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Curtain Falls on ex-giant Nortel – Sells Patents for $4.5b

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One hundred and sixteen years after its founding, Nortel Networks has reached a deal to sell all its remaining patents for a remarkable $4.5 billion to a consortium of six high-tech giants – Apple, EMC, Ericsson, Microsoft, Research In Motion and Sony.

 

The price easily trumped an opening bid of $900 million by Google for all 6,000-plus Nortel patents, and emerged after four days of bidding at the New York offices of Nortel’s lawyers. Canada’s Nortel filed for bankruptcy protection in January 2009 and has been selling assets since then, raising about $3.2bn in the process.

 

Assuming the deal passes all the regulatory hurdles, it will be very good news for Nortel creditors – from pensioners and suppliers to debt holders. The amount exceeds the $3.2 billion raised to date through the sale of all of Nortel’s active businesses – involving wireless, optical and telephone gear.

 

Nortel’s top remaining executive said the bidding was “very robust.” “The size and dollar value for this transaction is unprecedented, as was the significant interest in the portfolio among major companies around the world,” said George Riedel, chief strategy officer of Nortel.

 

The patent haul is also far greater than the several hundred million dollars former CEO Mike Zafirovski reckoned Nortel would pull in. Of course, Zafirovski’s estimate was made in 2009 near the depth of the stock market crash.

Nortel expects to close the sale of its patents by Sept. 30, at which point the firm should have about $7 billion available to distribute to its various creditors. The total value of the claims against Nortel is still guesswork.

 

Nor is it yet clear how the proceeds will be divided among the different jurisdictions – mediation efforts led by former U.S. federal district court judge Layn R. Phillips failed in April.

 

Creditors in various countries have filed motions in favour of their preferred allocation of the proceeds. Three weeks ago, the Canadian and U.S. bankruptcy judges indicated it would be some time before they ruled on the motions. In the meantime, they suggested mediation efforts continue.

 

Nortel was the biggest telecommunication company in the world in 2000, with sales of more than $30 billion. Even after accounting scandals and mismanagement, it was generating $11 billion in sales in 2008 – before filing for bankruptcy in January 2009.

 

The $4.5 billion raised in the patent auction could play in favour of Canadian creditors. That’s because the Canadian estate is believed to own most of the patents. The cash from their sale would therefore come to Canada. However, in previous sales of Nortel assets, judges have been careful to note that the proceeds should be held in escrow, with no bias attached to how the cash is allocated.

 

Nortel began assessing interest in its extensive patent portfolio in May 2010, eventually holding talks with more than 100 potential buyers. Forty companies were keen enough to sign confidentiality agreements and study the intellectual property in detail.

 

The patents run the full range of communications technologies – including 4G wireless, optical, voice, Internet, data networking, semiconductors and even social networking.

 

While Nortel had lost its lead in many of the technologies, the patents are considered useful in a number of ways.

 

Research In Motion, which has a relatively small portfolio of patents of its own, can use the Nortel assets to develop new products of its own, or defend itself against patent lawsuits.

 

Wireless giant Ericsson – which already has an extensive library of wireless patents – likely made a different calculation. The Swedish firm earlier paid more than $1 billion to buy Nortel’s wireless technology business, including a number of patents. Unknown was what percentage of those patents was acquired outright, or merely licensed. Ericsson may have purchased Nortel’s patents to avoid paying royalties on them.

Africa Must Build “Mines of Knowledge” Over Those of Minerals – My Brown University Talk

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It has been a while now since I posted in Tekedia, directly. I am very confident that our team is engaging our readers.

 

Yesterday, a friend sent me a summary of a talk I gave at Brown University late last year. I spoke on the topic: Redesign of Nations. I made a case that technology will triumph always and algorithms will rule all nations. While we see Facebook in its colors of blue and white, what drives that site is systematic relationships Mark and his team have concatenated together. Remove those algorithms, the Facebook experience will be gone. They hire the best Wants – mathematics geniuses – and they quantify our behaviors just as Quants try to make sense of our markets in Wall Street. It is a new field – Quantitative Psychology. The goal? Understand human patterns and make money of our it through ads.

