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Nigeria in a Knowledge Century

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Our world is changing rapidly. Across the globe, many events, including the election of Barack Obama as American president, point to a world where nations are looking for fresh ideas to overcome severe economic crises and survive the onslaught of global competition driven by the advent of information and communication technologies. The evolution of knowledge workers (or brain workers) is changing many national policies, as countries device strategies to manage the impacts of globalization by developing infrastructures on education, industry, health and energy. It is a new world where nations that fail to develop or learn, acquire and adapt technologies will remain poor. The emergence of China, and the continuous threats to many established industries by new ones, enabled primarily by brainpower, are showing that this is a ‘knowledge century’.

Knowledge will rule modern man and this knowledge is new, fresh and combative. Since Adam Smith’s ‘Wealth of Nations’, there has never been a more urgent time in the history of man where innovative economic and political leadership is required of leaders. The reason is simple; globalization makes it difficult to control factors like trade and labour, which hitherto, could be easily controlled to the advantages of nations.

From American Wall Street to Nigerian Broad Street, leaders have come to realize that new ideas are needed because many old economics are falling. New ideas that accommodate emerging variants that technology has enabled in both the political and economic national models. Models based on the theme that every nation has a limit to national wealth without science and technology. It is an understanding that the era where natural resources dominate international trade is giving way to that of knowledge resources. Natural resources are still important, but unfortunately, the most stable and prosperous nations are those that create ideas with army of knowledge workers.

A vision of new Nigeria is very important for the future of our nation. Our educational system needs immediate improvement. The advancement of any modern superpower has been fuelled by its educational infrastructures. And the collapse of any great nation has always been preceded by the decay in its education. The old Greece was known for its fine philosophers, the Babylon known for its wisdom and the old Egypt, where civilization began was known for its knowledge. In its age, Egypt was admired for knowledge as the land of pharaoh had some of the best thinkers. Moses of the Bible was highly respected partially because of his Egyptian education, which was better than his Israelite’s comrades. During the British industrial revolution, their education was the best, as no school on earth could be compared to Oxford and Cambridge. Today’s dominance of the United States is attributed to its education, which remains its best industry, at least at the university level. The schools drive the researches that translate to new technologies, which subsequently diffuse into the economy. America has the finest labs in the world and continues to dominate the roll call of Nobel laureates. It is believed that if America looses its educational superiority, it would loose its dominance in the world’s political and economic scenes.

How can Nigeria prepare for this century? We need leadership and fundamental changes in policies to modernize our education and industry. From electricity to road networks, Nigeria has the capacity to provide and sustain them; we are smart, ingenious and optimists. But our problem has been lack of 21st century level leadership. Nigeria needs a leader with capacity to rally the nation in honesty, hard work and raise our imaginations beyond where we are today and move us to believe in ourselves and create the tools to make us build our nation. It must be a leader whose goals will not just be to keep government running, but one who can help the nation dream a bigger, larger and glorious vision that generations of Nigerians will unite for.

A leader that can create a society to engage our brightest minds in government by evolving a new political system designed to seriously solve problems. A person who can engineer Nigeria into rebirth and restoration to offer a prosperous nation that is colorful, fluidic, vibrant and open for change. Yes, a person of immense intelligence, competence, pragmatism, and unimpeachable. A person of integrity, broad knowledge, enormous vision and solid experience; one that can stimulate more vibrancy in the private sector and move the public sector out of its stasis. With that leadership, Nigeria will witness changes in trade, education and commerce as battalion of knowledge workers emerge to give us the needed clout in the global arena.

Finally, Nigeria and indeed the whole world are faced with enormous challenges and opportunities. For Nigeria, the challenge is fundamentally developing the educational system to enable the emergence of new class of workers, the knowledge workers, and providing the economic environment where they can flourish. The opportunity comes by using the skills of these workers to grow the economy by diversifying the petroleum-based economy and move millions of our citizens out of poverty

 

Founder originally published it here

SMSPlaces.com – 6 Months After Acquisition. Three Great Products Coming

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About 6 months ago, Fasmicro acquired SMSplaces.com. We wanted to move into the domain of mobility. What have we done with it? We are building three great technologies on it which will be available to Nigerians in the next few weeks. Watch out and visit smsplaces.com. That site will be revamped. We have tools for farmers via SMS. We have the one for the travelers and more.

