DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 7815

Kenyan Whive, a Mobile Social Aggregator Opens A New Level of Communication

0

 

Whive is a mobile social aggregator integrated with major social media platforms. The application allows Whive Subscribers to communicate with contacts, friends via SMS, messaging and other social media. Whive is a recent winner of the Vision 2030 ICT award for Gender, Youth and Vulnerable Groups Sector in Kenya.

 

At Whive we Host over 90,000 Kenyans, 5 Social Media Applications that provide the most comprehensive Social Marketing tools ever developed for the African Market. Our partnership with Nokia Corporation in particular enables to understand the Business and Marketing Platforms of the future i.e. The Mobile Phone. Because we handle millions in SMS traffic on a monthly basis we are able to advise you appropriately on how to attract Kenyan Social Media users to your products.

 

Through our brand SMS254.com we are currently the number 1 brand offering Bulk SMS services in Kenya (google bulk sms kenya). Using this experience we have built formidable SMS applications on leading Social Networks in Kenya including Whive.com Facebook.com.
We also have a Native Mobile Application that we are developing with Nokia Corporation. This Mobile Application tool that provides communication and publishing capabilities to the user in the 3 mostly used languages in Kenya which include Swahili, English and Sheng.

 

This application will ensure that we will be able to offer Geo-location advertising which is suitable for the YOUR_PRODUCT brand in the very near future.

Information Technology for People-Centred Development (ITePED) 2011 – July 2011, Abuja

0

10th International Conference – ITePED 2011 will hold as follows:

 

Theme: Information Technology for People-Centred Development

 

Date: Monday July 25 – Friday July 29, 2011

 

Venue: International Conference Centre, Abuja

 

The Annual Conference 2011 focus on the micro issues that affect people directly i.e. how Information Technology (IT) could be used for People Empowerment or People Centred Development.

 

 

This will be approached not only from the policy perspective that addresses the required enabling environment (the general strand in most of our past conferences), which is largely in the purview of government and governance, but also with a good dose of practical orientation that opens up the opportunities and challenge people to take full advantage of IT, regardless of limitations of the policy environment.

Nigeria Information Technology Exhibition (NITEX) – June 15 2011

3

Nigeria Information Technology Exhibition  (NITEX) is stated for June 15 as follows:

 

Date:
Wednesday, June 15 to Friday, June 17, 2011

 

 

Venue:
The Lagoon Restaurant, Ozumba Mbadiwe Street, Victoria Island, Lagos

 

 

Theme:
Deployment of Information Technology for a Sustainable Economic Growth

 

NITEX is the premier event for software developers, software architects, solution providers, OEMs, IT vendors etc. NITEX-2011 will serve as an excellent opportunity to promote latest technologies as they relate to organizations, ranging from SME’s, large enterprise and multinationals.

 

The Nigeria Computer Society (NCS), in partnership with Nigeria Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN), National Office of Technology Acquisition & Promotion (NOTAP), Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) and National Directorate of Employment (NDE), present an all-inclusive exhibition to showcase various Nigerian IT products, solutions and services.

 

If Jumla Vision Comes True – We Will All Be TV Junkies. African TV Content Unified

0

Jumla which means “all together” in Swahili, will be a platform for people to find premier African content from anywhere in the world for free. The users will get to enjoy a high quality online video experience on demand, offering them the option to watch what they want, when they want and where they want. Jumla will be a free service to the public, but will generate revenue from advertising sales on the video streams.

 

Of course, this is  a very far idea because you cannot make contents free which you do not have rights over. How can you take TV programming and aggregate them for free? It does not seem possible. But we will see how this startup plans to overcome the challenges even many US companies have tried with severe legal consequences.

 

It is not as easy as Jumla makes it look. Yet, they can prove us wrong. Over to you Jumla.

Lessons From The History of Silicon Valley

2

The term Silicon Valley is not strange to anyone, but what many may not know is its history, the amount of hard work that went into its creation and the lives that shaped it.

 

Silicon valley refers to the southern part of San Francisco Bay area of Northern California in the USA, and got its name from the large number of companies in the area engaged in silicon chip manufacture. However, it evolved into a term that has now come to represent the hub of American high-tech industry, with names like Apply, Google, eBay, face book, Cisco, Adobe, Hp, Yahoo and many other companies that fall into the Fortune 1000 category.

