DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 7693

The Latest From Online Music Streaming Sector – Spotify Takes Command

0

The arrival of Spotify in U.S. in July 2011 was well received. Celebrities like Britney Spears, Ashton Kutcher and Trent Reznor have pushed the marketing and promotion in Twitter to a new level. This company cannot be luckier when some A-listers are openly acknowledging they were using the product even before the government gave it go ahead to begin to stream music in U.S. There is no other better way to promote or introduce a product in the market than the way Spotify had it in the month of July.

 

Spotify is a Swedish DRM-based music streaming service offering streaming of selected music from a range of major and independent record labels, including Sony, EMI, Warner Music Group, and Universal.Launched in October 2008 by Swedish startup Spotify AB, the service had approximately ten million users as of 15 September 2010; about 1 million of whom were paying members.The service is, as of July 2011, only available in Finland, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the United States. (wikipedia)

 

This is the the latest from the Spotify buzz and online music sector in general:

 

  • Spotify will get into Facebook soon and users can then share music and also help friends know what their friends are playing and listening to
  • iTunes is lagging behind in this sector and is poised to be one of the failed projects under Steve Jobs in the last few years. Since its launch in Sept, Apple has not promoted it to users. It is losing steam and arguable a failed endeavor from Apple
  • Justin Timberlake is revamping Myspace since he co-bought it from News Corp. He wants to return the site to its root – music
  • Turntable.fm is helping people play DJ and then rate others based on their playing habits. This company needs a lot of work to compete in this sector very well.
  • Though Spotify has the agreements with the major music label owners like Universal, Sony,EMI and Warmer – an indeed a sign of approval and confidence from those that matter, it is yet to have a strategy for most developing world. This means that anyone with a good tech skill can replicate their model for local artists and record labels.

 

Fasmicro Trains On Apps and Embedded Systems At Owerri, Nigeria

2


Two modules, independently delivered.

 

Module I: Mobility Computing & Android App Development

five days (call for date)

Module II: Embedded Systems -FPGA, Microcontroller

five days (call for date)

 

 

Venue: Fasmicro Head Office, 124a Okigwe Rd, Owerri, Imo State


Time: 9am -5pm

 

Cost:  N79,900 per module per participant. A participant that registers for both modules pays N139,900.


 

Summary

Android is an open-source cutting-edge mobile platform that has gained momentum in recent years. Developed by Google based on the Linux kernel and Java, it offers virtually limitless opportunities because of its open-source license. Embedded systems itself is a branch of microelectronics which has revolutionized the world of commerce and industry. This training will introduce participants to these core areas of modern technology.

 

 

Module I is a hands-on Android course designed to provide essential skills and experience with developing applications on Android mobile platform. Throughout the course, participants will develop real-life applications, which can serve as basis for their future Android projects. Eclipse and Android SDK are used as the development environment throughout the class.

 

Module II is a hands-on embedded systems program designed to impact practical experiences on building with microprocessors and FPGA. Real-life examples on Microchip PIC, Parallax SX and FPGA chips will be taught.

 

 

These are some challenging projects we have:

 

  • USB microscope developed with android tablet and a student can observe and send report online to the instructor. Your tablet becomes a display for microscope
  • RFID Android based supermarket inventory control—-using Android tablet to access and monitor inventory
  • Speed monitoring system for road safety——Android tablet interfaced with speed monitoring system
  • Security monitoring system or aid for security personnel—-In which Android tablet will be interfaced with wireless security cameras. This is a surveillance system
  • Fuel or fluid level inventory control —–holding your tablet,you can monitor and control fluid level anywhere in the world
  • Automation and process control —interfacing sensors, relays,speed controllers etc to Android tablet through micro-controller wirelessly
  • Home Automation that controls your electricity and water taps.

 

The goal is that after this workshop, participants can develop real life-applications or where applicable, introduce relevant courses in their tertiary institutions.

