Category: Technology

  • Small IT operators shutting down, sacking employees- Ayoola Oke

    Small IT operators shutting down, sacking employees- Ayoola Oke

    Ayoola Oke, the former Special Adviser to the former Executive Vice-Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Dr Ernest Ndukwe, has lamented that small operators within the Information Technology (IT) sector are shutting down and sacking employees.

    The Information Technology expert told newsmen on Wednesday in Lagos this is due to deliberate and systematic dominant operator of the industry deliberately carrying out disconnections and other anti-competitive practices against them to cream off their subscribers.

    Oke questioned how Nigeria would be able to infuse local contents into the telecommunications industry in a situation when local companies are not allowed to grow.

    Ayoola explained that all the small local IDAs are getting from the international market is less that one percent.

    “As for the International call market the local origin operators called International Data Access Operators (IDAs) and IGW International Gateway Operators have all been practically crushed and dead except may be those fronting for major operators.

    “These companies are shutting down and sacking all their employees contributing to high unemployment rates.

    “First of all in the whole industry Medium Scale companies are all practically dead or comatose due to deliberate and systematic dominant operator of the industry deliberately carrying out disconnections and other anti competitive practices against them to cream off their subscribers.

    “How will Nigeria be able to infuse local content into the telecom industry in this situation when Nigeria origin companies are not allowed to grow.

    “All the small local IDAs are getting from the international market is less that 1%,” he said.

    He suggested that Federal Government should insist on a minimum of 10% of international traffic, in bound and out bound to be handled by Nigerian International Data Access Operators (IDAs) operators for overall development of the country.

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    Ayoola said that the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) should work with NEXIM, AFREXIM and NCC to provide financial support through low interest rates and sovereign financial guarantees for small operators so that they can grow.

    While still speaking on how the country can leverage on IT development, he stated that small operators should be given import duties for their ICT equipment, adding that the Local Content Policy of the Federal Government for telecoms should be finetuned and enforced to support local participation in the industry.

    “Government need to insist on a minimum of 10% of international traffic, in bound and out bound to be handled by small NIGERIAN IDA operators. Before now they were not even allowed out bound traffic.

    “CBN should work with NEXIM, AFREXIM and NCC to provide financial support through low interest rates and sovereign financial guarantees for small operators so that they can grow

    “Small operators should be give import duties for their ICT equipment

    “The Local Content Policy of the FG for telecoms should be fine tuned and enforced to support local participation in the industry,” he said.

  • Tech industry leaders present as EdTech startup, Evimero is unveiled

    Tech industry leaders present as EdTech startup, Evimero is unveiled

    Evimero, an Edtech startup that provides tech education to learners of all backgrounds, launched yesterday with a conference themed “Thrive Beyond Limitations.”

    The conference, attended by over 100 people, featured tech ecosystem leaders such as Fola Olatunji-David, Victor Ekwealor, Princewill Akuma, Esther Ahaiwe, Simi Oluwatomi, and Emmanuel Mesole, Emmanuel Edokpa and Bayo Chike Odurinde.

    Fola Olatunji-David, who has led two of Africa’s most successful accelerator programs: Ventures Platform and Google for Startups Africa and is currently a key leader of the 3MTT program by the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovations & Digital Economy, emphasized the need to train technical talents in Nigeria and Africa, and appreciated Evimero’s work in this regard.

    He also reiterated the need to partner with government and private programs such as 3MTT.

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    Evimero’s CEO, Daniel Afolayan, spoke about the importance of starting a career in tech and emphasized that Evimero will give learners a chance to achieve their dreams with instructor-led live classrooms, mentorship clinics with top industry giants, and internship placement.

    Afolayan said: “We believe that everyone has the potential to thrive in tech, regardless of their background or experience. Evimero is here to provide the resources and support that learners need to succeed.”

    Evimero’s curriculum is designed to teach learners the skills they need to land a job in tech, including programming, product marketing and communication, and product design.

    The academy also offers a variety of extracurricular activities, such as hackathons and workshops, to help learners build their portfolios and network with other tech professionals.

    “We are excited to launch Evimero and help learners achieve their dreams of a career in tech,” said Micheal Agboola, the COO, as he unveiled the first cohort starting in December.

    He added: “We believe that tech has the power to transform lives, and we are committed to making tech education accessible to everyone.”

