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Home Blog Page 7720

No Pretense, Your Productivity Has Dropped, Your Quality Has Decreased, And You Can Blame Social Media.

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We live in an era of unusual disruption of cultures, lives and businesses by technologies. As a little boy, I listened to folklores under the moonlight in my south eastern part of Nigerian village. The elders told the stories of justice, bravery, honor and humanity. There was no cellphone and there was no distraction. Life was under a predictable pattern especially in the evenings when boys and girls will wait in turns to play under the moonlight and receive moral education carefully orchestrated in the stories told by the elders. Every child belongs to the village and parents are nothing but stewards.

 

As we trekked miles to fetch water and firewood for the family cooking, we enjoyed the songs of the happy birds. We treasured the flowers and the gentle winds out of the thick rainforest of our stream. It was a life of great tranquility and we never had a homicide in the village. By norms and traditions, the fishes in our stream must not be fished. They were preserved and in most cases we played with them.

 

When it was time for school, we continued on that village tradition of brotherhood. The elders have mapped out lands in the village where people could go and plant fruits so that any villager when hungry could go there and eat. It was forbidden to sell anything from that land because it was designed to be a ‘strategic food reserve’. It worked; I planted an orange tree and my best friend gave the village a coconut tree.

 

But that was then. Many things have since changed, not just in my village, but around the world. Technology is disrupting all aspects of human existence and our lifestyles have changed. Industries are being demised and new ones are coming up with our lexicons constantly evolving to accommodate new tech-evolutions.

 

Food has been professionalized and mamas do not need to know how to cook. Technology and globalization have already changed family traditions.

 

As a boy, I heard of professional typists. These were specially trained pros who could churn out characters on typewriters at amazing speed.  There are few of them today. There were shorthand experts; people that could write on special characters in order to capture statements as fast as they are spoken by their employers.

 

Many of these professions have since gone or are going. Technology is displacing their services. Computers make mastering of typing not a big deal since it does not cost anything to edit and delete when using word processors. Compare that with erasing and changing stencils in a typewriter, you will appreciate the level of innovation that has taken place. A single mistake in page could render the whole document useless; the typist has to start over, especially in quality documents where erasure is not permitted. So the trade was to get people that could type with zero error, and at fast speed.

 

For those that are shorthand experts, video recorders with translation capability make it unnecessary to be writing when a politician or anyone is talking. Just record and soon print out the transcripts. Those experts are also fading. It is rare to see a journalist job that requires mastering of shorthand as Isaac Pitman invented it.

 

Have you noticed that the city of London could police the whole city through video cameras when in the old dull days, policemen might have been used?  Those traffic policemen we used to see across many African cities are disappearing as most of the cities install traffic light systems. Those jobs or careers are being displayed by technology.

 

What of language interpreters? I recall a meeting in Kenya where someone was giving a speech in French and the interpreters were interpreting in English, Arabic and Portuguese. It worked out so well. But that career will soon die. If Apple or any of the Smartphone makers develop a good language translator in their gizmos, we may not need the interpreters, at least, in some gatherings.

 

So, we have got a lot of challenges in career planning these days. Does it make sense to pursue this career considering how technology could change it in the future? How many ticket masters were displaced when airplane ticketing moved online? How can software affect journalism in the future? How is technology affecting parenting since technology is increasingly displacing our attention to our families? Those late night emails and constant trips to the Blackberries at 10pm are all disruptions.

 

Planning for careers is not just focusing on what happens today or maybe in two years time. You must have a feel of where technology is going and then anticipate and stay ahead in your career.  A business model to open physical bookshops may not be a good idea since most people rarely care to know the bookshop around their neighborhood these days. The first point is order from ebay, Amazon or BN. The local bookstore is model already endangered.  The same goes with building cinema halls. In the next ten years, we will have virtual cinema halls where movie releases will be done online without the need of going to that physical location.

 

The interesting thing about this technology disruption on careers is that it does not matter what your level of education is. It could be that your industry is booming but has moved out of your locality.  That brings the degree to which your field is outsourced. The easier your job can be automated by technology, the higher is the risk of technology displacement.

 

So when people discuss about career planning, it is very imperative that you understand how technology and not just wages could play out in the future.  If you specialize in a special type of engine design and from all trends, it is evident that that engine is going to be obsolete and you refuse to adapt and be retrained, you could be in trouble. Ask the expert photographers that made fortune washing and developing films in dark rooms. Those that failed to move to digital photography are only in history books.

 

Our world has been made better by technology because it improves our productivity and standard of living. However, it also carries a major challenge; disrupting careers and moving many jobs to museums. It is very important you stay ahead and see how new technologies could disrupt and displace your job. Never wait, plan ahead and stay above technology innovation with new skills.