 

 

Facilities

We provide Android tablets for the training.  Besides, Fasmicro will provide the programming modules, Eclipse and Android SDK dev environments, microprocessors, required CAD tools, FPGA boards, computers, and course materials. All materials are retained by Fasmicro. If you need copies, please visit our store.

 

Audience

Our training is open to the public. We welcome schools planning to develop mobility computing and microelectronics courses in their programs as well as corporate clients that want to train their staff.  For hobbyists and students, there is no better opportunity to pick skills that matter. Register Today!


 

Registration

Payment details are here.

 Modules 1 and 2 Outlines

project outlines


Facilitators: External and in-house team

 

Cancellation Policy: 100% refund 4 weeks to start; 50% three weeks to start; no refund after three weeks.

 

Contact: Send comments, questions, etc to info@fasmicro.com
Visit our Training School

IT Leaders East Africa Summit – Nairobi, 2nd And 3rd November 2011.

0

Kinetic Events and the Kenya ICT Board are proud to partner in order to host the IT Leaders East Africa Summit in Nairobi on the 2nd and 3rd November 2011.
 

IT Leaders East Africa Summit covers today’s top business issues and technologies, impacting your enterprise with the strategic guidance and actionable tactics needed to yield higher results and gain competitive advantage over your competitors. Discover how to Link technology to your strategic business objectives and the importance of IT spending to successfully grow your business.

 
The IT Leaders Summit series is hosted in strategic locations all over the world which include, Johannesburg, Dubai, Brussels, Mumbai and Nairobi. The IT Leaders Summit hosts CIOs and IT Heads of the leading companies from the respective regions. The IT Leaders East Africa Summit is bringing together the top Chief Information Officers, Chief Financial Officers and Chief Executives in East Africa to discuss how technology can successfully transform their businesses.
 
The Summit has been designed for knowledge sharing, networking and deal making within the African IT industry. The event will feature focused business meeting’s, educational workshops as well as a cutting edge conference agenda. The current economic situation throughout the world and Africa will play a major role at the conference and will aid in determining workshop and discussion topics.
 
IT Leaders East Africa offers a unique format:
– Interactive CIO Roundtable Discussions
– Exclusive Networking Receptions
– Pre-arranged Business Meetings
– CIO Led Workshops

African Union – Act To Save The Famine Ravaged East Africans

0

This is a very short one. We do not make political commentaries here. But the famine in East Africa is reshaping Africa to the past. Things we have tried to move past and beyond. Hunger, famine, naked kids and unbelievable tragedies.

 

Where is the African Union? The world is beaming the searchlight showing kids that are dying. We need AU to step us and act. This is the time to stop those conferences and save money to help these kids in Kenya, Ethiopia and Somali. Please do.

 

If you cannot do this, then it makes no sense to have this AU. Nations must rise and help others and Africa has a duty right now to act and save these people. America is nearly bankrupt. Europe is under water. And China does not help where there are no minerals. So, you must figure out how to solve these problems and help the families.

 

 

Dow Off 512 Points Yesterday – The Lessons From PIIGS For African Union

0

Yes, Dow Jones Industrial Average (DOW) is off 512 yesterday. We quickly revisited an old piece about what caused all the EU problems that precipitated the massive market turmoil. Currency union is not a smart idea, especially for Africa with trade shocks and mineral dependent.

We posted a blog last  year and many people have written asking why I think what happened in Greece and EU could apply to Africa. Interestingly, I have attended African Union congress and made presentations supporting a single currency in Africa. My point has been that a single currency could open the fragmented African market to more global trade. I still think it is a fair idea, if the continent does it well. Even during my talk in the congress last year, I made it clear that the path I envisage to be the best way to implement this single currency is transitioning the regions into Knowledge Economic Communities where they will be atomic economic unit of nations connected with modern technologies and entwined by knowledge workers. In other words, Africa must develop its infrastructure and train its manpower to compete in this knowledge century.

