures. People will sign with their fingerprints and the national fingerprint ID can be uploaded to all the major banks and governments can service her citizens and get the unbanked banked. Loans can be disbursed with more efficiency since banks can easily validate the applicants.

 

A simple query on the system, financial related information about the applicant is on your screen.

 

But the big question is this: how can you implement such a system when there is no electricity. And that is why we must stop wasting money on this National ID exercise and its usual ritual. If you need electricity before you can pursue biometric alternative, fix the electricity before talking about National ID.

 

I proposed this strategy in Nigeria during a seminar in 2001. My plan was direct; get the fingerprints, have national data centers across the regions, synchronize them across the state, allow big banks to access them, issue terminals to shops for authentication; and get your citizens doing business with ease and freedom.

 

It is time Africa begins to use technology to solve all these problems. Biometric system is here to help it identify and identify its people effectively. That waste of card ID system must stop.

Methodologies For Penetration, Diffusion And Adoption Of Emerging Technologies In Africa

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Microelectronics is recognized as a very important technology that can lift Africa’s economy if it can penetrate into the economy. There have been many challenges associated with making this technology widespread in the continent.  They include inadequacy of quality teachers, equipment and tools, social amenities, among others.

 

The following under listed ideas are proposed are ways that can help in diffusing microelectronics in Africa by working with foreign universities and institutions that can provide technical and managerial supports to organizations in Africa.

 

Internet Virtual Classroom (IVC)
This is a ‘classroom’ on the Internet where instructors and students interact via computers. Besides lecture notes, VOIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) phone, live-chats and online-conferencing are vital components of this classroom resources. The motivation is to create a virtual traditional classroom on the web and educate students separated by physical distance from the instructors.

 

Many European and US universities use IVC to coordinate their satellite campuses and distance education programs. It offers to Africa a framework through which they can tap the pool of their experts in Diaspora, which increasingly prefer to live in the developed nations.

 

The importance of IVC is to solve the problem of lack of quality microelectronics tutors in the continent by connecting people in the developed world to educate students in Africa.

 

By implementing IVC across the continent, it would be easy for African nations to absorb new ideas and technologies through seamless interactions with the external world. Think of engaging a professor of microelectronics from MIT teaching students in University of Nigeria, Nsukka. That experience and connection can lead to new insights from the students. Any process that helps to expose students and small firms to microelectronics will facilitate its transfer.

 

Telepresence Technologies
The telepresence technologies, like the ones offered by Cisco and Digital Video Enterprises, would become one of the most important ways to connect students and instructors in developed nations and Africa. With a high-speed technology that provides high bandwidth, these technologies can help leverage the skills of experts in developed nations to advance technical education in Africa.

 

It also offers a good platform to link citizens of developing nations in Diasporas who are experts in microelectronics to make contributions in their native nations. These citizens can live in their adopted nations while assisting their native ones in developing this important technology.

 

Telepresence refers to a set of technologies which allow a person to feel as if they were present, to give the appearance that they were present, or to have an effect, at a location other than their true location.
Telepresence offers some advantages in terms of virtual reality, which cannot be easily produced in IVC. Telepresence offers ‘live’ classroom despite the small latency and can be a very effective two-way communication between the experts in developed nation and students in Africa working in labs or classrooms. With it, direct supervision of experiments or homework is possible.

 

Through this technology, it would be possible for anyone in any place with network connection and Telepresence equipment to educate and train Africans, either in the public or private workplaces. Because of its efficiency, it can easily translate to good results where people master skills that used to require traveling abroad locally. Many universities in the United States have these tools and if African schools can acquire them, there would be possibilities of integrating world class experts in teaching in African schools.

 

Multi-platform foundries
The availability of experts who can teach the students is not enough, the students must actually have to practically learn and design. That is why multi-platform foundries are required, to provide foundry services to students and universities. Through this process, they will have improvements in skills, develop competence and can potentially graduate to establish small and medium enterprises which will help in the diffusion process of microelectronics.

 

One way of realizing this practical exposure is to have a continental level fabrication service similar to MOSIS of USA, Europractice of Western Europe and CMC of Canada. Through this, students will have the opportunity to design, fabricate and test their microelectronic systems. This is one area African Union NEPAD can help to assist microelectronics education in Africa. They can fund or subsidize these programs for African universities.

 

Nothing teaches better than doing. By focusing on developing foundries, Africa will empower its universities and SMEs to have practical skills which will be spur innovation and competence. As they develop and grow, many multinational firms will like to tap into the skills. The continent enjoys fairly good labor costs. This means that many will come to build plants to benefit from these skills. That is how microelectronics transfer will take place in the continent.

 

The foundry is a solid infrastructure that drives many programs on microelectronics. It will be necessary to develop capability in the knowledge industry. By building them, a process that creates an environment for microelectronics transfer will be implemented in the continent.

 

Enabling Environments for SME
Africa was able to diffuse information technology consumption through a business-center model where small and medium enterprises (SME) educated and trained clients for small fees. Governments must provide the enabling environments in the forms of electricity, telecommunication, and other infrastructures.

