Tag: Computer

  • Computer skills behind bars

    Computer skills behind bars

    What started as a bitter reality behind the prison bars is ending on joyous note. No fewer than 53 inmates of Kuje Prisons have aquired computer skills to prepare them for post-jail life. GBENGA OMOKHUNU reports

    How everything now looks so different! When they were pronounced guilty and sentenced to various jail terms, glum faces captured their gloom.

    Now, they are smiling and looking forward to a fruitful life after serving their terms.

    That is the story of 53 inmates of  Kuje Prisons, Abuja who have celebrated their graduation from a computer course and were duly presented with their certificates.

    The skills will serve them well in reintegrating into the society following their release.

    The Controller-General of the Nigerian Prisons Service (NPS), Peter Ependu, at the graduation ceremony organised by Global Skill Acquisition Initiative, in collaboration with the NPS, advised the inmates not to see their stay in prison as the end of the world.

    Ependu urged them to see the situation as a stepping stone.

    The Controller-General, who was represented by the Controller of Prison in charge of Welfare, Akin Ekijere, said: “You all know that before now it was punishment in the prisons. The intention then was that prisoners should be brought and locked up, subjected to all forms of ill-treatment. But the new approach is what we call reformation. And the key purpose is to identify the ability and talent of an individual inmate and then be able to address the ability. We are playing the expected roll that we are supposed to play.

    “The three “Rs” in our slogan is reformation, rehabilitation and re-integration. These are very strategic in this administration. The CGP has had cause to express concern over the welfare of inmates, especially their progress. I emphasised the need for what we call community correction. The police have what we call community policing. On our part, we have community correction. Whatever correction that takes place within the institution without relevant or appropriate collaboration with the community cannot be meaningful. It is sad enough that you and I know that anybody that enters the prison, the society do not want to know if the person was initially guilty or not, but for the fact that you have stepped into the prison, they have a different notion about you.

    “You are rejected by the society as if there is no hope again. They say you are not good again. But honestly, with this concept of community correction, it is important to appreciate the kind of collaboration we are receiving. The after care programme also helps the inmates to do well after serving their jail terms.

    “To the graduating inmates, imprisonment is just a stepping stone. It does not reduce your capability, personality, your intellect is still intact. So, why allow people to make you feel inferior.

    “So, I like the challenge. Whatever situation I find myself I believe that God Almighty knows that I am there. So, I take complete control of the situation. Do not allow imprisonment to run you down. I see your faces as people that are committed to succeed in life. Take this situation as a challenge. We appreciate the National Open University of Nigeria for this platform.”

    Chamberlin Obianigwe, a convict and one of the best graduating students told Abuja Review that he had been in Kuje Prison for seven years and that few months

    from now, he will be gaining his freedom.

    The elated Obianigwe said: “I have been here for about seven years as a convict and I will be leaving in few months’ time. I am so glad and happy. When this unfortunate journey started seven years ago, I though it was the end of my life and that the world had come to an end for me. But when the education programmes came into Kuje Prison, I embraced all trainings academically and otherwise to see that I do not relent while I am here. So, I am so happy.

    “The advise I have for other inmates is that when you are in prison, you should not limit yourself to just the problem that brought you here but to engage themselves in every activity that is going on in the prison, pending when God will grant you freedom.

    “When I leave the prison in few months’ time, I will be very happy to re-unite with my wife, daughter, mother and the rest of members of my family for they have been supporting me all this while and they always visit me.”

    Another inmate who was the class governor of the 53 students, David Dung said the notion that some people outside the four corners of prison walls have is that

    prisoners are finished.

    Dung went further: “But God, in His infinite mercy says no to the thoughts of men.”

    The National Coordinator of Global Skill Acquisition Initiative, Ogbaje Ojogbedua said: “The purpose of the programme was to empower the youth in Nigeria, especially the less privileged ones to be self-reliant and self employed. We brought the programme to the prison to empower the inmates to be self-reliant. They came into the prison and one day they will go back to the society. So, we have to reform and re-integrate them through the collaboration with the NPS to give them the hope and future.

    “They are about 53 that are graduating. The issue of stigmatisation and discrimination should not be there. Government cannot do it all alone; it needs every necessary collaboration with the private organisations, non-governmental organisations (NGOs). The Federal Government should also try its best by going into collaboration with private organisations and NGOs.”