  • ‘Kainji/Jebba Hydroelectric calls for cost-reflective tariff’

    ‘Kainji/Jebba Hydroelectric calls for cost-reflective tariff’

    Chairman of The Board of Directors of Mainstream Energy Solutions Limited (MESL) Col Sani Bello (Rtd) has sought a cost reflective tariff in the Nigerian Electricity Supply Industry (NESI).

    The company took over and operates the Kainji and Jebba Hydro Power Plants 10 years ago.

    In his goodwill message at the NESI Participant and Stakeholders Roundtable 2023, Bello noted that the bane of the industry is lack of cost reflective tariff that should have afforded the industry liquidity.

    He also said there is need to criminalise energy theft to deter perpetrators.

    The chairman also noted that non-payment of electricity bills was affecting the industry.

    He urged government agencies to endeavour to pay their bills.

    His words: “The major challenges we continue to tackle with today is the lack of cost reflective tariff that will provide sustainable liquidity for the entire value chain.

     “Strengthened laws and enforcement of these laws that will criminalize and deter energy theft as well as non-payment of electricity bills.

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    ” We also implore that all arms of government and government agencies also pay all their invoices to the NESI.”

    Besides, the chairman said  multiple taxation, levies on the value chain have hindered the — growth of the industry and prevented the inflow of investments to the sector.

    Bello said the  ever-present liquidity challenge exacerbated by inflation and a dearth of foreign currency continues to affect industry operations.

    He said: “While we acknowledge the effort of the current administration in trying to resolve and improve the foreign exchange environment, we look forward to a way out that will midwife an enabling environment for existing and prospective investors to thrive within the NESI.”

    Bello noted that it  has been a decade of challenges and achievements for this sector since 2013, when Nigeria decided on a private sector partnership to participate in the development of the power sector and in an effort to bring in critical Capital to finance and rehabilitate the Power infrastructures.

    He noted that after  a decade of the privatisation of the NESI, the Industry has evolved and has made positive strides and impact on the Nigerian economic landscape through investments in capacity recovery and capacity expansion thereby increasing the installed Industry Generation capacity.

    According to him, a classic example in the

    Hydro Power space was when Mainstream Energy Solutions Limited (MESL) took over the Kainji and Jebba Hydro Power Plants with Kainji not in production and Jebba at 460Mega Watts.

    He added that “we have rehabilitated both plants and currently having an available combined capacity of 1002Megawatts at both plants.

    “A fellow Hydro company North South Power (NSP) has also achieved great strides in the rehabilitation of its plant.

    “Hydropower currently accounts for about 30% of the power to the national grid.”

    The chairman said despite these achievements in the sector, energy transmission and distribution still poses a severe challenge to a functional NESI due to the state of the infrastructure and requires significant capital to finance its rehabilitation and expansion.

    He noted that the total generation installed capacity of about 13,000 Mega Watts is more than the Transmission capacity of 8,000 Mega Watts with the distribution sub-sector taking up less than 5,000 Mega Watts.

     This, according to him, indicates the need for increased/enhanced investments in these sub-sectors of NESI to further boost energy supply to end users.

    He said it will serve as the leading example to the populace to sustain and support the sector.

    “As we celebrate this milestone of ten (10) years all stake holders are invited to remain resilient in their commitment to Nigeria’s industrialization Agenda to aid economic growth through the development of a vibrant power sector,” he said.

  • Grand Challenges: How Nigerian innovators are improving lives using AI

    Grand Challenges: How Nigerian innovators are improving lives using AI

    Backed with funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF), five Nigerian innovators are revolutionizing business, education and health among the country’s underprivileged using Artificial Intelligence (AI). Three of them were among other innovators from across the world whose works were showcased to a global audience of 1,400 scientists, policymakers, and leaders at the just-ended 2023 Grand Challenges Annual Meeting in Dakar, ROBERT EGBE, who was in Dakar, reports.

    It is 5am in Igando, a suburb of Lagos, Nigeria. Bus conductor Shola and his bean cake seller wife Shade have been up for an hour, trying to make sense of their expenditures for the past month. They have two young children and Shade is expectant for a third, so the couple wants to make better financial decisions with its joint income for the days ahead. But neither parent is literate. So, Shola picks up her low-end smartphone from where it is charging on the floor in a corner. She scrolls to an app, taps on it, and begins speaking into it in the only language she knows, Yoruba, her mother tongue. She tells the phone about their daily incomes, expenditure patterns and financial challenges. Then the couple waits. A short while later, husband and wife receive a voice-based response, also in Yoruba, giving them financial advice as well as suggestions on loans or financial products that are most appropriate for them based on how much they earn and how they spend money. The personal voice chatbot is like recording a voice-note on the phone and getting accurate answers to their financial enquiries with ease and simplicity. 

