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SlimTrader – The Mobile Commerce Firm That Started It All, Shop With Mobile Device

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Beautiful young asian woman holding a credit card and shopping online with using laptop computer at cafe on blue tone, girl payment on internet, business ecommerce icon concept.

SlimTrader is the first platform in Africa that allows consumers to purchase services or shop for goods with their mobile devices. This is especially valuable given the slow and erratic internet access on the continent, which leaves residents with the sole option of traveling and waiting in line to conduct potentially simple transactions.

The company has begun operations in four African nations with a sting of early success stories. SlimTrader recently teamed with EarthWise Ferry Service to help reignite the long-formant yet economically vital waterway transportation system along Lake Victoria and, in turn, strengthen the social fabric of the three countries that border it. SlimTrader also created the first Mobile web and SMS ticketing platform in Africa for Aero Airlines, a leading West African Airline.

Through its MoBiashara, SlimTrader helps to widen markets, reduce transaction costs, and facilitate the exchange of goods and services. It’s about getting people what they need, regardless of where they are. Now.

This is how MIT TR explained it

In much of the world, shopping online involves browsing e-commerce sites or typing what you want to buy into a search engine. In countries where Internet-connected computers are a rarity, a Seattle-based startup called Slimtrader hopes to offer Internet shopping via text message instead.

Just like a conventional e-commerce business, Slimtrader relies on interactive databases to handle product inventory, pricing, orders, and payments. But unlike, say, Amazon, it has a database that users can interact with through short message service (SMS).

GPS Receiver Modules for Embedded Applications

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GPS receiver module is a device that can determine your latitude, longitude and altitude. The GPS receiver listens for radio signals from an array of satellites in orbit and receiver can then determine how long it took to receive the initial signals and by analyzing the received signal strength, it can compute (triangulate) how far it is from the relative satellites in orbit. This is possible as the satellites are in geostationary orbit i.e. their locations are always the same in relation to the surface of the earth. Most GPS Modules have a serial interface which makes it very easy to interface with microcontrollers by simply connecting them to the UART of microcontroller. Most receivers will start sending data as soon as power is applied. The data is typically in ‘NMEA’ format. This can vary depending on the GPS receiver. Documentation on the NMEA protocol can be found at: http://www.madeeasykits.com/docs/SiRF_NMEA_Protocol.pdf

 

When considering embedding GPS application in your projects or products whether as GPS tracking device, as navigating device, in robotics, speed monitoring or control device, in precision timing operation and so on. A good understanding of some of the vital features of GPS receiver is important as this will avert west of time, money and energy. The followings are criteria to think about when shopping for GPS module;

 

Accuracy

The accuracy is a function of receiver module, time of the day, clarity of reception, etc. The good news is you can usually find out where you are, anywhere in the world, within 30 seconds, down to +/- 10m. Most modules can get it down to +/-3m, but if you need sub meter or centimeter accuracy, it gets really expensive.

 

Update Rate

This is about the rate at which GPS receiver updates location data. Considering a car navigation system, 1Hz (or once per second) update rate should be sufficient. A typical car simply doesn’t move fast enough that we need to know where you are on the globe more than once per second. There are some applications, such as planes and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs), where you need greater update rates. 5Hz and even 10Hz are becoming available and cheap. You can always configure a GPS receiver to slow down, and update less often (1Hz) if your microcontroller or application can’t handle all the NMEA data.

 

Number of Channels

This is ability to track multiple satellites at the same time and it’s a great marketing strategy by the manufacturers. You’ll see GPS modules that have 50 channels of tracking while we all know that there are 24 GPS satellites, and it’s impossible to stand anywhere and view more than 12 at a time. All modules designed since 2008 have more than enough channel tracking. Don’t bother about the number of channels.

 

Voltage levels

It is also important to consider the supply voltage to the module while you are making your choice. Interface voltage can be of problem at times because you can have 5V power supply module with 3.3V for the interface communication. In such a case, you have to design a simple signal level shifter.

 

Antennas

Each antenna is finely trimmed to pick up the GPS L1 frequency of 1.57542 GHz. Many modules come with a precisely made chunk of ceramic on them which are antennas. There are some other GPS antenna technologies (chip and helical) which are not as common, a bit more expensive.

Since the satellites are in the sky, 12,552 miles above us, so be sure to point the ceramic towards the sky and you can certainly get GPS signal indoors, but it’s hit-or-miss.

 

Size

These modules are getting smaller every day but figure out what your application is. As a general rule, the smaller you make the module, the more likely you are to have antenna problems (longer lock time, less accuracy, etc.). Also consider the interface circuit connection as some interfaces are surface mount contact while others are wired.

