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Towards a GloCal Engineering

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In this contemporary time, the most dynamic and evolving area is engineering. Such an observation may seem at first to be a mere truism but closer considerations of its impacts in medicine, entertainment, energy and surgery will rapidly dispel any such dismissive judgment.

 

Engineering is transforming all fields. Future medicine looks as a field where robots will seamlessly help doctors and surgeons get patients to work quicker and healthier. The future of global energy looks promising because engineers are breaking barriers daily in the quest to deliver affordable, efficient and clean sources of power.

 

From entertainment to security, nothing is spared. Today’s wars are technology wars fuelled by engineering geniuses acquired, advanced and processed over centuries. The bravery of a modern warlord is the engineering feat of someone who may never have to shoot. We are living in an era where discovery is not celebrated, not because they have become easier, but because they are happening regularly.

 

Engineering practice has changed so much and in a radical form from what it was a few decades ago. The global energy problem is engineering problem. The global health challenge is engineering problem and daily engineers are faced with burdens to solve major world problems. While the politicians enact the energy bills, the engineers make the energy practically available.

 

The bold and optimistic challenge to help engineer bio-grade artificial human organs is an assessment that managing what Nature gives us has limitations. Why not get a new artificial brain if the one that exists is troublesome enough?

 

But these advances pose serious ethical challenges which the engineers are not providing answers. In most cases, that is not their job; someone has to regulate them and put them on the path of keeping sanity on this earth.

 

But regulating these activities is unfortunately not easy. One technology could do well but could also be harmful. In this case, the problem is not the technology, but the application and usage. It is like saying because nuclear technology could kill en mass, it must be banned in hospitals where they are used in many critical treatments.
But for a moment, let us leave the technical aspect of engineering progress. I am already aware that many cotton farmers in Sudan could be out of jobs if some of the experiments on lab production of cotton in universities in US and European schools work out. We could be creating security crises where suddenly the commodity market is destroyed because nanotechnology has provided alternatives to rubber, cotton and hosts of other materials. People will be out of jobs and crises will start everywhere.

 

My concern is the disparity in engineering development between the developed and developing world. The rich nations are pushing the limits while the poor are not contributing much. It is not that they do not want to contribute, they want but the environment does not enable them. We lose their ideas and perspectives, unfortunately.

 

Can the future of engineering be structured so that these people can get on the pathway of creativity and innovation? Can the world and technical associations provide an effective system where boys and girls in developing countries could help to solve the global engineering challenges? How can this be done? In short, how can companies begin to give people at the bottom of the pyramid opportunities to shape the products that are designed for them?

 

The same problem that has undermined our abilities to solve major poor people’s diseases is what is affecting the ability of the world to provide technology in ways that the poor people can use them. Exporting Smartphone to people that just need the simplest phone is not a great strategy. When you stay in top European universities and craft an aids project that will be implemented in Botswana without understanding what they need is similar to exporting many products we see in developing nations that do not meet the real needs of those customers.

 

Malaria remains a disease because there is no money to be made as only the poor suffer it. Polio has the same problem. Tuberculosis is the same. Why? Because those that engineer drugs consider business before quest to save lives. So why not have a system where engineering goes global and local at the same time?

 

Answering, understanding and managing emerging developments of meeting the needs of every customer, broad and specific, in the highly fragmentized world market will define the future of engineering. It will show our readiness to solve the word’s problems. It will make engineering fresh before all global citizens. It is going gloCal- having a world global strategy, but acting local in each market or community. It means helping people solve local problems with global ideas.

 

If we begin to do that, we have the possibility of solving these problems. It is so shameful that in a world of so much knowledge, many are very poor and dying. We have solved the refrigeration problem in Boston, but in a small village in Ghana, the citizens have no light and refrigerators do not have any value there. So, can be say we have indeed solved how to preserve food?

 

The global food problem is an engineering problem. Even in Africa, they have enough during the harvesting season. But immediately that season is gone, many become hungry because they could not preserve the excess. So, you have a system where a man that threw away a basket of excess fresh tomatoes a month before is looking for a canned tomato for his family. What if he has preserved the fresh ones? We need solutions.

 

Now is the time to redefine what engineering research is. People at the bottom of the pyramid are not interested in nanotechnology and genome project. They just want simple ways to live and if governments, usually not their governments, can understand that there are many research and engineering challenges in these areas by providing simplicity through engineering, everyone can look at engineering future with optimism.

 

My African kinsmen care not if you can travel to Mars and yet cannot assist them to preserve the mangoes they harvested to last longer and feed their families. So while the Mars race is on, they expect the governments to fund ways to help them store their food. If that happens, they can confidently look at the future of discovery and engineering with optimisms. A little support and devoting the engineering powers of the advanced nations could eliminate many problems.

 

There are engineering challenges across the developing nations and it is time we put resources to solve them instead of being obsessed with sending private ships to the moon.

 

I hate to recognize the political problems, because in my understanding, a political problem is also an engineering problem. Engineering will solve all human problems. Let US put all the aids money they give the politicians in Africa and send some of their best minds from MIT, Johns Hopkins, Berkeley, GaTech, Michigan and Stanford on engineering missions in Africa. Suddenly, there will be solutions to food preservation and we can reduce global poverty as everyone that grew up in Africa knows that our problem is not production, but preservation.