  • Computer Warehouse Group’s profit drops by 91%

    Computer Warehouse Group (CWG) Plc witnessed major slowdown in performance in 2014 as revenue and profit dropped by 26 per cent and 91 per cent.

    Audited report and accounts of CWG for the year ended December 31, 2014 showed a top-down decline in the performance of the company. Turnover dropped from N20.67 billion in 2013 to N15.36 billion in 2014. Gross profit also dipped to N3.05 billion as against N3.91 billion.

    Profit before tax dropped by 90.7 per cent from N618.46 million in 2013 to N57.64 million in 2014. Profit after tax slumped by 91.4 per cent from N612.85 million in 2013 to N52.80 million in 2014. Earnings per share thus dropped from 24 kobo to 2.0 kobo.

    The board of directors of the company said the earnings shortfalls were principally driven by one-off provision for currency depreciation of not less than N380 million. In a statement, the directors said the currency depreciation was due to exemption of the group from participating in the official foreign exchange market, where it hitherto sourced Dollars for its imports.

    The noted that the situation may continue to impact the company warning that the fluctuations may persist.

    “Shareholders and potential investors are advised to note that exchange rate fluctuations are expected to persist in 2015. In addition, the ongoing electoral processes scheduled to be completed by second quarter 2015, are also expected to take significant toll on macroeconomic indices, with resulting impact on business operations for the remaining part of the year,” the company stated.

    CWG however expressed optimism that it expects improved performance on the back of its current CWG2.0 initiatives, which are expected to significantly reduce the company’s exposure to foreign components for its services.

    Audited report and accounts of CWG for the year ended December 31, 2013 had shown that turnover rose from N18.76 billion in 2012 to N20.67 billion in 2013. Gross profit increased from N3.75 billion to N3.91 billion. Profit before tax rose to N618.46 million as against N339.23 million while profit after tax increased from N339.23 million to N612.85 million. The company had paid a dividend per share of 8.0 kobo.

    The performance in 2014 fell below analysts and management’s projections. The management of the company had outlined that turnover could rise to N16.5 billion by the end of 2014 as the company moves to consolidate the income streams from its traditional business.

    In a review of the business outlook of the company, Chief Executive Officer, Computer Warehouse Group (CWG) Plc, Mr Austin Okere, said the company plans to optimise and recognise revenues from its traditional brick and mortar business which shall see a 46 per cent increase in revenue in the fourth quarter to close 2014 at about N16.5 billion.

    Okere, who founded CWG, said the company could end the year with a net profit of N300 million, some 61 per cent increase on its third quarter performance.

    According to him, the group has made great strides in the introduction of its new subscription based business lines and its profit outlook is a reflection of continuing improvement in margins driven by greater efficiency and good focus on the growth of managed services.

    “The company is firmly focused on scaling her new subscription businesses, under the CWG 2.0 umbrella, in order to see a change in the profitability trend by half of 2015,” Okere said.

    He outlined that the first among these new businesses is the SMERP, a cloud based ERP product that is ready for roll out and is currently being tested by a few organisations while there are also on-going discussions with multilateral organisations that are focused on SMEs and inclusive growth in Nigeria to collaborate on the roll out of this product.

    He added that there is also the flagship e-commerce technology platform, Openshopen.ng, a  product, that has been running a beta test with a few organisations, with the plan for a mass rollout in the first quarter of 2015.

    “There is also the free to air services which the group will be offering in collaboration with the second largest satellite provider in Europe. This service would launch with 30 TV channels and is planned to be launched in quarter 4, this year. CWG’s smart grid solution to Electricity distribution Companies (DISCOS) is at POC stage with two of the largest Discos in Nigeria and we expect that this new line of business will be at implementation stage by Q3 2015,” Okere said.

    According to him, CWG will continue to focus in growing the brand through initiatives directed towards empowering the African entrepreneur.

    “The declining sale is partly reflective of some changes in procurement pattern for ICT goods generally.  As part of seeking efficiencies in ICT procurements, users’ procurement processes are increasingly stretched, to find best value from competing offers,” he said.

    He said in spite of the challenges, the financial position of the group remains strong with adequate liquidity, leverage and efficiency ratios.