 

A good business environment will help the SMEs to grow and that will help them to enter into joint ventures and partnerships with external firms. Doing this will help them get skills and expertise that will improve the technology landscape of Africa. China has done remarkably well because of the institutional support from its leaders. The reforms and developments have helped many Chinese firms to partner with western firms. In the process, they have transferred technologies to China and China is doing great. Africa must do the same by having an environment that promotes business.

 

It is important to know that without enabling environment in the areas like power, property rights, transport, Africa will find it harder to absorb new technologies like microelectronics and nanotechnology since the scale of trade and partnership will be smaller.

 

Open Design Academic Program
The big divide between the microelectronics education in developing nations and developed ones will require a coordinated program to bridge it. We propose formation of Microelectronics Academic Network in each African nation. This will offer the schools the platform to seek for discounts from CAD (computer aided design) manufacturers, multi-platform foundries and efficiently share and collaborate on designkits and techfiles as the license owners provide them.

 

This will become a hi-tech equivalent of open source software development, but within a national level. A coordinated continental program will only focus on fabrication because of the expensive nature of the equipment.

 

The continent must pursue a plan to work to support its tertiary institutions to share resources and collaborate in the process of developing microelectronics.

 

Education Package for Diffusion
Microelectronics is vast; accordingly, efforts must be made to develop the right format as African students are being engaged. There should be scholarships supported by NEPAD to send African students for trainings on microelectronics related areas.

 

In summary, the 21st century is a knowledge century and knowledge will rule modern man. A bottom-up creative technology programs are necessary in Africa towards sustainable transformations into knowledge economy, especially with Africa’s plan for a common currency with potentials of delivering larger market.
Due to the high-specialized skills and capital-intensive nature of microelectronics, good technical education is a prerequisite for sustainable adoption and diffusion across Africa. Also, new applications like IVC and Telepresence could be vital along with a coordinated and planned academic network designed and implemented at both national and continental levels.

 

There is need for more economic, social and industrial coordination in the continent. Africa must reform various sectors in accordance with industry trends. Education, especially technical education, must be supported. Efforts must be geared in adopting microelectronics as its offers to stimulate the integration dynamics by delivering knowledge products which are homogenous and hence can mitigate impacts of trade shocks across regions.

Tools And Equipment You Need For A Microelectronics Center

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We continue our discussion on how Africa can build a world class microelectronics training and research institute (MTRI). Today, we look at tools and equipment necessary to establish such a lab or center.

The equipment and computer systems will be installed in the related rooms. This will involve some computer networking since all the systems must be networked. Some of these schools  already has many computer systems which can be used for MTRI. Nonetheless, MTRI will purchase some servers and high-end computers to run some of the CADs which will be installed.

Fabrication Services: MTRI will be designing on AMI 0.5-micron CMOS process technology because of its leverage costs of fabrication. MTRI will have a cleanroom for its MEMS programs and use MOSIS (mosis.org) for the chips. Other systems which would be purchased are:

–                      MUMPs Cronos (Surface Micromachining)

–                       Rapid Prototyping Boards (Xilinx FPGA)

–                       DSP Platforms (PIC, SX-48 microcontrollers)

–                      Altium/Protel PCB CAD

Workstations: 44 high-end Linux-Windows Combo computers.  These computers will have high speed and memory to enable usage of the CAD tools. Four of these computers will be used as servers for messaging/Internet proxy serve and CAD server. The other 40 will be licensed for CAD applications for design and development. While it is possible to use these schools old systems, these ones are required because of the special requirement of the CADs. These 44 machines are subsets of the 100 budgeted for lab room.

There will be additional 10 Tape Back-Up Systems and HP storage system to backup all students’ works on real time as well as store some vital Institute documents and digital infrastructure.

Test Systems: The following tools and equipment will be purchased to enable the testing and measurements of designed chips.

  • 8 computers to be installed with Matlab for data collection and analyses

• Other major equipment (they would be used for chip testing and measurement)

– 3/6 GHz Signal Generators—this would be used for generating test signals

–  Network Analyzers –this would be used to testing networking sequences on chip

–  Logic Analyzer – this would be used to test output chip for digital signals

–  Spectrum Analyzers – this will be used for noise analysis and spectrum measurement

–  Function/logic generators- this will generate different signals, like sine, pulses for test purposes

–  50 GHz Sampling Scopes – these are fast oscilloscopes for signal measurement and validation

–  Power Meters- this measures the power output in chips

– Probe Stations- we need the probe station for chip characterization and testing

– Microwave Probe Sets- this will be used for the RF systems testing

– SMUs test boards- these are used for easy prototyping and testing

– PCB Test Fixtures- these are used for prototyping

-High-Speed (RF) IC Test system- this test structure is designed for high RF system; good for telecoms

– NIDAC Card for data capture; this is the data acquisition card for obtaining signals from chips

– Microscopes- these are used for micro-soldering on SMU parts,

– Soldering stations- this is a high caliber soldering station

– Heat chambers- for the test of our bandgap references

– Bundles of chips for testing- there are some chips needed to test other chips; eg. ADC, DAC, etc