 

 

The old press release in our old blog.

 

Fasmicro Acquires a Nigerian Start-up

by goafrit

Lagos, Nigeria – Jan 29, 2010: The management of Fasmicro is happy to announce that we have acquired smsplaces.com from its management and owners. SMS Places is one of the indigenous players in the SMS business with a large clientele base. We are thrilled on this opportunity to continue to provide world class services to Nigerian businesses and people.

 

This site will become a key component of our Integrated Web Solutions hosted at FasWebKit.com and we will use it to support our operations. We will continue to look for opportunities on where we can acquire than invest from scratch in the local market.

 

To all SMS Places customers, we provide the same quality and even exceeding it that SMS Places management has served you over the years. We will make the experience holistic through our Fasmicro CMS and interface with our Android Apps. It will provide an enriched platform to connect and make businesses operate more efficiently with the excellent Gateway API  we can leverage.

 

Our vision is to use local skills and talents to redesign Nigeria’s economy through becoming a preferred microelectronics and embedded solutions provider in Africa.


For more about Fasmicro, visit fasmicro.com

Note: We are committed to help local talents and businesses to find opportunities. If you have a great business idea or you have a business that needs support, email usa@fasmicro.com. We will evaluate the business and see if we can buy. We are also looking for start-ups that can become divisions in our organizations. So, we acquire you and you continue to operate the firm though we fund you.  As always, we do not evaluate academic credentials – all we want are people that can do things. So, never worry if you have not those papers they always look. Show us your work and we will see if you can come onboard. We are licensing technologies and starting certifications on technologies we are creating.

A Complete Report on Garage48 Lagos – Decoding The Minds of Geeks

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Garage48 is a “hacking” event that aims at bringing programmers together to pitch innovative ideas and then go from idea to working service in 48 hours. At the end of 48 hours, teams are expected to have come up with a working service based on their initial ideas. For the first time ever, the Garage48 event came to Africa, specifically Lagos, Nigeria.

I am typically not one to take part in these vents, especially because I do not live in Lagos. However, I was opportuned to take part in the Garage48 Lagos event and I have to say I had a great time.

Considering how difficult it is to organize such an event in Nigeria and in a city such as Lagos, it is necessary to say that the Garage48 team really did quite a good job in making sure the event became a reality. I particularly liked the food at the event ;-)

Garage48 Lagos gave me the opportunity to meet and work with great people including Ahmad Mukoshy, Ernest “Namzo” Ojeh, Jesse Oguntimehin, Damilare Akinlaja, Ayo Olaniyi and Akinwande Adegbola. We were all part of the Flippii team at the event. This team was an awesome one made up of people with undeniable individual capabilities.

Namzo, Mukoshy and I Hacking it out at Garage48 Lagos

I had met Ernest once before Garage48 Lagos. Ernest “namzo” Ojeh is a superb UI/UX designer and co-founder of devedgelabs. He created the beautiful Flippii interface showcased at Garage48 Lagos. I do not think I have ever worked with a faster UI/UX designer, and the interesting thing about the way he works is that you hardly ever see him doing it and being serious about it. I do not know how to explain his work style any better than this.

Jesse Oguntimehin is one of the most energetic and enthusiastic individuals I have ever met. He always had a way of infusing a great deal of energy into the team. I would love to have a person like him as a marketing partner any day, any time.

At Garage48 Lagos, Ayo Olaniyi pitched an idea very similar to a startup I co-founded (adloopz.com). After he pitched his idea, I went over to him to tell him about adloopz and we somehow ended up on the same team working on Flippii. Working with him, I could see that he was a soft spoken, smart and business savvy fellow.

Damilare Akinlaja is someone I had met and spoken to at length before Garage48 Lagos. He has a strong passion for mobile technology and mobile software. I have met only a few other people with the kind of willingness to learn and experiment with new technology that Damilare has.

Akinwande Adegbola was the Android guru at the Flippii team. One thing I noticed about him was that he was not one to talk very much. However, his willingness to get things done was absolutely evident from the way he got things done.

Have you ever had a mentor younger than you are? For me, Ahmad Mukoshy is one (He might be 21 just like me, but I am slightly older than he is, by a few months). Before Garage48 Lagos, I had never met him. But without ever meeting him, I had learnt one important lesson from the things he had achieved: IT IS NOT HOW MUCH YOU KNOW THAT REALLY MATTERS, BUT WHAT YOU DO WITH THE “LITTLE” YOU KNOW. That said, I was glad to finally meet and work with him.