     

     

  • Unilag, Douala varsity best computer students honoured

    Unilag, Douala varsity best computer students honoured

    Computer Warehouse Group has rewarded best graduating students of the Computer Science Department of the University of Lagos and the University of Douala, Cameroon, as part of its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) programme. At two different ceremonies, its representatives presented gifts to the students in furtherance of its bid to extol the essence of attaining academic excellence.

    At the presentation ceremony in Lagos, UNILAG’s Vice Chancellor,  Prof Rahman Bello observed that if the focus of CWG’s CSR initiative is sustained, it is capable of aiding universities in Nigeria to attain desired greatness.

    He said: “This award presentation has been an annual event. Since inception, CWG has lived up to their promise of rewarding the best graduating student in Computer Science Department every year, for five years now. On behalf of the management of the university, I thank your organisation for your commitment to this partnership. Your commitment to promoting academic excellence will help us in going forward.

    “I tell you that your contributions have been helpful. At the moment, University of Lagos is the 20th best school in Africa and the first in Nigeria, according to the 4icu rankings. Going by our consistent progressive performance, we look forward to being the first in Africa anytime soon. This is our target. And, we believe that the input of corporate partners like CWG will see us through to the point we aim to get to,” he said.

    CWG’s Chief Operating Officer, Mr. Phillip Obioha, said the annual award presentation underscores CWG’s emphasis on hard-work and qualitative education.  He said: “Our business scope covers a range of sectors; from banking to telecoms and recently SMEs. Our business is all about the quality of our workforce. We boast of an array of professionals whose expertise has formed the bedrock of service providers in the telecoms sector, for example. Our premium on quality workforce explains our emphasis on quality education.”

  • ‘Door to IT age is not computer but books’

    The publisher of Lantern Books, Otunba Olayinka Lawal-Solarin, is 80. He marked  his birthday with his 50th wedding anniversary last week with fanfare. With over 40 years experience in pharmacy and publishing, Otunba Lawal-Solarin remains an inspiration to young entrepreneurs. How did he do it? He shares his inspiration, publishing voyage and thoughts on Nigeria in this interview with Evelyn Osagie. 

    It’s beautiful to find people like you aging gracefully. How does it feel being 80?

    Fine. I feel fine! I woke up this morning feeling very strong. My kids are here. Tomorrow, we are going out to play golf in the morning and I am going to beat them. And we would all laugh about it. “Aging gracefully”, that’s the word for it. I love being a grandfather. Being a grandfather is most desirable. I love dancing and I would still dance if I get good music. I may not be as enthusiastic as when I was 30 years old, but I like good music and still listen to them on my IPhone. I don’t listen to contemporary Nigeria music because I wasn’t brought up with such. I like highlife and jazz (play Lagbaja, Lagbaja be l’ode eru oni ba wa o) I like Lagbaja. My wife loves dancing and she is always dragging me to dance. And if we need to “dig” I “dig”. But as an 80-year-old man, you are a bit shy. But my wife would tell you that I can still dance.

    With the activities you are involved in and the book industry no one would believe that you are actually 80. What is the secret?

    It is not what you know how to do best, but the grace of God.

    What is your advice for those who desire to live up to 80?

    I would advise that they live a moderate life. I would also advise that they have a goal and be focused. The way you live life as a young man will eventually tell at old age. Some people drink, eat, womanise and gamble in excess, and stay out late; as they grow older it tells on their health and aging process.

    At your birthday celebration, it was said  you wrote a book to commemorate your 80th birthday. It is great to know that at 80 you can still write well; what inspired it?

    The book is Entrepreneurship: The Courage to Succeed. It is a guide for entrepreneurs because in Nigeria, you have a lot of problems when you are running an organisation. Call it government policy somersault, infrastructure deficiency, financing etc. When you succeed, it is something to be celebrated, and sometimes you wonder how you made it. By the end of the month or early March, we are going to start marketing the book with reviews and interviews in the papers and television.

    How did you survive as an entrepreneur?

    It took painstaking efforts that spanned more than 40 years because I decided to make a difference in publishing. I am a pharmacist – I could have made a difference in anything I did! But sometimes, it is the grace of God as well. Everybody has a talent, but the ability to harness it is God-given grace. Nigeria has a lot of brilliant people. In seeing an opportunity, the ability to grab it with both hands is a God-given talent. Some people have opportunity staring them in the face and they look the other way. It doesn’t matter what it is, even meeting a woman. (Laughs). But it’s true. When some people are in love, the next thing is that they’d start looking for faults.