It will benefit Africa if Ghana, Senegal and Nigeria share resources and establish joint technology clusters with university networks than using policy to force them to use one ECOWAS currency. Nigeria has never properly managed its budgets and its balance sheet is cyclical, being a nation with more than ¾ of its foreign earnings coming from hydrocarbons. Its population dominates the ECOWAS region. In any scenario, the trade shocks which are experienced in Nigeria will slowly affect the ECOWAS region under a Regional Economic Community. The scenario in Africa is just too risky; the biggest nations are the most irresponsible ones in terms of financial management. So, they will be the ones that need help; and that is a problem. In EU, they have the big nations, at least acting financially responsible . Germany is there, France is there; and with all the problems in PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain), there are strong partners watching. In Africa, the small must have to watch the big. And remember that South Africa’s debt profile is similar to Greece.

In the short-run, there could be marginal welfare gain under a single currency in Africa. Even Rose’s idea that currency integration improves economic growth is debatable within Africa. The CFA zone has used a single currency for ages and yet remains one of the major under-traders in Africa. Banks collapse in Africa because of the incompetence of central banks to supervise them (I agree not only in Africa). The recent problems in Nigerian banking sector where trillions of naira was lost to bad loans would have affected the ECOWAS region badly. Why this problem remains solely a Nigeria problem is because the country has control over its monetary policy and can use it to solve this problem.  Under one currency, it cannot work that way as they will lose autonomy over the currency.  Those changes made by the Nigerian central bank to stabilize the banking sector would not have been possible.  The pitfall of currency integration is very huge. The benefits come in cents, but the consequences in dollars.

I remain confident that Greece would not have gotten into this situation where its bonds have fallen and its ability to pay debts eroding, if it has not been part of the EU.  Also, those cheap loans it got in the good old days would not have been possible in the first place without the EU membership. According to Bloomberg BusinessWeek, euro zone unemployment rate for Feb 2010 is at 10%- a record for the zone.  One wonders where this single currency is leading the region.

As a young Lagos banker, I worked in one of the best managed banks in Africa-Diamond Bank Plc. I learnt something in banking before I moved to semiconductors; you need to watch your loan or debt profile constantly and continuously.  African nations will not do that. They will continue to borrow until they bust. And when their central banks cannot work the magic, their sovereign debt will potentially destroy their national economies.

Learn something from me: If United States has been in a currency union with Mexico and Canada while losing control over the US dollar, their fate would have been similar to Greece’s. But with the control of the dollar, the US sovereign debt will dent them, but will not cripple them. They have control over the currency, and they will survive this skyrocketing debt with the right legislation. Two years ago when the global crude oil price crashed, Nigerian government devalued its currency from N118 (to USD) to N145 overnight to enable it meet its obligations to local debtors. An ECOWAS currency union would have made that oil crash a bigger trade shock for Nigeria.

In summary, there is a very fundamental tool every nation needs to take control of its destiny in this globalizing world. You need to be on top of your currency. It is no joke that the most important tool that enables China to compete is its currency and the person that manages it is the most vital person in the new China which has since overtaken Germany as world’s largest exporter. If they lose control of that currency, China will fail. I am thinking that globalization makes currency union a bad idea.  You need speed to react and act which unions will deprive you. The barriers which currency integration wants to solve will dissolve as technology improves. In the near future, it will not matter what currency you have in your bank.

The fusion of economies by technology will break those barriers online through homogeneity in e-commerce. It would be a bad idea for Africa to pursue currency integration now; it makes no sense in the long-run. We need to stop it and focus on strengthening our infrastructure and manpower. You cannot build a union that depends on hydrocarbons and minerals when the world is running on knowledge. At least in Africa, we worry over bank’s loan/debt profiles; reversing that to sovereign debt will destroy our economies. And a single African currency under one supranational bank will guarantee sovereign debt crises in Africa.

Originally written April 2010