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Lessons From The History of Silicon Valley

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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.

 

 

Visafone Introduces Unlimited Free Calls Through The Visa U&I

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Visafone communications introduces Visa U&I –  a package that offers unlimited free calls with friends and families on their in-network. This is true for 6 months and all the parties must recharge for at least N200 within a month.  This package requires a payment of N2, 400 for a phone and SIM card and thereafter get the following benefits:

 

– ZTE/Huawei handset worth N3, 200

– unlimited free call to one Visafone number for six months (on recharge of at least N200/month)

– On-net recharge bonus of 50 per cent on the first recharge every month for 6 months on minimum RCV value of N200.

 

The MD/CEO of Visafone stated on this package:

 

“For us at Visafone, our customers are very dear to us and that is why we constantly put in place initiatives that add significant value to their lives,” he added.

 

Voted The Best ICT Company and Best Telecom Brand in Nigeria for 2008, Visafone Communications Ltd was born out of the strategic acquisition of 3 CDMA mobile network operators that had been in operation for up to 8 years with 30,000 subscribers and coverage in different parts of Nigeria.

 

Visafone, in the intervening yawn of time, amassed over 3 million subscribers after 16 months of operation and crossed the 1million subscriber mark in just 6 months from its launch in February 2008. Thus, recording an unprecedented industry milestone as the fastest growing mobile company in Nigeria since the earliest it took a Nigerian based GSM company to hit 1 million was 9 months.

Quantum NG Introduces Contact Centre Solution – Launches QTM IP

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In an effort to help partners and clients provide world class customer services and sustain their business cost-effectively,  QuantumNG has introduced into the market  QuantumNG Contact Centre.

 

According to the MD/CEO Mr Sonny Oyediran,

 

The business processes and technologies that is implemented in the QTM IP was designed specifically for the Nigerian business environment and the operational constrains that continues to be dominant in the local market,” he said. QTM IP is an Internet Protocol, IP based Contact Centre system designed to intergrade directly into the Nigerian business environment. It is a Plug & Play solution that can be deployed in 100 days with attendant cost.

 

 

QuantumNG is an innovative supplier of customised modern solutions and matching services for a variety of markets. The company focuses on the provision of enterprise technology and business applications to private organizations and government.

Watch The Apps Source – Malware Could Kill The Fun

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Whenever you have an opportunity to download that app, always think and ask yourself if that app is coming from a legitimate source. There are many codes written by bad boys that are flying around. Mobile malware is real and gaining a lot of popularity and the cyber criminals have become very sophisticated.

According to InfoWorld

Over the weekend, mobile security firm Lookout discovered that nearly three dozen apps available through the Android Market contained a stripped-down version of the DroidDream malware that infected devices in March. The new Trojan, dubbed DroidDream Lite (DDLite), sends information about the infected phone to a central server, but does little else. Unlike the original DroidDream, it does not try to compromise the device by exploiting software flaws. Both programs were seeded in the Android Market using pirated programs in what has become a characteristic of these attacks, according to Kevin Mahaffey, chief technology officer for Lookout.

 

You need to be very careful before the fun turns into pain.

 

What is malware?

Malware, short for malicious software, consists of programming (code, scripts, active content, and other software) designed to disrupt or deny operation, gather information that leads to loss of privacy or exploitation, gain unauthorized access to system resources, and other abusive behavior. The expression is a general term used by computer professionals to mean a variety of forms of hostile, intrusive, or annoying software or program code. (wikipedia)

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.