After the Flippii team was formed, it was interesting to see tweets on Twitter about how it was unfair to have all of us in the same team.

@harkinlarjar: RT @mambenanje: @harkinlarjar who are your team mates ? namzo mukoshy wande davidadamojr and two product managers

@mambenanje: @harkinlarjar waooh you guys are cheating… why take the best and put in one team ?

@mayorbrain: @namzo, @davidadamojr and @mukoshy in the same team? Now that’s just unfair to the others. #smh #garage48

@mukoshy @mayorbrain hahahaaa not really, other teams also got geeks ;)

A few people were of the opinion that the team was a little bit too high powered and indeed a good amount of red bull and coffee went down human drains on this team.

There was no denying the fact that this was a team full of technical power. However, I think this resulted in a team that could not focus on effective presentation and communication of the Flippii idea instead of focusing on technical details. It later became apparent that technical ability was really not what was going to make a team come out tops at Garage48 Lagos. The final results of the Garage48 event made it pretty obvious that the metrics for judging the demos definitely did not center around technical skill and use of innovative technologies but rather on strength of idea and the “wow factor” resulting from sound presentation of a strong idea.

The fact that the teams at Garage48 Lagos were not provided with accommodation for the 48 hour duration of the event made it seem more like a Garage30, since we really did not have a 48 hour coding marathon. Teams could not be together during the entire 48 hour period and I believe this affected the quality of demos shown on the Garage48 Lagos live demo day.

As I have earlier noted, I was part of the Flippii team. I sincerely think Flippii was the most misunderstood idea at Garage48 and was believed to be a platform for Nigerian software developers to share their ideas and get feedback. At least, this was how it was described on the Garage48 Lagos “projects” page. Flippii is a whole lot more than this.

Flippii is a software platform that puts systems in place to encourage a culture of idea sharing, collaboration and innovation amongst different people around the world, between individuals and companies, or just among employees within a particular company (intranet or “cloud”-based). It just a matter of time before Flippii is launched fully. It is currently in alpha at http://www.flippii.com/alpha.

There were many great ideas pitched at Garage48 Lagos. My team shared a room with the MyCash team. The MyCash idea centered around expense tracking and enables people track how and where they spend their cash. MyCash is a great idea and had a great team even though they once came close to throwing blows at each other. Personally, the MyCash idea is something I had made plans to work on before Garage48 Lagos but somehow never got around to doing so.

The concept of MyCash would make for an excellent mobile application. Little wonder the MyCash team won the best mobile app category at the event. I am hoping against hope that the MyCash team would give me the devices that Nokia promised them. :|

Another interesting idea was Extramiles which aims to make it easy for volunteers to signup for volunteer service. I think this is a really noble idea. The Extramiles team won as runners up for “best execution”.

Cook ‘n Chop was a beautiful idea that proposed a solution that creates an online database of Nigerian food recipes. These recipes would be available in text, video and audio. I like the angle taken during the cook and chop presentation which made the Cook ‘n Chop project seem like the saviour that had come to save Nigerian food recipes that were dying away. I really would not want my grandmother to die and be buried without passing on those magical food recipes of hers. Cook ‘n Chop is a superb and realistic idea and the team would have no insurmountable challenges getting it to a working service in very little time. The Cook ‘n Chop project was a fantastic one from many perspectives. It was excellent because of its focus on local content and it is good to know that the Google representative at the Garage48 Lagos event readily acknowledged this fact. I see Google supporting this project because it might become mutually beneficial for both parties.

Call Camp came out overall winners at Garage48 Lagos. Call Camp aims at taking away the problem of inadequate and inefficient customer care personnel by enabling individuals serve as customer care agents wherever they are and at anytime. The Call Camp idea sounds excellent and “heavenly” in theory but in practice, the difficulties to be encountered are a little less than exciting. The jury, in my opinion, was a little short sighted (too farsighted??) or rather over-excited, and disconnected from the realities of Nigerian society and the Nigerian business climate in judging Call Camp overall winners of the event. Or maybe they were just being visionary.