    The chatbot used by Shade and Sola is a communication-simulating computer programme designed to mimic human-to-human conversation. It was developed by Olubayo Adekanmbi of a Lagos-based firm, Data Science Nigeria. The platform is so innovative that it can even read and explain financial documents, meaning “a user can upload their statement of accounts, or a loan agreement and our app solution will explain the details to them,” Adekanmbi said in a chat with The Nation.

    Adekanmbi and four other Nigerians are among the 50 grant recipients of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMFG) from 17 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) who are developing global health and development solutions for their communities using Artificial Intelligence (AI)-enabled large language models (LLMs). The solutions have proven beneficial to rural women farmers and business owners in Nigeria who receive critical financial advice through a voice-to-text interface of the AI-enabled LLMs.

    Following an announcement by the Foundation on August 9, each grant recipient received up to $100,000 to advance its research project, for a total of $5 million in grants. The findings of these projects were shared at the Grand Challenges Annual Meeting in Dakar, Senegal, between October 8 and 11.

    Apart from Adekanmbi, two other Nigerians – Nneka Mobisson and Chinazo Anebelundu – also showcased their work with AI in Dakar.

    Mobisson of mDoc Healthcare has integrated ChatGPT-4 into her firm’s chatbot, called ‘Kem’, to provide virtual self-care coaching for low-income women of reproductive age in Nigeria, to improve its accuracy and capacity to respond to queries with evidence-based information.

    Dr. Mobisson, a pediatrician with a Master’s degree in clinical and public health, told The Nation how it works. 

    She said: “We created a chatbot called ‘Kem’. Imagine a woman with three children at home, she has high blood pressure, she’s a trader, has been working all day and has to attend to her kids when she gets home and it’s 2am. She can pick up the phone, write to Kem, and talk to it about what she’s worried about. She may be worried about the rash on her baby, so, Kem answers her and talks to her about that rash. But because Kem knows that she has high BP since that information is already inputted in the system, it will initiate a conversation about her, and find out how she’s doing, etc. That dialogue will help her think about herself and what changes she can make for herself as well so that she can continually be there for her baby. Right now it is texts, but our next focus is to integrate voice into it.”

    Anebelundu, also of DSN Ai Innovations Limited is using AI for education delivery by adapting learning content for rural students. She is developing a Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM)-focused multimedia learning platform by leveraging GPT and DeepBrain text-to-video AI tailored to rural students to increase their engagement. Through AI, the system is able to recognise five categories of students, according to their level of intellectual ability, and provides video lessons that can be personalized to a specific student. Anebelundu told The Nation that the work bears in mind that Nigeria’s estimated 18.5 million students out of school can potentially be reached through a more engaging and personalized AI system. The platform integrates local contexts and nuances to enhance student comprehension of STEM subjects. It also tailors the learning to the preferences of each student and employs visual activities such as interactive STEM laboratory simulations. 

    Grand Challenges

    This year’s Grand Challenges – the 20th in the series – was hosted by the Global Grand Challenges network of partners and the government of Senegal. It was sponsored by Grand Challenges Canada, the United States Agency for International Development, Wellcome, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF).

    The Grand Challenges Annual Meeting has become the preeminent forum for global health Research and development (R&D). It convenes a dynamic community of researchers and practitioners and provides a platform to learn about cutting-edge scientific advances, build new local, regional and global collaborations and explore how to build a more effective, inclusive and equitable ecosystem for global health R&D. 

    This year’s edition, themed “Science Saves Lives,” brought together funding and research partners throughout the Grand Challenges network and beyond to discuss and share innovative solutions to global health and development challenges. Over four days, the meeting featured a set of more than 15 scientific tracks, three mainstage plenary sessions, more than 20 roundtable discussions, and other sessions that focused on topics such as health technology research, innovation for the next generation, harnessing the power of science against malaria, and AI for the world.

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    81 grants in Nigeria

    The Grand Challenges has awarded no fewer than 3,833 grants worth $1.6 billion in 119 countries around the world since 2005, including 81 grants in Nigeria.

    Not all of the grants yielded the desired results though. Nevertheless, BMGF C0-Founder Bill Gates, who spoke at the opening plenary of the Meeting, expressed delight at the current state of global health, compared to what it was 20 years ago, before the Grand Challenges was founded.

