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Team Hermes, Ireland Wins Microsoft Imagine Cup in New York – Nigeria Lost in Round 1

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The Irsih team despite all the bubbles and crises in their nation came to New York and went home victorious in the just concluded Imagine Cup. Good news out of Ireland.

 

These are the teams and individuals who won BIG at the Worldwide Finals of Imagine Cup 2011 on July 13, 2011 in New York City, USA. After competing with more than 350,000 other students, these winners highlighted below, battled it out at the Worldwide Finals. They used inspiration, innovation, and their imagination to solve some of the toughest problems. We commend each of these teams and the impact their solutions will have on the future of our world.

 

We had reported that Nigeria’s representative lost in Round 1

  • Software Design
  • Embedded Development
  • Game Design
  • Digital Media
  • Windows Phone 7
  • IT Challenge
  • Interoperability Challenge
  • Orchard Challenge
  • Windows 7 Touch Challenge
  • 2011 People’s Choice Award

Software Design Winning Teams:

Place Country/Region Team Name School/University
First Ireland Team Hermes Institute Of Technology Sligo
Second United States Team Note Taker Arizona State University
Third Jordan Oasys Team German Jordanian University, Petra University, Princess Sumaya University

There is Still Opportunity in Semicoductor Startups, Says Gartner

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According to Gartner, a market research firm, there is still growth prospect in startups, despite a slow pace of growth when compared to the last decade. In the the last two years, small private companies got excess of $1.3 billion dollars from investors to speedup or rampup or even startup their companies. The key areas are analog startups, wireless connectivity firms and even optics in the semiconductor industry.

Looking at the market, there is still a huge opportunity for innovative startup companies in the industry. They are usually bought over by bigger players that need critical core technologies to stay competitive. In some cases, their vendors buy them.

The summary of the Gartner report is as follows.

  • In the industry, VC goes for later stage startups with some products or working prototypes
  • The number of startups newly formed is lower than what it was abbout three years back. And when benchmarked with last decade, this decade rate is lower
  •  Most of the firms in the report are in speedup cycle and have revenue generating operations
  •  Most cases, big vendors invest in startups to lock up new technologies
  • Investment  averaged $12.4 million startup

Google Search Dominance is Increasingly Under Scrutiny – Will Google Be Broken Apart?

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It happened to AT&T, the Rockefeller oil empire and nearly happened to Microsoft. These days, Google is up to a lot of scrutinies. With total dominance in the search business online, it has made many enemies. And when the people thought it could lose in the mobile domain, Android saved its day.

 

So, the US Federal Trade Commission has started formal investigation of the trade practices of the software giant.

 

But not just in the US is the company getting another look. European counterpart of the FTC, European Trade Commission,  has warmed up after a French competitor, a really small one, iplusV noted that it has to adopt Google search methods just to survive. Without adopting the Google way of doing business, it cannot secure advertising services.

 

1PlusV, a French search company, has filed a lawsuit against Google asking for 295 million euros ($421 million). “Between 2007 and 2010, no less than 30 vertical search engines created by 1plusV were black-listed, some of which showed significant business potential,” the company said in its lawsuit. […]  In March, Microsoft announced that it was filing a complaint against Google with the European Trade Commission.

 

It is not certain that these investigations can result to any punitive measures. However, the fact that they are will make some Google planned acquisitions on hold. They will not like to be moving fast to close the competition in the ecosystem. Watch out, Google will not make any major deal in search in the next six months, until these investigations clear.

 

INSEAD Global Innovation Index 2011- How Did Nigeria Perform?

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By Adebola Daramola

How timely. The INSEAD Global Innovation Index (GII) 2011 was released just as we have new ministers appointed to work with Mr President on his transformation agenda. I expect them to take time just as other leaders in every sphere of the economy to review and assess the report. So invaluable, they will find it useful in creating the desired competitiveness which we seek to achieve with our 20:2020 goals.

 

This is not another report or rankings: Transparency International (GlobalCorruption Index), World Bank (Doing Business) and UNDP (Human Development Index) as we have become used to, GII is created to facilitate dialogue among the leadership in business, governments, society and other stakeholders. It is a collaborative effort led by INSEAD with other knowledge partners since 2007 in measuring innovation beyond the traditional yardsticks of number of PhDs, research articles produced, research centers created, patent issues and R&D expenditure. It attempts to measure all forms of innovation not limited to the high-tech coming from the developed nations ( it recognizes emerging economies kind of innovation, sometimes taking names such as reverse , gandhian, frugal ,inclusive, constraint-based etc), with an admittance of the expansive and evolving nature of the subject.

