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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.

ISO Certified Kenya’s Institute Of Advanced Technology, Nakuru Officially Opens

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Institute of advanced technology (IAT) is well known for offering certificate, diploma and degree courses in Business and Information and Communication Technology. It is the first training institution in East and Central Africa to be ISO certified. They have also been for four consecutive years the recipients of the Microsoft award for Best Certified Technical Education Center (CTEC).

 

The organization was established in 1991 and has over the years amassed a considerable amount of experience in training both individuals and corporate clients. So there is no campus in your area? No problem. IAT also have offsite training as well. This means that they will come and offer training to you where and when it is convenient.

 

 Their participation in the delivery of ICT Training coupled by demand for the said services has seen them grow rapidly with campuses being put up in major towns in Kenya. The latest Campus is the Nakuru branch which was officially opened by the C.E.O of the Kenya ICT Board Mr. Paul Kukubo. The Kenya ICT Boar d is committed to delivering exemplary service to our clients through the application of globally recognized project management standards so that Kenya can adopt and exploit ICT for socio-economic enrichment. The above mentioned awards show that the organization (IAT) has been excelling in ICT training and has attained international recognition for their efforts. As further proof of the Government’s Commitment to supporting the growth of ICT in Kenya the area MP, who is also the assistant minister for Roads, Hon Lee Kinyanjui was in attendance.

 

The campus rests on approximately 18,000 square feet of land and has a state of the art examination center. At the time the school had 87 units but with the capacity to hold over 260 units there is room for expansion.

 

While the majority agrees that ICT development is a powerful tool towards attaining the Kenyan vision 2030 goals, it is also important to ensure that services delivered are of quality and are up to international standards.

Kenya’s Ministry of Information and Communication Calls For Grant Proposals For Web And Mobile Apps – Top Prize Is $150,000

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The Kenyan Ministry of Information and Communication calls for web and apps proposals from its citizens towards the awards of grants in 2011 Tandaa local digital content. We must point out that this agency of Kenya is one of the best in Africa. You can find all the details at the grant website.

 

Other African nations must see what ICT Kenya is doing. Instead of the gimmicks from Microsoft and Google where African developers compete just for about hand shake or $25,000, Kenya is giving something in return. What this implies is that if the government plans well, they can motivate more than these MNCs. This Kenyan grant is more lucrative than anything out there in the world from these companies.

 

 

Call for proposals: July 21- Aug 22 2011

 

 

Grant amount: $ 10,000 per individuals; $ 50,000 per company; $ 150,000 matching grant for established companies

Number of grants to be awarded in 2011: at least 30

Eligibility: Kenyan citizen, companies registered in Kenya

Categories: Private Sector Innovation, Government Data Applications

 

The Ministry of Information and Communications, through the Kenya ICT Board is now accepting proposals for the Tandaa Digital Content Grant. The grant is offered to Kenyan citizens and companies registered in Kenya for the development of innovative web or mobile phone applications. Grants of up to $ 50,000 for companies and $ 10,000 for individuals and teams will be offered through the program.

 

The objective of the grant is to stimulate ICT innovation and creativity while promoting economic growth in the sector. For many companies that develop web and mobile solutions, access to funding to grow their company is a huge challenge. By supporting entrepreneurs with the funds they need to successfully take their products to market, the grant hopes to grow the number of relevant and local web and  mobile applications available to Kenyans.

 

The Kenya ICT Board awarded fifteen grants in 2010 and hopes to award at least 30 grants in 2011. The grant is available to individuals and companies in any sector and the Kenya ICT Board encourages any individual or company with ideas for web or mobile applications to apply.


Category 1: Private sector innovation 

The Tandaa Digital Content Grant is divided into two categories: Government Open Data and Private Sector Innovation.

 

In the Private Sector category, the Kenya ICT Board will select the most innovative proposals that demonstrate long term business viability. Proposal in this category must respond to a demonstrated market need and have a positive impact on the community it seeks to serve.

 

In 2010, the Kenya ICT Board awarded seven grants in this category including a diary farmer payment application and a social media marketing product.

Category 2: Government Data Applications

On July 8, the Government of Kenya made 290 datasets publicly available and accessible through an Open Data portal. Now, the Kenya ICT Board will support entrepreneurs to develop web and mobile applications that utilize the data to provide services or products for citizens.

Eduweb, an online school portal that use data from the Ministry of Education to provide a service for parents selecting schools for their children, was among seven grants awarded in 2010.

Eligibility

Kenyan citizens above 18 are eligible to apply for the grant. Companies officially registered in Kenya are eligible to apply for the grant.

 

Matching grant for established companies

A new feature of the second round of the Tandaa Digital Content Grant offers established companies an opportunity to participate in the program. Companies founded at least 10 year ago with  over 40 members of staff are invited to summit their proposals for a web or mobile application. The companies must match the grant in full. This categories allows otherwise profitable ICT companies to develop innovative projects within a short period of time.