 

Engineering must be global and yet adaptable to local needs- we need gloCal engineering for the future. Let engineers be engineers, irrespective of boundaries and make this world a better place. Until then, many will not understand why they matter.

Where Is Nigeria? Internet In 2015 – Nigeria Has No Footprint, An Economist/Cisco Data

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Ok. We took it from the  Economist. There is no way to explain that Nigeria is not even in the horizon. What is happening people?

 

RELIABLE data about internet traffic is hard to come by. One of the better sources is Cisco’s annual Visual Networking Index, which was published on June 1st. Internet traffic, the world’s biggest maker of networking gear predicts, will quadruple and reach 80.5 exabytes per month (80 exabytes would fill 20 billion DVDs) by 2015.

Talent Watch: Alex Nyika – Ugandan Born, Kenyan Trained

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This article is adapted from here:

 

Mr Alex Nyika is an  Ugandan software developer based in Kenya. He was the guy that won  the  Base of the Pyramid award at the 2010 Mobile Monday Peer Awards that took place in Helsinki, Finland. Five finalists including United States-based Super Technologies, which emerged runner up in the category competed for the award.

 

The award recognises young and outstanding mobile companies that are making a difference in mobile health, education, payments, employment trade and entertainment. Software developers from 37 countries across the world participated in the awards.

 

Mr Nyika, 26, was recognised for developing iCheki, a mobile phone software solution designed to help users of public transport in Kenya to track taxis coming their way. iCheki is a Swahili-English (Sheng) word for “I see”.

 

Mr Nyika holds a degree in Civil Engineering from Makerere University and a Diploma in Business Information Technology from Strathmore University. Commenting on the win, Mr Emmanuel Kweyu, a former lecturer of Alex at Strathmore said the win is a reflection of the spirit of East African community – a Ugandan winning a global award while representing Kenya.

 

Mr Nyika won the Strathmore Boot Camp competition last November with an application called ‘Pamoja’ (Swahili for together) which is an event management system. The application was used to manage applicants in subsequent boot camp in July 2010.

 

My Nyika led Xrystalgenius, the mobile programming start up he heads to win the 10th MIT-AITI mobile development competition held at Strathmore University on 30th July.

M-Shop Takes Tickets Validation To Mobile Devices – Your Events, Travel, Goods And Services Simplified

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M-Shop is a platform allowing consumers to order, pay for, obtain and validate tickets for events, travel, goods & services. The solution provides USSD technology or a mobile application on smart phones to deliver this convenience at any time and from any location with a mobile carrier signal.

From their website:

We provide solutions and services to the general public enterprise and mobile operators alike. By partnering with M-Shop you join a team of forward thinking and innovative companies making use of the latest technology to further your personal & business objectives.

All our solutions and services are designed and developed in-house by our team of highly skilled industry specialists offering you functionality, flexibility and reliability that is second to none. The M-Shop team is made up of experienced, dynamic people who all share the same passion for technology and. Innovation ,Teamwork, dedication to excellence and a professional approach above all are our core values reflected in the solutions we offer.

Our people are completely and comprehensively up to date with all developments in the mobile telecommunications industry. We constantly work on improving our knowledge and skills to keep bringing you high quality solutions and powering your business and making your life easier.

Some products

MOBILE AIRPLANE TICKETING – Need to travel by air well with M-shop and your local airline its simple. Just access our travel menu. Select your preferred airline /choose destinations/ /dates & times of travel / Book tickets,buy and receive a M-Ticket for your travel .

MOBILE BUS TICKETING –Need to travel on the road well with M-shop and your local bus company its easy. Just simply access our travel menu. Select your preferred bus company/choose destinations /dates / times of travel /seat / Book tickets,buy and receive a M-Ticket for your travel .

IC Insights Predicts That Tablets Will Drive PC Growth in 2011

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IC Insights, reports that PC shipments will rise by 13% in 2011 compared to 2010. This is contained in its report

 

The surge in tablets and a 14% increase in sales of standard notebook computers (to 182 million units in 2011) is expected to drive up total portable PC shipments by 23% to 250 million systems worldwide this year, following 30% growth in 2010, says the new IC Market Drivers update, which is available to subscribers of the report. Portable computers are forecast to account for 62% of worldwide PC shipments in 2011, compared to 58% of the total in 2010 and just 31% in 2005. The shift to mobile personal computers continues to gain strength, and IC Insights now expects 72% of PCs sold in 2014 to be portable systems, with tablets accounting for 24% of the projected 557 million units sold that year–up from 5% of the 355 million PCs sold in 2010

 

The key driver for this upward trend in PC shipment could be traced to the developing world which is just starting to buy their own PCs now they can afford them. East Africa grew more than 70% last quarter and that trend is expected to continue.

 

While many have seen tablets as a killer in the PC business, what is happening is that both PC and tablet can co-exist because tablet cannot replace PC. That office productivity cannot be easily replaced by tablet – so people still need PC.

 

From IC Insights report, desktop PC will lose more share to laptop and netebooks. It will decrease from 45% in 2010 to  28% in 2014 while notebook will increase, marginally,  from 45% to 46%. The biggest gainer will be tablets that will move from 5% to 24%. Total PC sales will increase from 355m to 557m within the same period.