– each of oscilloscopes, voltage regulators, power supplies – this include the regulator, power supplie, and scopes

 

Design Tools:

MTRI will obtain 10 user licenses for CADENCE (cadence.com) and 40 for Tanner (tanner.com). Presently, these CADs are given at ridiculously discounted prices. While Cadence runs on Linux, Tanner runs on Windows. Other design tools to be purchased are:

High Level Synthesis (FPGA/CPLD):                                              Xilinx ISE

High level simulation (VHDL, Verilog, HDL:                                  Hamster, Xilinx III

MEMS (MEMS, design & simulation)                                              SUGAR, NODAS

PCB (Printed circuit board)                                                   PCB Express/Altium

Acer beTouch E110 Review – An Affordable And Friendly Mobile Phone

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In a word or two

The Acer beTouch E110 is an affordable and friendly mobile phone.

 

The Design

The look of the Acer beTouch E110 reflects its user friendliness. The screen measures 2.8 inches and beneath it sits the 5-way navigation key for easily finding your way to the feature you want. There are three different virtual keyboards onboard the phone, ranging from a compact version to a full QWERTY. This enables you to text a quick message when you’re in a hurry or launch the full keyboard when you have more to say. The predictive text option speeds up the process and lets you type more quickly.

 

The touchscreen is resistive like on the HTC Tattoo, so there is no support for multi-touch. This means you need to apply a little more pressure for your requests to register but the screen is still responsive and you can always use the stylus for those smaller web links. The positive aspect of having a phone like the E110 with a resistive screen is that you are unlikely to make any wrong presses or mistakenly launch an app by brushing the handset – which is easily done on phones like the iPhone 3G S or the LG KF900 Prada which have capacitive screens.

 

You can choose between black and dark blue for the exterior of the Acer beTouch E110, the two colours in keeping with the simplicity of the mobile phone. The phone is fairly compact and light (105g) so you can pop it in your pocket or handbag when you are on the move.

 

Acer beTouch E110 Specifications

The most affordable of the handsets recently launched by Acer – including the beTouch E400, neoTouch P300 and neoTouch P400 – the Acer beTouch E110 still houses a number of features to ensure your mobile experience is a good one.

 

The Acer beTouch E110 runs on the Android 1.5 platform with Acer’s UI on top. This allows for customisable home screens so you can arrange the apps in order of importance, always having the apps you frequently use within range. There are nice touches in the interface too, for example when you bring up the main menu, the background blurs.

 

For fun, Acer has installed several apps on the Acer beTouch E110. These include Acer Spinlets for streaming music and sharing with friends on social networking sites – which you can access quickly via the Facebook and Twitter apps. You can even create your virtual lookalike profile using Acer UrFooz, to share with friends.

 

Other sharable items include snaps taken on the phone’s 3-megapixel camera. And if you don’t feel like sharing online, you can always use Bluetooth instead. Or, if you don’t want to share at all, you can tune into the FM radio and listen on your headphones via the 3.5mm audio jack.

 

Considerations

The web browser is friendly and you can search just by tapping the address bar, but it is a shame there is no Wi-Fi to complement the 3G support.

 

Verdict

The Acer beTouch E110 is an affordable phone which is easy to use and houses social networking ability as well as GPS, a camera and music player.

 

Editor’s Note: You can buy this phone from our UK partner, Best Mobile Contracts

Major Contributors To Nigerian Economic Growth – Picture Of The Desired Economy By 2020

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Over the past few decades, agriculture, wholesale and retail trade, telecommunications and manufacturing sectors contributed most to the growth of Nigerian economy. At present, manufacturing sector’s role, as key driver is limited but it has high potentials. This role will be stimulated during the Nigerian vision period in order to maximize its linkage with other relevant sectors of the economy. It is important to note that advancement in manufacturing is driven by technology. The figure shows the sectoral growth driver of the Nigerian economy from 1999 to 2008.

 

Picture of the Desired Economy by 2020

Under the NV20:2020 manufacturing and services are expected to dominate the structure of national output, while gross national investment is expected to increase, and the infrastructure base of production is expected to improve considerably. Income per capita should have risen to $US4,000 from the estimate of US$1,230 in the year 2008. Table shows existing and desired structure of national output by 2020.

Figure above is sectoral growth driver of the Nigerian economy from 1999 to 2008.

 

Table: Existing and desired structure of national output by 2020.

Activity Sector Projected Share of Output by 2020 (%) Existing Share of Output (%)
Agriculture 3-15 42.1
Industry 30 – 50 23.8
Manufacturing 15 – 30 4.0
Services 45 – 75 34.1

 

Comments: Notice that the Nigerian Vision 2020 architects expect the economy to become a service driven one.  The table above shows about 45-75% share by 2020. What this means is that they want the economy to be less dependent on agriculture and of course mineral extraction. To make this happen, the government must invest in ICT and other critical technologies. The reality is that services go hand in hand with technology development and adoption. The newer ways of improving productivity are largely technology driven these days.

 

For the plot, agriculture is still the driver. What must be pointed out though is that this agriculture is not the advanced type that is practiced in most developed nations. This is largely subsistence agriculture.