Layer3 Is a Pioneer and Provider of Enterprise-wide ICT Solutions

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Layer 3 is a leading provider of enterprise-wide information technology and telecommunication solutions.

 

They specialize in the design, implementation and support of complex data and IP services such as broadband Internet, IP VPN and data connectivity services over our metropolitan and longhaul fiber network for corporate organizations, service providers and telecommunication companies.

 

They also provide bespoke solutions through our partnerships with leading global companies such as Juniper Networks, Vmware and NetApp. The expertise in the design and implementation of network solutions have made us the solutions provider of choice for corporate organizations and telecommunication companies alike.

 

The culture drives  them to work closely with our customers to truly understand their business, and ICT needs and constraints. With the interest of  their customers paramount, they work towards completely understanding their business needs and provide solutions that minimize risks, maximize flexibility and optimize the use of capital with results that exceed their expectations.

 

Layer3 is made up of a management team and staff with extensive experience in the telecommunications and IT industry. The collective experience spans over fifty years with expertise in the design and deployment of IP services, data networks and data center solutions. They  pride ourselves as being one of the first companies in Nigeria to truly take advantage of emerging broadband communications technology

TCC Construction Is an Expert in Base Transmission Station and Fibre Installations for GSM/CDMA

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Truth Construction Company Limited (TCCL) is a fast growing enterprise whose inital objective was to service the telecom sector of the Nigerian economy but is now expanding to take advantage of viable business opportunities as they present themselves across the globe. Telecom services are still at the core of our activities as we have handled and are currently handling several turnkey Base Transmission Station (BTS) projects as well as fibre installations for GSM/CDMA telecom as well as providers in Nigeria.

 

TCCL is a wholly indigenous company duly registered with the Nigerian Corporate Affairs Commission with registration Number RC 508602. It began operations in 2004 as a registered Telecom Support Service company, helping major telecommunication companies in Nigeria improve their services through BTS installations and optical fibre plus additional equipment nationwide. True to our motto: ‘link you up’, we always leave our clients satisfied with our excellent service delivery.

 

The company has enjoyed stable growth over the years, employing over 75 competent personnel to staff its operations. Its core areas with which it started operations (Civil Engineering, Antenna and Radio Frequency (RF) cable installation, Project Management, Telecommunication equipment installation ) have since expanded to include Product Sourcing and Importation, Manufacturers’ Representatives, Business Development, Supply and Distribution.

 

The company is now gradually expanding across the West African sub-region; beginning operations in Benin, Togo, Ghana, Burkina Faso to mention a few. Its client base covers a wide number of telecom service providers: MTN Nigeria, Ericsson, Etisalat, Glo, Zain, Huawei, Nokia-Siemens Nigeria (NSN) and the likes in their facilities roll-out.

 

We are also exploring other frontiers for business relationships with other international companies who wish to take advantage of our expertise in the local telecom terrain in the biggest market in Africa. We are always prepared to go into discussions on how we can partner with legitimate business concerns worldwide.

Free Google+ Invitation for tekedia followers

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It is no news that Google is testing the Google+ platform and that Google has temporarily suspended signup due to monstrous request…

 

Get a free Google+ invitation and decide if you will go the facebook way or Google+ way

 

Interested people can drop their mail addresses. Once you get invitation, just click the learn more about Google+ button to join.

 

Editor’s Note: We have received monstrous emails from all over the world on this. We need to get to the author to be sure he meant that you should add your email in Google plus website. Unless he has information we do not have, that happens all the time, Tekedia does not think he is saying that he, the author, can send you an IV. Please we want to be clear. Of course, the author will be here tomorrow to answer your questions. It is night in Lagos people. You may hold off the emailing of your emails. We sincerely beg you because Tekedia does not know what the promise is.

 

Nonetheless, the author was  among the first that wrote one of the most comprehensive reports on Google + and compared that to Facebook. That post since it was posted  remains the top pageviews here. He may have insights we do not have and please wait for him. Thank you.

To Succeed Internationally, You Must Adapt Products For Each Market. GloCal Engineering is a New Normal

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In this contemporary time, the most dynamic and evolving area is engineering. Such an observation may seem at first to be a mere truism but closer considerations of its impacts in medicine, entertainment, energy and surgery will rapidly dispel any such dismissive judgment.

 

Engineering is transforming all fields. Future medicine looks as a field where robots will seamlessly help doctors and surgeons get patients to work quicker and healthier. The future of global energy looks promising because engineers are breaking barriers daily in the quest to deliver affordable, efficient and clean sources of power.

 

From entertainment to security, nothing is spared. Today’s wars are technology wars fuelled by engineering geniuses acquired, advanced and processed over centuries. The bravery of a modern warlord is the engineering feat of someone who may never have to shoot. We are living in an era where discovery is not celebrated, not because they have become easier, but because they are happening regularly.

