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Apple To Launch iOS5 This Fall – More Than 200 User Interface Enhancements, Twitter Integration And More

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IHS Screen Digest reports that Apple will release iOS5. IHS Screen Digest expects the launch of iOS 5 in the fall to accompany any major hardware like iPod or iPhone.

At its annual worldwide developer conference, Apple unveiled the new version of its iOS operating system (OS) that powers its iPhone, iPod touch and iPad mobile devices.Apple claims iOS 5 will bring over 200 user-facing enhancements, including:

  • An improved notification system
  • iMessage, a new messaging application and protocol that allows the exchange of short text messages over Wi-Fi and cellular data
  • OS-level Twitter integration allowing for single sign-on
  • PC-free start-up and Wi-Fi sync essentially eliminating the need to tether a device to a computer

IHS continued that there are about 80m units of iPhone that will be shipped in 2011. That means that Apple will continue its dominance in the premium s’phone category leaving Nokia and Blackberry on the catch-up phase. IHS also noted that Apple is now the world’s biggest purchaser of electronics components largely in part to the volume of iPhone,iPod and iPad it has sold. Today, iPhone is already generating more revenue and profits than any other mobile handset. Unless Android phones push harder, it does not seem that either of RIM or Nokia can challenge Apple.

 

Analysis

The introduction of iOS5 will position Apple to continue its dominance in the market. While Android has made a lot of inroads into the market, the fact remains that in the premium market, Apple wins.  By adding more integrations with Twitter and more sync functions, iOS will position Apple to lead and drive this discussion on their own terms.

 

The plan to have more than 40 user interface enhancements is a welcome news. Apple must ensure that this does not end up confusing people that are already obsessed with their technologies. While innovation is encouraged, it is vital that they have a transition that does not radically alienate their core customers.

 

Tekedia will be waiting to experience the new iOS5 even as new iPhones, iPad and other gizmos are planned in coming months.

 

What is iOS?

iOS (known as iPhone OS before June 2010) is Apple’s mobile operating system. Originally developed for the iPhone, it has since been extended to support other Apple devices such as the iPod touch, iPad and Apple TV. Apple does not license iOS for installation on third-party hardware. As of May 31, 2011, Apple’s App Store contains more than 500,000 iOS applications, which have collectively been downloaded more than 15 billion times. In the last quarter of 2010, it had a 16% share of the smartphone operating system market in terms of units sold, third behind Google’s Android and Nokia’s Symbian. As of May 2010 it accounted for 59% of mobile web consumption (not including the iPad) in North America. (wikipedia)

 

How to Fix Public Utilities in Africa – The Brightest Africans Must Work In Them

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Any person traveling to most parts of Africa will notice the level of infrastructural decay in the continent. From roads to electricity, public water system to waste disposal system, the continent continues to struggle to join the league of modern world by not providing necessary services to its citizens.

 

During the time of Africa’s greatest generation, the legends of our 1960s that liberated us from colonization, we saw a continent on the path of continuous progress. It had a virtuoso agricultural system and was revamping the social amenities. Good and durable roads were built and Africa was respected across the regions of the earth.

 

Those days, the brightest African minds were living in Africa. From Chinua Achebe to Camara Laye, Africa gave the world literary icons. Interesting, as our literature was developing and growing with African voice and writing under the African Writers Series, our engineering was solid. Our engineers were in charge of the railway system which was functional and efficient.

 

Our engineers built the best roads. Our few water boards were working. The electricity where they were was reliable. Construction houses were not collapsing. Across the universities, there was an aura of order and intellectual haven. The public utilities were functioning and government had access to the brightest African minds to hire and retain.

 

It was an honor to be working for government because they offered the best package.

 

But, that was then. Things have changed, for worse. Military governments destroyed that harmony and alienated many Africans to their leaderships. Many left the continent and some vowed never to work for government.

 

During series of workshops and seminars across Africa last year, I asked groups of students where they would like to work upon graduation. At Universality of Nairobi (Kenya), none of the engineering students I spoke with showed any interest to work in the public utilities.

 

At Ahmadu Bello University (Nigeria), the brightest of the engineering students noted that public utilities like Nigeria’s PHCN (public electricity corporation) and NITEL (public telecom corporation) were lasts on their lists. From Uganda to Cameroon, Senegal to Botswana; government agencies are not attracting the very bests of African talents. These students do not see public utilities as places to build their careers.

 

In short, the students thought that by working with government, people will think they are not good enough to compete for private sector jobs.

 

In a seminar in Benin, we made this observation to students: “why do you complain when there is no light considering that the very best among you are not interested in helping to provide that light”. They all smiled and said it was none of their problems. We gave a lecture making an argument that any sector that cannot recruit and retain the bests in the land cannot compete.