 

The success of Silicon Valley has lead many countries to try to imitate it, although in a rather distorted and artificial way; countries like the UK, India, and lately Russia, and Qatar and also on the list. Although these countries are putting in tremendous effort to develop their high-tech industry, they are in no wise creating another silicon Valley.

 

History

Silicon valley was originally called the Valley of Heart’s Delight, due to its landscape was but first termed “Silicon Valley” in a 1971 article in the newpaper Electronic news.

 

The history of Silicon valley dates back to Stanford University, its students , affiliates, and a onetime Dean of engineering, Frederick Terman (often called the father of Silicon Valley) who in the 1940s and 50s encouraged students to start their own business. As a result, the institution grew from a campus to an industry of high-tech entrepreneurs around the campus, most of which were nurtured by Frederic Terman, including Hewlett-Packard (which was started by two Stanford Students).

 

Another key element in the history was Stanford’s quest for survival after world war II. This it solved by leasing its land strictly to high-tech industries that it could benefit from.

 

Stanford University got into solid state research with the support of private corporations (NOT GOVERNMENT), leading to the development of the microprocessor, microcomputer and many other foundational technologies of the high-tech industry. All these were made possible by the large geographical concentration of skilled and passionate minds in the area and the generous funding by a network of venture capitalists and the leadership of Stanford. In all this, the Stanford Research Institute was born, comprising of university authorities, and private business men.

 

A good number of the companies in the Silicon Valley area were owned by former students of Stanford, including HP.

 

This is not intended to be a detailed history of silicon valley, but just a way of drawing out attention to some key lessons in its history which can be applied anywhere.

 

Lesson 1 No one, who intends to do anything, waits for any man to do it for him, not less the government, he steps out and gets it done.

 

Lesson 2 Someone must plant the seed and pay the price, Here we refer to the constant motivation of Fred Terman for his students to start businesses. Therefore we must constantly talk about it, encourage it and motivate the young generation to step out confidently and take this country and Africa back.

 

Lesson 3 There must be extensive knowledge sharing: too many people Hoard knowledge in our environment, even if ideas cannot be shared in details for fear of being stolen, yet information, knowledge pertaining to a field of study must be shared freely amongst members of the industry, especially in the stages of development and even beyond. Every year, countless training and development conferences hold in the silicon valley area to continue the trend of knowledge sharing, countless online association (free and paid) abound for this, and countless industry-university alliances, which brings us to the next point.

 

Lesson 4 The educational institution must train, study and research strategically in a way that will benefit the local industry. This is the only way graduates can be relevant, and this is the only way the Industry can be interested in the institutions. Mutual benefit must be sought. Industry has ideas, the institutions have minds and equipments (or should have).

 

I would however like to note that the mindset that a geographical concentration of industries is still necessary is obsolete, especially in the age of information. The internet has given us the world’s largest hub for everything, and we must maximize it. Hubs like TEKEDIA and many others need to spring up to great a meeting point for like minds, while symposiums, private interaction between like minds and conferences need to be more frequent in specific and strategic areas of development.

 

Lesson 5 The private investment is key. The Silicon Valley rode of two wings: ideas and private venture capitalism. We have a lot of private industries in Nigeria who invest their resources into music, entertainment and media, with absolutely no investment in education and research. I think it is because no one has given them a reason good enough to do so, for me, it’s time to do that. Private investment must be sought and maximized to develop a high-tech hub. The Stanford Research Institute was such a body created to maximize all mental and financial resources needed for development.

 

No one ever waited for the government to do anything, where it took the government to get things done, it was because the man who got into leadership had greater passion than everybody else, and decided to use the resources at his disposal to get it done. If that man were not in government, he still would have gotten it done one way or another.

 

Some might wonder why a country like Nigeria would want to develop a high-tech hub, some might deem it pointless and useless, but Nigeria is still the giant of Africa and we must pave the way. In addition, we are the largest nation in Africa, if we cannot do it then who will. West Africa and indeed Africa waits on us in many areas.

 

This is more than a blog post; this is an insight into the steps to the birth of a valid high-tech industry in Nigeria to serve Africa and the world, which is already on the way.