 

Engineering practice has changed so much and in a radical form from what it was a few decades ago. The global energy problem is engineering problem. The global health challenge is engineering problem and daily engineers are faced with burdens to solve major world problems. While the politicians enact the energy bills, the engineers make the energy practically available.

 

The bold and optimistic challenge to help engineer bio-grade artificial human organs is an assessment that managing what Nature gives us has limitations. Why not get a new artificial brain if the one that exists is troublesome enough?

 

But these advances pose serious ethical challenges which the engineers are not providing answers. In most cases, that is not their job; someone has to regulate them and put them on the path of keeping sanity on this earth.

 

But regulating these activities is unfortunately not easy. One technology could do well but could also be harmful. In this case, the problem is not the technology, but the application and usage. It is like saying because nuclear technology could kill en mass, it must be banned in hospitals where they are used in many critical treatments.
But for a moment, let us leave the technical aspect of engineering progress. I am already aware that many cotton farmers in Sudan could be out of jobs if some of the experiments on lab production of cotton in universities in US and European schools work out. We could be creating security crises where suddenly the commodity market is destroyed because nanotechnology has provided alternatives to rubber, cotton and hosts of other materials. People will be out of jobs and crises will start everywhere.

 

My concern is the disparity in engineering development between the developed and developing world. The rich nations are pushing the limits while the poor are not contributing much. It is not that they do not want to contribute, they want but the environment does not enable them. We lose their ideas and perspectives, unfortunately.

 

Can the future of engineering be structured so that these people can get on the pathway of creativity and innovation? Can the world and technical associations provide an effective system where boys and girls in developing countries could help to solve the global engineering challenges? How can this be done? In short, how can companies begin to give people at the bottom of the pyramid opportunities to shape the products that are designed for them?

 

The same problem that has undermined our abilities to solve major poor people’s diseases is what is affecting the ability of the world to provide technology in ways that the poor people can use them. Exporting Smartphone to people that just need the simplest phone is not a great strategy. When you stay in top European universities and craft an aids project that will be implemented in Botswana without understanding what they need is similar to exporting many products we see in developing nations that do not meet the real needs of those customers.

 

Malaria remains a disease because there is no money to be made as only the poor suffer it. Polio has the same problem. Tuberculosis is the same. Why? Because those that engineer drugs consider business before quest to save lives. So why not have a system where engineering goes global and local at the same time?

 

Answering, understanding and managing emerging developments of meeting the needs of every customer, broad and specific, in the highly fragmentized world market will define the future of engineering. It will show our readiness to solve the word’s problems. It will make engineering fresh before all global citizens. It is going gloCal- having a world global strategy, but acting local in each market or community. It means helping people solve local problems with global ideas.

 

If we begin to do that, we have the possibility of solving these problems. It is so shameful that in a world of so much knowledge, many are very poor and dying. We have solved the refrigeration problem in Boston, but in a small village in Ghana, the citizens have no light and refrigerators do not have any value there. So, can be say we have indeed solved how to preserve food?

 

The global food problem is an engineering problem. Even in Africa, they have enough during the harvesting season. But immediately that season is gone, many become hungry because they could not preserve the excess. So, you have a system where a man that threw away a basket of excess fresh tomatoes a month before is looking for a canned tomato for his family. What if he has preserved the fresh ones? We need solutions.

 

Now is the time to redefine what engineering research is. People at the bottom of the pyramid are not interested in nanotechnology and genome project. They just want simple ways to live and if governments, usually not their governments, can understand that there are many research and engineering challenges in these areas by providing simplicity through engineering, everyone can look at engineering future with optimism.

 

My African kinsmen care not if you can travel to Mars and yet cannot assist them to preserve the mangoes they harvested to last longer and feed their families. So while the Mars race is on, they expect the governments to fund ways to help them store their food. If that happens, they can confidently look at the future of discovery and engineering with optimisms. A little support and devoting the engineering powers of the advanced nations could eliminate many problems.

 

There are engineering challenges across the developing nations and it is time we put resources to solve them instead of being obsessed with sending private ships to the moon.

 

I hate to recognize the political problems, because in my understanding, a political problem is also an engineering problem. Engineering will solve all human problems. Let US put all the aids money they give the politicians in Africa and send some of their best minds from MIT, Johns Hopkins, Berkeley, GaTech, Michigan and Stanford on engineering missions in Africa. Suddenly, there will be solutions to food preservation and we can reduce global poverty as everyone that grew up in Africa knows that our problem is not production, but preservation.

 

Engineering must be global and yet adaptable to local needs- we need gloCal engineering for the future. Let engineers be engineers, irrespective of boundaries and make this world a better place. Until then, many will not understand why they matter.