    “The state of global health in 2003 was, frankly, awful. Huge numbers of deaths but tiny amounts of money spent on science to save lives. That lopsided equation is what inspired the partners who created the Grand Challenges. It was shocking and unjust, and we believe we could do something about it,” he said.

    Gates noted that the Grand Challenges have spurred advances in critical areas of health that have helped to save millions of lives around the globe.

    He referenced, for instance, the Grand Challenges grant that went to an international team, led by Douglas Young of Imperial College London, to develop drugs for latent TB.

    “The consortium that Young’s team organized laid the groundwork for the TB Drug Accelerator, a public-private partnership with 25 members that’s largely responsible for the amazingly robust TB drug pipeline we have today,” Gates said.

    Another example is the Grand Challenge grant supported work to reduce the mosquito population and stop disease transmission. The original idea of the project, now called Target Malaria, was to use homing endonuclease genes to drive a bias for male offspring so that it was inherited preferentially from generation to generation, gradually preventing mosquitoes from reproducing themselves.

    Gates noted that researchers have now successfully tested gene drives on caged mosquito populations in the UK and Italy.

    “Now the work is shifting to several malaria-endemic countries where gene drives would actually be tested if and when they receive regulatory approvals and local support,” he said.

    Obstacles

    But challenges remain. 

    “AIDS, TB and malaria still kill about two and half million people a year, and five million children still die before their fifth birthday, these are preventable deaths.

    “To save more lives, we need to keep challenging ourselves to innovate. How can we make vaccines that protect for a lifetime? There are plenty of big scientific challenges to solve, we need to talk about how it will happen,” Gates said.

    Why AI is important

    Acknowledging the commendable progress in global health R&D that has been made in the past 20 years, Gates called for “much bigger improvements in the next 20 years to approach health equity.”

    To achieve this, the BMGF founder extolled the importance of AI – such as deployed by Adekanmbi, Mobisson and Anebelundu – to the global efforts to save lives. Importantly, he noted the necessity of all countries, not just the rich, to be involved in the process.

    He said: “AI has the potential to revolutionize R&D by linking data and people in new ways. We need to make sure—right now, while the technology is still in its formative stages—that all countries get to participate and all countries benefit, not just wealthy ones.

    “We recently gave Grand Challenges grants to 50 innovators in low- and middle-income countries to pilot different AI approaches. I am optimistic that you will generate knowledge and develop technologies that help fulfil the potential of AI in global health.”

    He also noted the importance of the right regulatory framework to speed things up.

     “I call upon the WHO to make the emergency declarations needed to unlock additional regulatory pathways for some of the deadliest infectious diseases and I call on the regulatory authorities to use them,” Gates said.

    He also called for the world to spend at least $3 billion more every year on global health and development R&D in order to close the critical gaps in funding for neglected diseases.

    Funding: Walking the talk

    But it wasn’t just jaw-jaw. The BMGF walked the talk by making huge donations to the global efforts to save lives. 

    Gates announced a $30 million investment from the Foundation to support a new AI platform to provide African scientists and innovators with the technical and operational support they need to turn promising ideas into scalable health and development solutions.

    Other investments announced at the event include a total of $40 million in funding to advance access to South Africa-based Quantoom Biosciences’ low-cost, mRNA research and manufacturing platform.

    The Institut Pasteur de Dakar (IPD) and Biovac, research institutes with vaccine manufacturing experience based in Senegal and South Africa, respectively, will receive $5 million each to acquire the technology and will be able to use it to develop locally relevant vaccines.

    To further advance the technology and lower costs for commercialization, the foundation also will provide $20 million to Quantoom Biosciences, ensuring Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) can benefit from the next-generation mRNA health tools. The Gates Foundation will also grant another $10 million to other LMIC vaccine manufacturers.

    This new funding builds on the foundation’s previous US$55 million investment in mRNA manufacturing technology.

    Finally, the European Commission, the European Investment Bank and the BMFG announced a €1.1 billion financing partnership to address critical global health opportunities: eradicating polio and ensuring that innovations in health are more accessible to the people who need them most.

  • Does Creative Suite Offer Free Templates for Personal Use?

    Does Creative Suite Offer Free Templates for Personal Use?