 

It does not matter whether this sector is run by government (many public utilities are still monopolies in Africa) or the private sector. The point is that we cannot necessarily expect the governments to give us the best service on electricity, water, etc when the brightest people do not engage in those areas.

 

When they hire third class graduates, they cannot provide a first-grade service. It is the same analogy where a school district asks a teacher to provide A students when the teacher is not an A grade quality. It is a vicious cycle and can only be broken by getting the right talents in the pipeline.

 

The best African technical graduates are employed by banks and multinational corporations (MNCs). The few more ambitious and risk taking ones travel abroad. Usually, the ones that make it abroad are above average; at least they pass the visa interviews. Under these conditions, the monopolistic public utilities have to plan with some graduates who may not be on top of their games.

 

Sure, this does not mean that all those that work in public utilities are not bright; we are discussing averages here. We are aware of first class graduates in these agencies, though we acknowledge that those might have been hired more than a decade ago.

 

Many of our public utilities are not efficiently managed and lack dynamism you will see in banking or MNCs. The bureaucracy is stifling with usually below average remuneration. To compound all is that many African governments do not see talent drains in the utilities as a problem they have to find a solution.

 

It makes one laugh when governments issue orders that public utilities in different African countries would double capacity. Nigerian governments have consistently missed targets in this yearly ritual for more than a decade. They promised to raise electricity capacity; they will revise at year end.

 

On rare occasions, they have small success because they brought in some foreign contractors. But when these expatriates are gone and time to sustain that capacity, you will notice in few weeks, the system has broken. In the good old Africa when public utilities had the brightest stars from universities, competing far better than banking, many nations had better electricity and water than today. Those talents will not just support the capacity, they will improve on them.

 

So how do you fix this problem?

 

It is about knowledge and skill – the greatest tool of this century. To modernize and make utilities functioning in Africa, it is time African leaders understand that talent drain in the public is hurting everyone. They must find ways to bring talented Africans to public service to move our continent forward.

 

This can be done by revamping the system, paying competitively, developing merit based processes and finally entrusting our bests to run our utilities. Fixing Africa’s public utilities is perhaps one of the most important competitive weapons the continent can use to reverse brain drain and accelerate economic development in the continent. It is time not to handoff the brightest talents to the private sector.

Qualcomm To Produce Chips for iPhone5 Codenamed N94

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The rumor and consensus from many analysts is that Qualcomm will produce the baseband socket on the next Apple iPhone, displacing Intel. Presently, Infineon supplies that unit. Infineon had been acquired by Intel last year.  Qualcomm was the company that supplied Apple the baseband socket for the CDMA iPhone4 though the GSM version was out of their reach.

 

Now Qualcomm will be responsible for the supply CDMA and WCDMA of the iPhone5 which is heralded as the world phone because it can be used in different networks, both GSM and CDMA.This business will give Qualcomm up to $800m – 1bm in revenue from Apple, especially the iPhone5 which is codenamed N94.

 

Qualcomm continues to do well and the chip it created in the wireless market Snapdragon has truly positioned it for a lot of opportunities.

 

Qualcomm is an American wireless telecommunications research and development company, as well as the largest fabless chip supplier in the world, based in San Diego, California.

Capacity Building – African Institution of Technology Brings Innovation To Non-Profit Management

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African Institution of Technology works with governments, schools and companies in the areas of technology diffusion and innovation.  It has supported universities in many African states and continues to play big roles in the technology and startup narratives in Africa. AFRIT will be launching series of programs in coming weeks across African major cities on technology and how it could help to redesign the continent.

 

What is AFRIT?

We are engineers, technologists and scientists actively engaged in the cutting edge technology developments in medicine, communication, automobile, etc, in the top US, Canadian and European institutions.

 

Our plan is to help the diffusion of semiconductor, microelectronics, nanotechnology, biotechnology and other emerging technologies in developing nations (especially African nations) by  supporting schools, SMEs (small and medium-scaled enterprises) and governments through world class education support and technical consulting. All services are free.

 

We are made up of talented and highly motivated individuals who believe that the ‘ant-hills are not built by elephants, but by the collective efforts of the little ants’. We volunteer our time and skills to help schools and institutions as time and professional commitments permit us. Because many of us have been mentored and inspired in our lives, we want to do the same for new generation of technical leaders across Africa.

 

If we get the students engaged, African continent will have the best strategy to overcome its challenges. And this will come by pushing their imaginations towards creating technology. It remains a puzzle that many are hungry in a continent that is exceedingly blessed with land and other resources. Finding the right technology to harness these resources remains the best pathway for Africa. No matter how much loan we can take from the developed nations, we’ve got to solve our problems. And until we begin to create wealth, we will never overcome mass poverty.

