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Igbo Language Goes Digital – LearnIgboNow Brings The Power of Internet in Igbo Training

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You want to learn Igbo on the web? Now you can. Learnigbonow has all you need to master the good language – tutorial, extended curriculum, among others.

Learn Igbo Now(LIN) is a Superior Igbo language learning system that simply works. Our teaching methodology enables you learn Igbo FASTER than ever before. LIN ensures Super Quick Fluency In Igbo Language for children and adults. Includes Interactive Video, Audio and printable Support Sheets – even when you are out and about!

Ndewo.

Technology Brings Open Democracy – Leadership Must Be The Result

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Since democratic system of governance was invented many centuries ago, the present transformation or redesigning phase it is experiencing across many nations is noticeable. From America to Africa, technology is restructuring how citizens relate with their leaders. With readily available information, the citizens have become more informed and active in the affairs of the nation.

Leadership has morphed into a very simple two-way feedback system that is cheap, efficient and timely. And that has come through the powers of social media networks which enable interactions between any interested citizen and the leaders. From American President to his Nigerian counterpart, Facebook provides a platform for dialogue. Citizens can go online and post simple questions and expect the leaders to take note.

This evolving trend is possible because communication systems have become cheaper and accessible. In the old network TV model, only the very influential people could get on the TV to make suggestions on how the country could be managed. But today, what is important is an idea-have an idea on what government could do better, then visit the necessary website and post it. It turns out that if they ignore it, another website will escalate it until they notice it.

It is not just the political leadership that is using this citizen energy. Businesses are increasingly sourcing and sharing ideas from the consumers of their products. They get insights that help them shape future products. And the consumers also pass across their feelings when they do not get the products rights. In this piece, I will focus on the political leadership.

Never before is the citizen exerting more influence than what we have today. And the future looks more exciting because Moore’s Law will guarantee us more access to networks of more people as technology prices continue to go down even with more efficiency and performance.

In the midst of this development is a challenge for government to be ethical. Every citizen is a pseudo journalist and control over the media empires will not stop any bad act to be transmitted across the globe.

It used to be, take care of the big networks and any scandal will never be made open. It does not work anymore because there are many avenues to break news without the media houses. And those can move faster with devastating impact that even retraction makes no sense since the digital footprints are always there.

This implies that governments must be mindful that in the era of modern democracy, it has become more open. And this openness brings a challenge to act ethical at all times. There is no more a season of deals because anything can appear on the web. Technically, there is no secret.

Governments must understand that the tripod relationships between them, citizens and institutions have changed drastically over the years. Globalization makes it possible to have access to information for benchmarking what other constituencies are doing. And immediately, firms and people change their expectations from their governments.

Over the course of many centuries, governments have moved from central, regional, then central, and now to citizen government, especially in democracies. The self-aware citizens do not accept polices hook, line and sinker. Even in feudal systems, the citizens are asking questions and that old dominance has since been challenged for accountability.

In America, the citizens could organize under a Tea Party umbrella; in Nigeria, they have Enough is Enough. Despite their different names and modus operandi, these organizations and many that can be found in any democracy are pushing leaders to be more open, accountable and responsive. And they honestly think that directing the future of the nation must not be left alone to the politicians. They want to influence dialogue and the nation’s trajectory. They ask questions on areas of national concerns and they want change.

Forty years ago, they may appear to be ill-informed. Not anymore! They have access to information that used to be seen by only government officials as technology has made dissemination easier. From Think Tanks to universities to non-governmental organizations, anyone could read their analyses online, free. Even the government’s own writings are easily available and suddenly that secrecy that leaders enjoyed over things that shaped their policies is eroding. People now challenge them with data and can authoritatively make their points for new directions.

Leadership in this era provides an opportunity that a star could be born overnight as performance news pass across boundaries. It offers an opportunity to be ethical and honest in dealing with the citizens. One understands the difficulty leaders face in trying to engineer the nation to long-term prosperity when most of the citizens are interested in the short-terms. How you communicate the need for minor pains today for major joy tomorrow will depend on how trustworthy you are. Citizens will believe an honest leader and can give concessions for the good of the nation.

As the opportunity is also the threat. It is easier to see politicians resign quicker and faster after scandals are broken. The bad news go through the same pathway the good ones pass.