    Are you in search of personal templates to present your photos in an impressively appealing way? Fortunately, there are lots of personal templates available on the internet with beautiful designs. However, many of them are paid ones or you may not use them without paying. However, you can still access a great variety of free-to-use personal templates on Creative Suite. This CapCut creative suite is the best online designer that allows you to edit your videos, and photos, and download them without watermarks. In addition, it also offers a great variety of free-to-use templates that you can use for multiple purposes. Let’s explore this suite here in terms of its templates and see how it benefits you.  

    Does Creative Suite Offer Personal Templates?

    Yes, the CapCut Creative Suite comes with a great variety of free-to-edit and watermark-free personal templates. You can choose from a huge variety of these templates and even search for a specific one that you need. Before using these templates, you need to create an account on this CapCut Suite online editor. After that, you can navigate to its online image editor and see how beautiful personal templates it holds for you. There is a completely different section for templates on the online image editor. When you click on it, your screen shows the most heart-touching variety of personal and professional templates. You are free to pick any one of them and use them in your projects or anywhere else. 

    Pros of Creative Suite Personal Templates

    This amazing Creative Suite doesn’t simply offer you some personal templates to use, but it also offers you several benefits with them. Do you want to have a look at what benefits you can enjoy from using Creative Suite for personal templates? Look at them here!

    • Huge Collection

    Unlike many other online editors that offer only a few free templates for personal use, you will get a huge collection here. This Creative Suite assures that it meets the needs of all people by serving them the desired personal templates. Whether you are a student, a housewife, a work-from-home person, a teen, or an elderly, you will find the best personal template for you. Just browse through the amazing collection here to pick up the best ones for you!

    • Ease of use

    Similarly, you enjoy the simplest and easy-to-use templates at this Creative Suite. There are no hard-to-implement steps to use and customize these templates. Instead, you can make changes by the one-click AI technology. Just click at any place on the template and edit it in any way you want. 

    • Saves time

    Due to the simplification of the editing process, using these personal templates saves you time. You do not need to waste hours with tons of energy using these templates. Instead, you need to only edit those areas of the content that don’t match your data. The rest of the things are already done here and they don’t even need any touch-ups to look good. 

    • Saves money

    It also helps you save money by offering you free templates. As this Creative Suite doesn’t require any payments, you can access all the personal templates for free here. In this way, you can save and invest your money somewhere else where it is more useful to invest. 

    • Reduced chances of mistakes

    Due to pre-built templates, you don’t need to do anything for their designing or anything. Instead, you just need to edit the written text or photos on a template. In this way, it reduces the chances of mistakes and issues with the design of your template. 

    • Beautiful results

    Similarly, beautiful results are guaranteed if you use this Creative Suite for personal templates. All of its templates are designed so beautifully that double the glory and aesthetics of your photos. The results here are more strikingly appealing and attractive. As a result, they also catch greater attention of other people in case you share them with anyone. Seeing them at a later point in your life would also bring a smile to your face through the beauty or creativity of these masterpieces. 

    • Free to Share

    Moreover, you can also download and share these beautifully crafted personal templates with anyone. There is no editor’s logo or watermark on your templates which is a good sign. If you want, you can also try out the other features of this incredible Creative Suite as well along with using its templates. For example, its text to speech free converter, photo color corrector, image upscaler, video stabilizer, etc. all are worth using. 

    How to Use Creative Suite Personal Templates?

    No matter who you are or what qualifications you have, this Creative Suite is for everyone. It is not built only for the editors or art students, instead, it is for every single person on this Planet and equally benefits all. Therefore, you must also use it to transform your photos and videos into amazingly artistic masterpieces. To use its free personal templates from a great variety at this Creative Suite, follow these steps.

    To use this incredible online suite, you have to sign up by visiting the following link https://www.capcut.com/creative-suite. The signup here doesn’t require any payments or premium subscriptions. Instead, it is free and allows you access to all of the premium features of this editor for free as well. 

    • Step 2: Choose a Personal Template

    After creating your account and signing in to it, go to the online image editor. Here you will see many options on the left side of the screen. From these options, click on the templates section at the top of this panel. A great variety of personal templates will load on your screen with the option to search for more. You can either pick any one of these beautiful and impressive templates or search for many others as well. 

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    • Step 3: Customize Beautifully

    Whatever template you pick, click on it. Upon clicking, it will open on your screen from where you can edit it as per your personal needs. For example, select the photo on the template and remove/delete it. Then, upload any of your photos by using the upload button to set it in this photo space. Similarly, feel free to add different shapes, and stickers, and also rewrite the text into their template. You can also apply a beautiful filter to make it stand out through impressive visuals. 