 

Africa has got great schools with excellent lecturers, but the educational model remains archaic and redundant. With issues of funding and strikes, the students are left unchallenged and unprepared to face the fierce and competitive 21st century economy. We believe we can change this from bottom up.

 

Yes, the SMEs can help us begin a movement which will rattle the world. Recall the computer training model, where students paid to learn computer skills from SMEs. That has been an excellent technique. Though the semiconductor technology is complex, intense and capital intensive, we are optimistic about the future of this industry in Africa. We focus on what we can control; teach the students and expose them to the concepts and hopefully wait for a political leadership that will galvanize those efforts into a national/continental competitive strategy.

 

It is important to note that a nation cannot be greater than its educational system, especially in this century. Until we evolve and develop a sound educational policy, we will continue to waste the enormous talents of boys and girls in Lagos, Cairo, Accra, Nairobi, …

 

Simply stated, we are passionate about technology and we’ve got great skills. And we understand economics, business, and management because we’re trained in many fields. Just the way you expect the 21st century knowledge-workers to be.

 

Send us an email if you’re fired up and let’s join efforts to make Africa a technology titan and global outsourcing hub of the 21st century.

 

AFRIT is registered in the United States as a non-profit with Federal ID # 001024699

Technology will rule Nations and Algorithms will be the Constitutions

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Over the last few decades, new technology applications have become very central to the process of socioeconomic development of nations.  Successful ones like information and communication technologies have accelerated productivity by integrating people, processes and tools cheaply and efficiently. They continue to revolutionize all aspects of human existence, both in the public and private sectors, by connecting individuals, organizations and countries electronically in mutually dependent global relationships.


Increasingly, the world is experiencing new dimensions in knowledge acquisition, creation, dissemination and usage. Microelectronics, the engine of modern commerce and industry, directly or indirectly, is enabling these revolutionary changes. When this technology advances, a dawn emerges in global economy in speed, efficiency and capacity. Yet, despite its pervasive impacts on daily lives and businesses, it remains to be diffused in Africa. A vision of knowledge workers cannot be achieved in this continent without a creative microelectronics program.



Though software technology has been advancing in the developing countries, the hardware is largely non-existent. Inability of these nations to develop competence in hardware has stalled their institutional capacities to compete in the world.

Around the world, technical education has become a vital instrument for wealth and national prosperity. In any developed nation, this education occupies a key strategic position. It is understood that new (successful) technologies are important to a healthy economy. Consequently, technical education is well funded to drive innovation in the economy. Arguably, it is hard to see any successful economy without a sound educational system. No wonder, some of the most innovative and revolutionary technologies are created in the university dorms: the Google, the Yahoo, the Facebook, the Microsoft, the Dell, and so on and on. University is the epi-center of raw dreams where minds are liberated and prepared to shape the world. It remains an organic system that sustains national policy and vision and no succession plan can survive without those students and professors.


Today, there is a limit to national wealth creation without science and technology. Experiences have shown that natural resources in form of crude oil, diamond, tin and others may not create the needed national growth for stability and prosperity in many African nations. An alternative would be to support technological innovation if the continent must survive the intense competition of the 21st century fueled by globalization. Technology diffuses only when it is developed or acquired. For many years, Africa has been slow to the development of the most pervasive industry of our time- semiconductor. The major challenge has been the human capital to drive the industry.

At AFRIT, we are engineers who major in semiconductor related areas. We understand the concepts which are used to build computer processors and other cutting edge technologies. We are poised to facilitate the diffusion of new technologies in Africa through quality training and consulting. Providing this service bridges the knowledge gap. This is not IT, which in many African nations is synonymous with technology. With all its glory, IT is an offspring of semiconductors. It cannot exist independently of semiconductors. Above all, the IT in Africa is not the creative IT, but the consumptive IT. We need the wealth that comes from  IT creation and that is what AFRIT stands. We stand that Africa should have technology policy that would have broad perspectives involving medical, geophysical, agricultural technology, semiconductors and other technologies and not just information technology which has been promoted by the media and governments disproportionally.

Our operational logistics is very simple. Invite us to develop a curriculum in your institution; organize a workshop/seminar, educate your students/staff on the use of VLSI CAD tools and software, program robots, design in FPGA, VHDL and many more. With our skills, we would train these students/staff with current and comprehensive programs which would enhance performance and capabilities. We understand the spirit of this century. It is a century where “Technology will rule Nations and Algorithms will be the Constitutions”.

Imagine firms outsourcing jobs to Africa in 2020 because we have talented labour force with the advantage of competitive wage structure when compared with India and China. It cannot be wished; someone has to make it happen. Join us; and let’s get our young men and women back to the labs.

 

This is the mission of AFRIT with this Ten Year Strategic Plan.