In open democracy, what is truly leadership? Can we argue that China which shortened a century of western innovation into a quarter century under no internationally accepted democratic norm is not displaying leadership we could envy? No open democracy, but the world, especially Africa is looking towards China. They envy that state capitalism where the leaders build world class public institutions that Wall Street gladly accepts even when they criticize governments going into business in America and Africa. From banking to energy, we have pseudo government-run empires in China that best investors welcome though successful IPOs.

The reality is that under a citizen government, economic vibrancy is not the only gain of governance. People want freedom, by nature. Nonetheless, leadership and good one minus other externalities is not only found in democracy. However, to the people, denying them the right to attain that position of leadership, if they choose, shows the leader is not a good one. It is about having rights to exercise wishes under the law. And every person irrespective of birth can fulfill a dream. Under this hypothesis, many African leaders that oppose elections are designated as bad leaders by the West irrespective of their efforts in other areas. By acculturation, the West thinks that a political leadership should be expressive and open.

Finally, I conclude that I dream of a world whose governance is open and transparent with a vista not only to economic greatness, but individual rights. It must be one where citizen energy is exerted in the affairs of the nation and leaders stewards not only to the citizens, but the nation. And those leaders taking the opportunities that technology brings through openness and continuous improvement to restore the dignity of man.

 

Author. Ndubuisi  Ekekwe

Get Ready for More International Calls – WACS is Nearing Completion

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The tariff from U.S. to Nigeria dropped from about 20c to 7c in the last four months. Something great is happening. But it is just the beginning.

The West Africa Cable System (WACS), the latest in a new generation of high-capacity submarine communications cables linking Africa to the rest of the world, is set to land at its final destination in Yzerfontein near Cape Town, South Africa in coming weeks.

The cable, the product of a consortium of companies including Gateway Communications, Angola Telecom and Telkom South Africa, has a 5.12 Tbit/s capacity, making it substantially faster than the celebrated SEACOM cable with its 1.28 Tbit/s design capacity. The speed of the WACS cable is such that one could theoretically download about eight million MP3 files or over eight thousand DVDs per minute.

The 14 000km, US$600-million, cable system is being built by Alcatel-Lucent Submarine Networks, and the construction phase is set to be completed in April. WACS will connect Namibia, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo, Cameroon, Nigeria, Togo, Ghana, and Côte d’Ivoire, to Portugal and the United Kingdom. Significantly, this is the first time Togo, Namibia, the Republic of Congo, and the Democratic Republic of Congo will be connected to a global submarine network.

Originally planned for commercial launch in Q3 2011, a delay means WACS will only become operational in Q1 2012. Once the construction phase in completed this month, the testing phase will commence.

Mass Challenge – A Huge Challenge for Africa to Replicate and They Must Figure That Out

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Mass Challenge has emerged as one of the to technology competitions in the world. As stated on their site:

The world is full of great ideas, but only a few become reality. Novice entrepreneurs require advice, resources and funding to bring their ideas to fruition. Currently there is a gap between the resources these entrepreneurs need and the ability of the entrepreneurial ecosystem to provide them.

Indeed, there is a huge gap, especially in Africa.  Massachusetts has figured this out and have a solution:

We are addressing this gap by launching the world’s largest startup competition. We use the power of competition to create urgency, and to identify and aggregate high-impact teams and resources. We strengthen and accelerate finalists by providing them high-quality, personalized mentorship and by connecting them to potential team members, advisors, customers and sponsors. As an independent not-for-profit, we are solely motivated to support and strengthen entrepreneurs – no strings attached.

But Africa that needs this type of program has not. It is important that Mass Challenge is trying to address one problem that has become very common in the state – ideas born and ideas move. Microsoft began in Cambridge but moved to California. Facebook the same. While it is not certain that any of the firms can be stopped from moving to anywhere they will get the cluster they need, one must understand that the state is losing revenue by this happening. The solution? Support businesses and ideas that can stay in Mass, at least for a while. There is no other motivation than to create  jobs and opportunities in the state. They must work out a problem to keep some of the startups in the state after they have started operations.

African governments must begin startup competitions which will help thinkers and those with ideas to transfer ideas into businesses.

Africa Moves Past Europe in Mobile Connections

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Wireless Intelligence has reported that Africa has passed Western Europe in the number of mobile connections during the final quarter of 2010. This is emerging as the continent continues it progression in the mobile ecosystem.

The new report said that African mobile connections reached 547.5 million during the final three months of 2010, up nearly 20 percent from the previous year. In comparison, Western Europe reported 523.6 million connections, or an increase of less than one percent from 2009.

This clearly shows that Africa has the future market and anyone not developing African strategy will miss opportunities.