    • Step 4: Save Your Work

    At the end, don’t forget to save this beautiful result to your device via the export/download button. Also, you can choose the quality, size, and format to which you want to save this template. Make several beautiful photo collections by using these personal templates and cheer up yourself through the results. 

    Conclusion

    Let’s turn your spare boring time into something creative by trying out these free personal templates at Creative Suite. Take your random photos and insert them into beautiful personal templates to give them a touch of art, professionalism, and creativity. Doing all this would be so much fun and would enable you to preserve your memories in the best way. 

  • Access, NerdzFactory Foundation empower 500 youths with digital skills

    Access, NerdzFactory Foundation empower 500 youths with digital skills

    NerdzFactory Foundation, in collaboration with Access, has empowered Nigerian youths with essential digital and technology skills.

    Launched in September 2023, the programme has effectively bridged the digital divide among young Nigerians and provided them with the knowledge and skills to thrive in the digital age.

    The managing director of NerdzFactory Foundation, Ade Olowojoba, who reiterated the programme’s significance, said: “In today’s fast-paced digital landscape, essential technology skills are not just an advantage; they’re a necessity. Nigeria’s youth are at the forefront of our nation’s digital future, and through DigiGap 2.0, we’ve equipped them with the knowledge and skills needed to ignite a wave of innovation and economic empowerment, shaping a brighter, more digitally inclusive future for Nigeria.

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    “The DigiGap 2.0 Program featured an array of engaging activities aimed at maximizing participants’ learning experiences. It included a webinar series where industry experts shared valuable insights into starting careers in the tech space. Participants embarked on an intensive four-week training, delving deeper into their chosen tracks to cultivate practical skills and excel in their respective fields. There was also a Demo Day, where participants showcased the projects they developed during the training period, exhibiting their newfound expertise and creativity.”

    NerdzFactory Foundation and Access also restated their partnership, emphasising their shared commitment to the success of the DigiGap Programme.

  • AMORDER future of E-commerce – Alegbeleye

    AMORDER future of E-commerce – Alegbeleye

    A United Kingdom (UK) based Nigerian enterpreneur, Oyewole Alegbeleye has said his newly developed software application, “AMORDER “ will elevate future of commerce through the use of cutting edge technology, saying the application would help in revolutionizing buying and selling and promote e-commerce.

    He stated that AMORDER would revolutionise how buying and selling is done between Nigerians products sellers and restaurants in UK e-commerce market, with a mission to empower 5,000 restaurants, stores and enhance their sales and delivery services within the first 24 months. 

    Speaking with The Nation, Alegbeleye noted that the application is not just another e-commerce platform but a bold innovative leap that transcends the ordinary.

    He said it would empower restaurants and stores to connect with customers in unprecedented ways, adding that the new software will encourage young entrepreneurs who want to start selling products online, and gain financial freedom, small scale businesses,

    Alegbeleye encouraged new restaurants and stores and anyone who want to start businesses in those categories to start maximising the innovation that seeks to transform landscape for restaurant and store owners while reshaping buyer behavior in the UK and Nigeria market.

    Read Also: ‘AMORDER is future of e-commerce’

    He said: ”AMORDER is an invitation to culinary artisans , Chefs, Fashion designers, pharmacists, delivery riders and drivers and shop owners to connect with their customers in extraordinary ways.”

     “Our platform is not just about transactions; it’s about transforming experiences.” AMORDER offers a unique proposition for enhancing the buying and selling experience, crowned as the ambassador for quality and affordable orders.”

    “The application is also meant for business owners looking to forge new connections and make a difference in the market, I also engaged series of remarkable talent as a digital product developer such as EMobilesms APP, Niajaestate.com, job247.co.uk, and CorporateSupport247.com among others.”

  • Five ways Google Health is using AI in Africa

    Five ways Google Health is using AI in Africa

    Every day across Africa, people turn to Google products like Search, YouTube and Fitbit for insights about their health and wellbeing. But many may not know that we have also been researching how AI can help improve healthcare outcomes for people, and how AI can empower our partners to deliver better health services — from improving maternal health outcomes to building useful digital tools for healthcare workers.

    To mark the upcoming Africa HealthTech Summit in Kigali, Rwanda — an event that brings together a diverse group of digital health innovators and public health experts to share knowledge and ideas to help transform the healthcare landscape in Africa — here’s how we’re working with partners across Africa to research and explore new AI-powered healthcare tools.