    So, in the spirit of Valentine, are you saying being and staying in love also demands talent?

    Not exactly, but being and staying in love demand accommodation, understanding, tact and not to think that everything is perfect. My wife is a white woman. I could have said “Oh, my mother won’t like a white woman…”, and thought of all the reasons in the world not to marry her. But that is not what I did. Since that is the person I wanted to spend the rest of my life with, I went ahead to marry her. It has not been easy. I mean it is two different races, systems and cultures; to live together demands the desire to make it work. Nothing in life is easy. To succeed as an entrepreneur, you also need all of the above along with honesty of purpose. Nowadays, people want to start a business today and start riding a jeep tomorrow. That is the Nigerian way of doing business. It doesn’t work like that, while building a reputation, build a good one because that is what will speak for you. It is what we’ve done with Lantern Books. We make sure that every book we publish is educationally sound for children, and that has worked. My younger son is there now and he is still following the same policy, but we still have a lot of problems.

    Does the problem include that of funding? Most entrepreneurs complain about the gap in funding, especially from the government?

    Yes, it does, but who came to the world funded? I never got one government funding. So, you’ve got to go get family funding to start with and show the ability to succeed, and then seek bank funding. Even Aliko Dangote is being funded all the time, by the banks and the Stock Exchange, but one must first excel in what one does. A couple of years ago, a governor, who was trying to encourage young people, had asked me to talk to them after given them money to start businesses. Those kids were not prepared. Many considered it as government largesse, so some had used the money to go to Mecca, others bought cars and other things. Even market women survive through thrifts, so don’t talk to me about government largesse.

    From pharmacy, you delved into publishing. How easy was it for you to go from pharmacy to publishing?

    Whether then or now, it doesn’t matter what age, business start-up is never easy because you can fail very quickly if you don’t get your acts right. It wasn’t easy at all. I had difficulties, but the saying that “whatever your hands find to do; do it well,” had always been an inspiration. I had to borrow money from the bank, which I had to pay back. I had difficulty in convincing my bank managers, but once they saw I had honesty of purpose they yielded. I played my part in ensuring that I did not default on the pledge I made to pay back their money and got more support. Like I have said, “survival in the publishing industry takes painstaking efforts because publishing is a cerebral occupation that has long gestation period”. Unlike other business, its process is long and difficult. No matter the subject/genre, you have to find good authors, editors, assessors, then package the book for the market, promote and get it accepted. If it is not accepted, you’ve made a loss. I have made Lantern Books a household name in the Book Industry and I can now expand and improve on our books, but it takes a long time – more than 40 years to get to where we are today. Dangote is one of Nigeria’s richest businessmen because he produces what everybody needs. But books are different.

    Over 40 years and still counting…could you share with us how the publishing journey began?

    I started by publishing a book/ journal of Medicine in 1969. When I did Medipharm, I didn’t have the idea that it was going to be that successful. However, before publishing a book, you had to have a publishing house – that was how the publishing house was born. But I was still running the pharmacy then. So, I did the book with a partner but that partnership didn’t last. In fact, from the beginning, nobody gave the book a chance. For 40 years, a printer was printing the book for me. I used to go there to edit it twice a day because it was so technical and I couldn’t afford a mistake. When it succeeded and it became popular, I decided I had to build a printing press to carry on with the printing because my printer was always having problems. Then, came the question, “what do I do with the printing press?” That was when I went into full-scale publishing of children books. But before I built a printing press, I had published a book for children called Pussy Merry Birthday party. From day one, I had been interested in children books. I think if I didn’t do anything, I would have made the education of the child my main aim in life. Even if I had kept the pharmacy, I would still have been involved in something that had to do with children education.

    So, what happened to the pharmacy?

    In a country like ours, you can’t leave one thing for the other; people would ruin it for you. And that is what they did. Once you leave people and expect them to carry on, the first thing they’d do is to try to feather their own nest, hoping they’d succeed by that. But it doesn’t work out like that.