 

Not to be left out, Nigeria through the Federal Ministry of Science and Technology (FMST) has revised her Science and Technology (S&T) Policy earlier in the year to a Science, Technology and Innovation(S, T&I) Policy, with a commitment to foster collaboration between industries, enterprises, governments and scientific community. The change to a STI policy was an acknowledgement of Innovation as a critical driver of growth to all stakeholders in our economic ecosystem. Yes, we hope through this policy amendment when passed  to law  by the legislative, we would be close to establishing the framework to a closer links between  academic, industry and government  for  economic growth and competitiveness.

 

The GII 2011 evaluated the efforts by 125 countries in providing enabling environment that promotes innovation. The lesson in this report for us as a nation and leaders in every sphere of life is to appreciate our level of investments in human, finance and time over the years in fostering next generation of innovators or entrepreneurs. Our adoption of new process, marketing method, organizational/ business model, productivity improvements, new product release, with no restriction to technological breakthroughs, with an inclusion of public sector and social innovation, all qualifies as innovation.

 

If developed nations like USA president will be committed to encouraging Innovation as expounded in his Jan 25, 2011 state of the union message that “the first step in winning the future is encouraging America innovation”, why not take the challenge home with us, in steering a national discourse as the INSEAD Global Innovation Index seek to achieve.

 

The GII as a benchmarking tool is computed as an average of the scores across inputs pillars (that is, the enabling environment for innovation) and the output pillars (measures the actual achievements in innovation). The inputs pillars have 5 sub-indexes: Institutions, Human Capital and Research, Infrastructure, Market sophistication and Business sophistication, whereas, the output pillars is made up of 2 sub-indexes: ‘scientific outputs’ and ‘creative outputs’.

 

For a second year running, Nigeria came 96th amongst the total economies covered in the two subsequent years 2009-10 and 2011 respectively, with 132 countries in the former compared with 125 countries in the latter. Nigeria, as a nation came 2nd within the top 10 in terms of Innovation efficiency index, this measure is the ratio of the Output Sub-Index (the average of the two output pillars) and the Input Sub-Index (the average of the five input pillars). It explains how well we have utilized our enabling environment in stimulating innovative results.

 

Evidently, our stellar performance in the film industry is recognized by all, as ingenious, with a ranking of 5th  in the GII 2011, which is the first time of inclusion in the creative outputs. Is it the business model/ strategy or the low cost finance that drives Nollywood, all has been assessed and rightly fits as a form of innovation common to emerging economies: constraint –based innovation. Among the 24 countries assessed within Sub-Saharan Africa,  Nigeria was recognized as a regional leader on the GII, the output , input and efficiency measures alongside with Mauritius, South Africa  and Côte d’ Ivoire. Remarkably, Nigeria obtained the top regional position on the output sub-index with 62nd and also a relatively high score from the survey questions on ICT use on business and organizational models (45th and 70th  respectively).

 

Innovation is a global phenomenon not limited to the developed countries, innovators can be found across the world. What we need is the proper understanding of the concepts and underlying premises of innovation by our leadership in government, business, education and society, this will go a long way in fostering and encouraging a new breed of generations that appreciates knowledge above natural resources.

 

As our new ministers settle in, I charge them as well as every other leader in our economic system to work together at ensuring our institutions are strengthen (through improve regulatory environment, enhanced environment for business, credit, investment, trade and competition), fostering an improvement in our educational system through funding and establishment of linkage with industry for flows of knowledge and execution of R&D projects and lastly, take on their role as an innovator.

 

The Illusion of Bitcoin and Why It is Dangerous for You – The Online Currency is Volatile

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First, what is bitcom? It is “money”. Yes, Bitcoin is a digital currency created in 2009 by Satoshi Nakamoto. The name refers both to the open source software he designed to make use of the currency and to the peer-to-peer network formed by running that software, according to wikipedia.

 

Bitcoin eschews central authorities and issuers, using a distributed database spread across nodes of a peer-to-peer network to track transactions. Bitcoin uses digital signatures and proof-of-work to provide basic security functions, such as ensuring that bitcoins can be spent only once per owner and only by the person who owns them.

 

It is simply  a peer-to-peer currency. Peer-to-peer means that no central authority issues new money or tracks transactions. These tasks are managed collectively by the network. This is the problem.

 

With Bitcoin you have close to the global reserve currency which many economists have called since the financial crises. You buy and sell online anonymously without any control by the government. And the number of Bitcon has also increased at a constant rate which is close to what top economists expect a good currency to posses.

 

But this June, we got a small lesson that may change that perspective.  It nearly lost $9 million of the digital money when a hacker did his thing. The digital currency crashed from $30 to a penny before it rebounded to $16. At $16 it is still up when compared to what it was earlier in the year, $5. Yet, do not gamble with your future. The dollar or Naira has not crashed with that effervescence. Be careful with what the Silicon Valley does in this case.