    1. Searching for skin conditions using images

    Describing skin rashes or moles accurately using words alone can be challenging. Since earlier this year, users in the US and Japan have been able to use Google Lens to search for information about skin conditions with images instead of text. Now, this feature is being expanded to cover the entire African continent. People can simply capture a photo, upload it to Lens, and discover visually similar matches. This feature works well for those times where you’re not sure how to describe something on your body, like a bump on your lip, a line on your nails or hair loss on your head.

    1. Improving maternal health outcomes in Kenya

    Ultrasounds are effective in identifying potential issues in early pregnancy, but capturing and interpreting ultrasound is a complex medical imaging technique that requires years of training and experience. Due in part to a shortage of experts, up to 50% of pregnant people in low-resource settings do not receive ultrasound screenings during pregnancy. In our paper published last year, we show that AI models can make ultrasounds more accessible to lightly trained ultrasound operators in under-resourced settings. Now, we’re working with Jacaranda Health, a Kenyan nonprofit focused on improving health outcomes for mothers and babies in government hospitals, to validate the use of AI in clinical settings. Through this partnership, we’ll conduct research to understand the current approach to ultrasounds in Kenya and explore how new AI tools can support point-of-care ultrasound access for pregnant women.

    1. Using Open Health Stack to build apps for healthcare workers

    Across Africa, frontline health workers form a critical link between a community and the healthcare system. Unfortunately, they often face challenges around care coordination and data quality. To build mobile-first, technology-based healthcare solutions that enable better care, healthcare developers in Africa can now use Google’s Open Health Stack to build next-generation digital health tools. These tools make it easier to adopt the HL7 FHIR standard. To help upskill local developers, we partnered with Kabarak University and IntelliSOFT Consulting, to host our first Open Health Stack bootcamp in Kenya.

    1. Screening for tuberculosis using AI 

    According to the World Health Organisation, tuberculosis (TB) is the ninth leading cause of death worldwide, with over 25% of TB deaths occurring in Africa. While TB is treatable, it requires cost-effective screening solutions to help catch the disease early and reduce community spread. This year, Google partnered with an AI-based organization headed by Right to Care, a not-for-profit entity with extensive experience in TB care within Africa, to make AI-powered screenings widely available across Sub-Saharan Africa. Our partners have committed to performing 100,000 free AI-powered TB screenings during our collaboration.

    1.  Supporting access to emergency obstetric care in Nigeria

    According to recent estimates, though only 0.06% of annual global births occur in Nigeria; the country disproportionately contributes 28% of global maternal deaths every year,, and evidence shows that long travel times play a part in negative maternal outcomes. We recently released a tool in Nigeria, developed in collaboration with the OnTIME consortium, to help governments and public health organizations address challenges around accessing emergency obstetric care. By using Google’s internal directions API — the same API that powers navigation in Google Maps — decision makers can see data around average travel times to the nearest emergency obstetric facilities for different regions, which helps them better understand where expectant mothers may have limited geographic access to life-saving care.  

  • Google announces 11 African Startups for inaugural Africa AI First Accelerator program

    Google announces 11 African Startups for inaugural Africa AI First Accelerator program

    Google has unveiled the first cohort for its ‘Google for Startups Accelerator: AI First’ program. The 11 startups, picked from a vast pool of innovative talent, are using cutting-edge Artificial Intelligence to address both Africa’s challenges and broader global issues. The transformative power of AI in Africa is highlighted by a McKinsey report which suggests that AI could add $1.3 trillion to Africa’s GDP by 2030.

    The selected startups will undergo a 10-week accelerator journey. Beyond benefiting from Google’s AI expertise and a $350k allocation in Google Cloud Credits, they’ll benefit from mentorship sessions, technical guidance, and networking opportunities to enhance their reach and impact.

    The selected startups are;

    ·  Avalon Health (South Africa): Empowers patients with streamlined online healthcare access and offers doctors digital tools to enhance care.

    ·  Chatbots Africa (Ghana): Spearheading SMEs’ transition into the Social Commerce era with AI-driven online storefronts.

    ·  Dial Afrika Inc (Kenya): Tailoring customer support tools for global businesses, with a focus on African SMBs.

    ·  Famasi Africa (Nigeria): Building the OS for pharmacies in emerging markets.

    ·  Fastagger Inc (Kenya): Using AI to amplify sales and loyalty, supporting MSMEs’ growth.