“Visionary” is one way to look at the call camp idea. The problem is Call Camp has so much to do in order to make their service a reality. They have a sh*t load of thinking and implementation to do. After 48 hours, on demo day, call camp was as far from a working service as they could ever be, not due to laziness or anything of the sort, but simply due to the realities of putting up such a system. The demo day presentation of Call Camp is here.

I believe the concept of Garage48 is to achieve a useable service in as little a time frame as possible. I do not see myself becoming an ad hoc customer care agent using Call Camp anytime soon. Not because I do not want to be, but because the service is probably not likely to function anytime soon. Basically, I am quite pessimistic about the ability of Call Camp to become a fully working service in the next 48 weeks.

If the actual idea of Garage48 does not center around getting a full working service in as little time as possible, then definitely Call Camp deserved to be overall winner of the event due to the strength and innovativeness of the idea as well as the undeniable existence of the problem they are trying to solve. Call Camp got the idea part of Garage48, but the working service part??? I’d like to see them make that happen. Frankly, I am not a believer in Call Camp for Nigeria (especially considering the fact that the angle they want to attack from is the telecommunications industry in Nigeria, MTN, Airtel and the like). It might be feasible in a few other countries with more stable infrastructure, but probably not in Nigeria.

For me, the fun part of Garage48 is the part where we get to see which of the applications showcased at the event gets to live up to expectations in the long run. Even though all the teams at the Garage48 Lagos were short-term winners in one way or the other, we just have to wait and see who the long-term winners are. This is something only time can reveal.

A member of the Call Camp team, Wale Awelenje, has posted a beautiful comment in defense of the team. It has spawned another interesting blog post here.

Editor’s Note: This was originally written shortly after the event.

How Android Won Search in Mobile Space for Google. Tekedia Predicts Chrome To Power Mobile Devices In 2014

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Google remains a company that is heavily dependent on its search.  Most of its revenue comes from search.  A lot of analysts had called it a one pony company. Attack the search and Google is gone.

 

But that is where they get it wrong. Google has gone beyond that. Simply, Google has perfected a domination of the mobile search which is the next frontier.  It won the Internet long ago. Now, it has won the mobile with Android. Yes, we are very close to make the call despite our observation that Microsoft can disrupt by giving Office 365 away in Windows Mobile tablets.

 

In Q4 2010, mobile search grew for Google 4x  for web browsers while search on Android was 10x. It has been observed that  Android users search more often than regular smartphone users. This has to do with the way the OS was engineered.  It has a search button for most devices and there is also a search widget where users can start search. This simply makes it a hot device.

 

With the launch of Google Wallet, get ready for more fun in Android. That will push the competition to the next level.

 

But all in all, Tekedia predicts that irrespective of the success of Android, Chrome OS will soon add new flavors and power future tablets from Google. The reality is that Chrome OS is a mobile OS because it is web based. And we think tablets will do well on it. Then why will Google compete with Google , Android vs. Chrome. Answer: they have cash and money. For a company that will bring more than $27b this year, they can afford to play ideas with some engineers.

 

Finally, we benchmark Android with other mobile OS.

 

Q1 2011 market share

Android 35%, Apple 18%, Blackberry 14%, Microsoft 2%

 

Number of apps

Android 200,000 Apple 425,000  Blackberry  25,000 Microsoft  20,000

 

Carriers

Android 215 Apple 200  Blackberry  n/a Microsoft  60

 

S’phone available

Android 310 Apple 2  Blackberry  6 Microsoft  11

 

Credit/ Fortune, Canalys

FreedomLab Amsterdam Interview of Tekedia Founder on Technology

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Ndubuisi Ekekwe 2 from FreedomLab on Vimeo.

Ndubuisi Ekekwe 2 from FreedomLab on Vimeo.

 

 

 

Interview in Amsterdam. FreedomLab hosted Tekedia Founder on many issues about Technology and Africa for an hour long interview. Most of the contents are exclusive for their members. This interview took place in Amsterdam as Dr N Ekekwe was traveling to the United Nations Summit in Freetown as a UN expert last December. The above is the small portion that made public.
Freedom Lab – Dr Ekekwe

FreedomLab Future Studies is a research lab and an European think tank. We do continuous research on social change based on future studies using a proprietary method: Scenario Based Reasoning (SBR). We use the results of our research to help various organizations by developing an alternative vision and creative strategies.