 

So, Knowledge will rule and that is what matters in our age. It is not important that you have minerals because minerals in essence is not wealth until you have knowledge to extract it. Visit many villages in Chad, they have problems of good drinking water, yet, underneath where they live, science has shown enough water to keep them going. But because they lack the knowledge, that water is not accessible.

 

In my native Nigeria, if the big oil companies depart today, we may cease to become an exporter of crude oil. The oil will still be there, but we cannot extract it. The reason being that we have not developed the technology or capacity to mine and extract it. So, while Japan may not have minerals like most nations, they create specialized knowledge that help people mine their minerals. At the end, they get better share of the natural resources through fees, licensing, sales of tools and technologies.

 

Personally, I think  Shell gets better bargain than the Niger Deltans in the oil industry in Nigeria. They have the knowledge while the natives have the oil. But to make the oil have value, Shell is needed. Then they stake their terms.

 

Back to Brown University, someone sent me this as the summary of my talk.

The future of Africa will be secured by building mines of knowledge. Technology and IPR will always triumph over minerals and hydrocarbons. Africa must find ways to have a technology roadmap.

 

ABWxD ’10 – Ndubuisi Ekekwe from ABetterWorldByDesign on Vimeo.

 

 

I think he summarized it well – I want Africa to begin the process of building mines of knowledge by creating good schools and knowledge firms. Until we do that, the vicious cycle of poverty will not end.

[Tekedia Commentary] The Rise of the West – What Africa Could Learn

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All the Western nations became great because they invested in IPR . Without property rights, capitalism fails. It is time Africa fix its legal systems and provide the foundation to build a better society. In our works in Africa, we have noticed that a deep problem in Africa is lack of clarity in ownership of properties. When your patent system is weak, investors cannot put resources for creative works. This must change. And we can only rise like the west when we do what they did. They fixed their IPR and became great.

There is another caveat to this argument. Intellectual property right (IPR) is a cardinal part of this productivity. Without it, technology will not improve and innovation is stalled. The old world was an era of absence of IPR and that contributed to a no small measure to the lack of wealth creation. Sure, people invented things in arts, engineering, but there was no wealth created. Lack of IPR prevented meaningful market success in one major way. It prevented the pursuit of innovation since ideas could be stolen and commercialized with no penalty. The return to innovation was very low. That was why the world had many Inventors and few innovators.

Ovim Powers Electronics Medical Records (EMR) Systems – Let The Experts Help You

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Introduction:  Fasmicro  is now helping clinics and hospitals on their electronic medical rercords (EMR).

While customers can buy Ovim for any use, we are poised to build special Apps with the Nigeria market in mind.  Ovim has been successfully on Electronics Medical Records (EMR) systems. We are ready to provide health practitioners with the patient information needed to improve decision-making before, during, and after care. With data, our health professionals could save more lives, across the country. Ovim makes it possible for on the go mobile healthcare delivery.

Electronic Medical Record (EMR) is a computer-based medical record created in an institution that delivers care, such as a hospital and doctor’s surgery. Electronic medical records tend to be a part of a local stand-alone health information system that allows storage, retrieval and modification of records (Wikipedia).

Test: We have tested Ovim on a number of EMR systems and found it optimized to support doctors and nurses working in the field. Figure is a photo of data acquired from the EMR system.

Ovim in action on EMR

 

Our EMR services: As part of our grand vision to use technology and invent a new Africa, Fasmicro and is  providing the following services:

  1. We      supply Ovim – Nigeria’s Tablet
  2. We      develop EMR database for clients. We can host the server, in USA, and take      away the electricity problem. We guarantee 99.99% uptime for the server.
  3. We      install, setup, and customize the EMR systems to work with Ovim – Nigeria’s      Tablet. This will include the software and hardware.
  4. Our      engineers will provide technical support 24/7 to our clients

Potential Clients: We are looking for government hospitals (local, state, federal) and private hospitals to work with us and improve healthcare delivery in Nigeria.

 

Contacts:

Fasmicro Ltd /info@fasmicro.com

Website: www.fasmicro.com

Ovim is a product of Fasmicro and Microscale

Fasmicro Android Apps Competition – Three Top Winners, Each Gets One Ovim Tablet

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July 03, 2011, Lagos, Nigeria: Fasmicro is very happy to announce the opening of Fasmicro Android Apps Competition. Two things: a store that any developer can sell Apps and a competition that anyone can participate within the Ovim tablet environment.  Not interested in the competition but wants to partner with us to monetize your Apps, bring it on!