 

Business Plan training

Another new feature of the Tandaa Digital Content Grant is a training component designed into the proposal process. Over 2,000 people participated in the first round of the Digital Content Grant. However, more than half of the applicants struggled with the business plan sections of the proposal. As such, the Kenya ICT Board will offer business plan training to the top 150 applicants. The training will equip the most innovative applicants with the tools to help them secure funding and grow the business–regardless of wether they are awarded the grant.

Application Forms:
•Individuals/teams ($ 10,000 each)

•Companies ($ 50,000 each)

•Matching grant ($ 150,000 each)

Grants Sub Menus:

— Status Update

— Eligibility: Individuals

— Eligibility: Companies

— Eligibility: Matching Grant

— Criteria: Private Sector

— Criteria: Government Applications

— Inquiries

Mobile Design Principles – A Presentation By Ushahidi iPhone And iPad Apps Developer

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We think you will like this presentation by one of the bests in the game – the guy that made Ushahidi  iPhone and iPad mobile apps. The presentation by Dale Zak is available on this link.

 

Simple – keeping it simple is key to good mobile design

  • single task – each screen should focus on doing one task really well
  • less is more – reducing features often provides a better overall user experience
  • uncluttered – clean, large, well spaced, readable
  • easy to use – should be intuitive the first time

Familiar – application should instantly be familiar to your users

  • native platform – familiar with the target device (shouldn’t feel like a BlackBerry app squished onto an Android screen)
  • other apps – similar user experience to other apps on their device
  • design standards – reuse basic ui elements (if you are building your own custom date picker when a native one already exists, you need to ask yourself why)

Consistent – should be a consistent user experience throughout application

  • element layout – similar location of controls, buttons or menu items like Done or Cancel
  • color, fonts, whitespace – consistent color, fonts and whitespace also important

Fast – performance critical on devices with limited processing power

  • quick launch – opening the app should be quick
  • responsive – actions inside the app should feel snappy
  • cancellable – long running tasks should allow user to cancel them or elegantly timeout

Feedback – providing meaningful user feedback a must

  • loading indicator – tasks that take longer than a second should display a loading indicator
  • show progress – long running tasks should ideally show the percentage of progress
  • highlight selected – changing the background color of current item is subtle but useful feedback
  • scroll to current – auto scrolling to the currently selected item can also enhance user experience

Efficient – strive to making input as easy as possible

  • minimize input – the more ways you can reduce typing the better
  • auto complete – provide suggestions as user types
  • easily searchable – filtering long lists for easier selection
  • remember last – intelligently remember last input for each field (example name vs city)
  • pre-populate – populating fields with available information like date and location, while still giving user option to change if needed

Scale – resizing elements to utilize the screen space

  • utilize full screen – docking controls to screen edges can help ensure controls stretch gracefully
  • fit to orientation – re-arranging elements to utilize portrait or landscape
  • easy to click – large easy to click controls makes it easier to select and input data
  • reduce scrolling – scrollbars are often painful on mobile devices, so providing alternatives like pagination worth investigating
  • expand for more – limit how much is displayed while giving the option to expand to view more

Offline – should function when internet is not available or connection limited

  • work offline – if your app requires a constant internet connection, why didn’t you just make a mobile web page?
  • load in background – intelligently pulling of data in the background can provide seamless user experience allowing them to do other tasks in the meantime
  • download now – ability to download data now can utilize wifi hotspots making the app useful in dead zones
  • upload later – being able to add content in a disconnected state, and then upload when internet becomes available

Context – remembering where user left off

  • remember state – the app should re-open at the previous state
  • auto save on exit – automatically saving content
  • user preferences – allowing user to customize the app and it remembering their settings

Design – balancing appearance and functionality

  • look & feel vs functionality – can you make it look nice but also be useable?

Fun – finally, make it fun

  • useful – does it solve a problem?
  • addictive – do you use it yourself?

 

We must point out that these features apply for any platform, and not just the iPhone and iPad. Thank you Dale for these insights.

U.S. Federal Government Certifies Blackberry Playbook For Its Enhanced Security Features

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Good news just came to the struggling old giant.  The BlackBerry Playbook has been approved by the US government for use in federal government activities. This makes it the first ever tablet to be certified by the U.S. government for its secuirty features and good quality.

 

Research in Motion in a statement release stated the following:

 

“RIM is pleased to announce that the BlackBerry PlayBook is the first tablet approved under FIPS for use within the U.S. federal government,” said Scott Totzke, Senior Vice President, BlackBerry Security at Research In Motion.

 

“This certification demonstrates our continued commitment to meeting the needs of security-conscious organizations and enables the U.S. federal government to buy with confidence knowing that the PlayBook meets their computing policy requirements for protecting sensitive information.