 

Power

GPS units are taking in large amounts of timing data from the satellites and crunching it down. The current average power consumption is around 30mA at 3.3V. 30mA may not sound like a lot, but it’s a lot. Note that antennas use power because they often use an amplifier which can account for 20-30mA of current. If a module has really low power specs, it’s probably because the module doesn’t have an antenna built in.

 

I have worked with EM406 GPS receiver module and it worked fine. It’s very compact (includes antenna), status LED, 5V Power, and it has 1Hz Update rate. But the interface communication signal level is 3.3 volt which I constructed a signal level shifter. Its picture is as shown above.

 

Why The Kenyans Are Doing Great In Mobile Apps Development – Emobilis

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Few weeks ago, Tekedia made a case that Kenyans are doing just fine in mobile app development largely because of the cross fertilization the foreign students that visit from US and Europe give them every summer. Kenya visa system is  simple for the Americans – you get it at the point of entry. And within minutes on arrival, the visitor is in. So, they choose Kenya as the destination point for all their summer foreign trips that help to jack up their resumes.

 

From all indications, there is nothing extraordinaire about Kenyan educational system that makes it better. University of Nairobi has nothing unusual – still the old British model of more theory and less hands-on. So the schools cannot claim the glory.

 

Besides iHub which has emerged as the centre-piece of the Kenyan app renaissance, the key institution is eMobilis. The mission of eMobilis is to create opportunities for local talent by training them on Mobile and Wireless Cellular Technologies.

 

eMobilis is part of the winning consortium, tasked by World Bank donor agency Infodev, with hosting the first Mobile Applications Laboratory in Africa. This is one of two labs established by the World Bank – the second lab is in South Africa, and will be run by a South African consortium comprising the Meraka Institute of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), The Innovation Hub, Innovation Lab and Ungana-Afrika.

 

Together with these institutions, the East Africans are doing better than the Western Africans.

Kusanya Uses SMS To Support Field Health Operations

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Kusanya is an SMS Data Capture by BTI Millman LTD. It is a soluton harnessing the power and simplicity of an SMS to send data for fieldwork based operations primarily in the health sector. It sends a predefined string of information via SMS to the server for storage, analysis and later retrieval.

 

This company is one of the finalists in 2011 Pivot25 program.

 

About  BTI Millman Ltd

BTI Millman Ltd is a young, dynamic and innovative software solutions provider with wide experience in provision of government and private industry custom solutions. Our goal is to develop high quality custom mobile, web-based or stand-alone solutions that meet your organisational needs. Our corporate social responsibility is focused on protection and restoration of the environment. We have a passion for caring for the environment.

Innovation in Battery Charging With STMicroelectronics’s New Innovative Solar Charger

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STMicroelectronics, a global leader serving customers across the spectrum of electronics applications has announced a new IC which will significantly increase charging efficiency either indoor or outdoor, using the sun’s radiated energy, enabling longer mobile equipment runtime and avoiding an unexpected lack of power when a mains connection is not available. The small strips of solar cells seen in the front panels of today’s small portable consumer, healthcare and security devices are set to become a more valuable source of free energy with help from a new advanced battery charging IC from STMicroelectronics

 

STMicroelectronics’s SPV1040 is a step-up DC-DC converter tailored to be used as solar battery charger for portable applications to employ Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT), an innovative technique for collecting the maximum possible energy from solar cells. It can be connected to strips of even just a few cells, allowing use in products such as portable healthcare devices, watches, calculators, wireless headsets, toys, or mobile phones. The battery charger and MPPT technology can also be used in equipment such as sensors and security cameras.

 

The MPPT algorithm embedded in the SPV1040 dynamically adjusts the charger’s input impedance to ensure perfect matching with the solar cell, thereby maximizing energy transfer to the battery and dramatically improving overall system efficiency. Without MPPT, changes in the solar cells caused by temperature, ageing, dirt or unit-to-unit variation can produce mismatches that significantly reduce the energy harvested.

 

Major features of SPV1040:

Input-voltage range: 0.3V to 5.5V

Integrated low-loss synchronous rectifier and power switch

Up to 95% efficiency

Shutdown pin to aid system-level power management

Thermal shutdown and protection circuitry to improve battery and overall system safety

 

Available in the TSSOP8 plastic package, the SPV1040 is in full production, priced at approximately $2.00 in quantities of 1000 units. Alternative pricing options are available for larger quantity orders. Evaluation boards and technical documentation are also available.

Source: http://www.st.com