As we noted in statements during the unveiling of Ovim Tablet, we are into application and solution space business, and not necessarily hardware sale. Ovim will drive new services in Africa, beginning from Nigeria, and will simplify the lives of citizens and corporate entities.

Accordingly, Fasmicro AppStore is live and doing well with apps from Japan and more coming from other nations.  Interswitch is being worked upon and soon the paid apps will be available there. We have to take this strategy since Google Android Market does not allow paid Apps in Nigeria. Build a great app, we help you sell it.

We have a strong Android App Engineering team and are ready to lead in this segment in Nigeria.

We are seeking for Apps to be part of Fasmicro AppStore. Individuals and companies are requested to develop and send us Apps to us. We do not require exclusivity. You can  use your apps in other environments or platforms.

Prizes: Best three apps each gets one new Ovim tablet and automatic qualification to Fasmicro Apps Store.

Submission Deadline is Sept 20, 2011. If you cannot meet this deadline; there is no problem. Just send your Apps for consideration in our store when you are done.

Submission Locations:  Just email info@fasmicro.com when you are ready

We will have digital counters to transparently account for sales so that developers will be paid accurately. You can submit Apps directly without going through the competition and we will evaluate it.

Competition is open to any person, but the law will be governed by Nigerian law and all payments will be made within the Nigerian banking system. If you contribute from outside Nigeria, be prepared to open a bank account in Nigeria.

Apps Suggested Areas

Below are suggested areas we are seeking entries and solutions, in Core, Basic and Segment Apps categories. These are not all, but just to get you thinking. Be innovative and think outside the box.

Inventory Management: Think how traders, spare parts dealers, Tokunbo car sellers, will use Ovim to improve their businesses

Fixed Asset Management: Can you find a better way to help keep company assets in order?

Small Business Management: Think how that tailor, hairdresser, mechanic, etc will use Ovim to manage his/her business

Mining, Exploration and Distribution: We still think the oil truck drivers in Nigeria can get a lot of help if we can help them manage many things they do. The same goes to the energy companies and their logistics.

Retail Management: What of the supermarkets, boutiques, etc? Can we help them take their store “home”? They can tell right from home, how the sales are going, from Ovim.

Real Estate Management: Can we put that real estate across Nigeria on the palms of the experts. Find ways that will make it easy for real estate professionals to do business with your App.

Construction Management: we want them to schedule on the go and manage their businesses easily

Air Travel, Bus Travel: I hope you agree that we can simplify air travel in Nigeria. The same applies to all those luxuries buses. Find Apps that will focus on those airlines, Chisco buses, AKTC buses, etc and let us simplify transportation in Nigeria.

JAMB: Let us have Apps to capture all Jamb questions and answers. Do not worry; we will work with you to get the necessary agreement with JAMB

Mobile Payment: mpesa, etc. We need Nigerian content mobile and e-payment system

Worship: Give us an App for prayer houses in Nigeria, across all cities. You enter Ibadan and want to Worship in Deeper Life the next morning, can this App provide answers? Can you help religious groups organize their writings, and videos?

Personal Organizer: You want your life organized in Nigeria? Eating joints in Ibadan? Sokoto? Aba? Dating? Keeping tabs with friends and family? Bring it on.

FOREX Traders: I hope you know the Forex traders need better tools than calculators and constant worries of not getting real-time currency data (Source: http://forextrading.company/forex-brokers). Those gadgets that Forex traders at Ikeja, Ikoyi, Abuja, Aba, etc carry are obsolete. Build an App and let us change the industry.

Nigerian Stock Exchange: We need to provide Nigerian Stock prices in a way that any investor can have access to all the stocks in time. A database and we can stream stock prices to customers via the App. When the NSE gets it system ready,  real-time stock prices will follow.

Games

 

Terms and Conditions

–          Our decisions on the competition is final and Apps must be original works of the submitters. We also have rights to modify the terms and conditions.

Ovim is a product of fasmicro and microscale