    ·  Garri Logistics (Ethiopia): Digitalizing freight brokerage and transport services.

    ·  Izifin (Nigeria): Providing an end-to-end credit infrastructure via API for small businesses.

    ·  Lengo AI (Senegal): Launching the first Data-Driven OS for the Informal Sector.

    ·  Logistify AI (Uganda): Minimising inventory losses in industrial facilities.

    ·  Telliscope (Ethiopia): Offering an AI-enabled business intelligence platform.

    ·  Vzy (Nigeria): Revolutionising website building with AI-driven tools that craft sites in mere minutes.

    Folarin Aiyegbusi, Head of Startup Ecosystem, Africa, remarks, “At Google we’ve been working on AI for over a decade, and we’ve shown how useful AI is in our products and for developers externally. AI is not only a powerful enabler, it’s also a major platform shift. That’s why we’re focused on making it easy and scalable for others to innovate with AI. Our chosen startups for the ‘AI First’ program embody this vision, leveraging AI in pioneering ways to address both local and global challenges.  We’re here excited to support and amplify their impact.”

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    Speaking on the selection: Adeola Ayoola, CEO/Co-founder of Famasi Africa (Nigeria): “Famasi Africa is scaling AI-powered digital health solutions to reach more underserved communities. . Joining the Google for Startups Accelerator: AI First program represents a significant step towards realising that dream. With Google’s mentorship, we’re confident of scaling our solutions, reaching more pharmacies, and ultimately improving healthcare outcomes.”

    ·  Avalon Health (South Africa): “”Avalon Health is scaling AI-powered digital healthcare solutions to reach every South African.With the support and mentorship from the Google for Startups Accelerator: AI First program, we believe we can scale our solutions even further, ensuring every South African has access to top-tier healthcare services.”

    ·  Japheth Dibo, CEO & Co-Founder of Dial Afrika (Kenya): “Dial Afrika is revolutionising customer support in Africa with cutting-edge AI-powered solutions.Being selected for the Google for Startups Accelerator: AI First program will allow us to leverage advanced AI technology to make this vision a reality. With this support and mentorship, we aim to revolutionise customer support and equip businesses across the African continent with the tools to thrive and excel.”

    Since 2017, Google has consistently supported African startups across diverse programs. Collectively, these startups have raised $263 million and created over 2,800 job opportunities. 

  • Eutelsat Konnect partners Coollink to reshape Satellite Internet in Nigeria

    Eutelsat Konnect partners Coollink to reshape Satellite Internet in Nigeria

    While SpaceX‘s Starlink garners attention, Eutelsat’s Konnect, in partnership with Coollink, is silently revolutionizing Nigeria’s satellite internet landscape.

    Many might associate Eutelsat with TV broadcasts, especially during events like Big Brother or the UEFA Champions League on DStv. However, Eutelsat has bigger ambitions beyond TV. It’s challenging Starlink in ways that could redefine Africa’s satellite internet.

    To put it in perspective, 864 million Africans still lack internet access, and the rural-urban divide is growing. Africa’s median internet speed is just 31 Mbps, but Konnect aims to change that.

    Modupe Okeowo, Country Manager for Konnect, Nigeria said: “We aim to connect 1 million unconnected individuals in sub-Saharan Africa within the next 3-4 years. Nigeria plays a pivotal role in this endeavour due to its unconnected population and the impact of connectivity on economic growth.”

    Konnect, launched in 2020, offers speeds up to 100 Mbps, with unlimited data plans starting at just N7,900 and device costs from N45,000. It caters to various users, from SMEs and homes to hospitals and businesses.

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    To adapt to local challenges like low purchasing power and high capital costs, Konnect and Coollink use segmented pricing and innovative speed limits, making them more accessible than Starlink, whose pricing begins at ₦30,000.

    Notably, Konnect’s satellite is geostationary, covering a wide area across Nigeria. Starlink, on the other hand, uses Low Earth Orbiting satellites, offering better latency and speed but with reduced coverage.

    However, Konnect is working to bridge this gap by adding more capacity in Nigeria by Q2 2024 and launching LEO services in Q4 2023, addressing the demand for connectivity.

    Additionally, Eutelsat is collaborating with OneWeb on a proposed merger, combining forces with OneWeb’s 648 low Earth-orbiting satellites. This merger could give Konnect even higher speeds and more affordable latencies, solidifying its position in the satellite internet market.