    How would you score the Nigerian Publishing Industry in the last 40 years compared to its counterparts across the world?

    We haven’t started. We haven’t got publishers; we’ve got booksellers, who feel the only way they can succeed is to bribe teachers and government officials to sell their books so that they can invest in something else and forget about books. No electricity. I spend a lot of money on powering our organisations all over the country. We are on generator all the time. These make it difficult to run a business.

    Who is to blame for this?

    Everybody. The people who are in publishing have no honesty of purpose. What is the history of publishing industry in Nigeria? The British, in order to educate us, imported their books to the schools they founded so that the graduates can work in the British administrations. So, what kind of books did we read? Robinson Crusoe, Alice in Wonderland and William Shakespeare’s books – stories that the Nigerian child cannot relate with. But how many Nigerian publishers today are publishing books that are relevant to our society, except textbooks? If our writers write books, publishers won’t publish them. And who are the publishers anyway? The publishers we have are foreigners, who import books all the time. Even when they call themselves Nigerian publishers, how much of Nigerian publishing do they do?  Only school books. The university lecturers do hand-outs, and if you write a book in University of Lagos, University of Ibadan may not buy it because it is not by their own professors. And yet they go to India to buy books. Look, the African man has not started.

    Parents who spend over N50,000 a year, talking on GSM to spend more on books for their children. We say government must give us books. And the government cannot afford it, but they don’t want to tell people because it is political. Now, everybody says they can provide free education; it doesn’t work that way.

    Are you saying free education cannot work?

    It can, only if government partners with parents to purchase books for children. Government cannot afford to give all books free. We must emphasise that the door to the IT age is not just the computer, but books.

    As Nigeria is in the verge of another transition process, what can we do to correct this?

    The government has plenty to do to correct this. All governments (whether military or civilian) that have come and gone don’t pay any attention to education. There is a National Book Policy that nobody is paying attention to. I have written a lot about it and nobody is listening. I said “if we don’t get things right this time as we have not done in the last 40 years, we may continue to grope in the dark and breed more illiterates”.

    How can we begin to correct this?

    Don’t ask me. What we need is a leader, who has a purpose and knows where he is going. The only person who has done that in this country is the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo. He knew exactly where he was going in all facets of life. What we have are people, who are trying to imitate Awolowo, but do not have Awolowo’s philosophy. What the western states is enjoying today is based on his philosophy.  And they called him all sorts of names like they are calling some of our leaders now, who are determined to bring about change. When I was chairman of the Book Fair Trust, they conspired against me, not minding that I built it up because they thought I was making money when I was sweating and investing all my money in it. Indians are now running the Nigerian Book Fair. Once, my battle cry was that we must build the capacity of the publishing industry in Nigeria.

    With all the political candidates gunning for power, do you see any as the saviour Nigeria needs at a time like this?

    I don’t want to be political. I have my views and I would rather keep my views to myself. Now on social media if you are not for party A or B, it is pathetic how people abuse each other – nobody talks about issues.

     

  • Aspirant donates computer sets to Ondo APC

    An aspirant for the Akure North State Constituency in the Ondo State House of Assembly, Mr Leye Akinola has donated four sets of computer and printers to the state secretariat of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Akure, the Ondo State capital.

    He said the donation was to facilitate administrative convenience and easy passage of information to relevant agencies for the growth of the party.

    Receiving the items, the state Chairman of the party, Isaac Kekemeke praised the donor for the gesture, even as he promised to make good use of the facilities.

    Kekemeke, who was Secretary to the State Government (SSG), reiterated that there would be no imposition of any candidate on the electorate in the choice of candidates for the 2015 general elections.

    He further said the party would abide by the wishes and aspirations of the people in the state and would not bow to any external interference.

    According to him, those who claimed to have been endorsed by the leadership of the party outside the state are merely spreading falsehood, noting that it is an attempt to frustrate other aspirants within the party.

    The chairman re-assured all aspirants as well as members of the party of level- playing field.

    He appreciated God for the rising fortune of the party in the state within the shortest time.

    Kekemeke revealed that prominent politicians in the state are set to join the APC soon.

    Speaking with reporters shortly after presenting the computer sets, Akinola said: “The gesture was informed by my desire to contribute to the development of the party. I was also motivated by the commitment and the developmental drive of Kekemeke to the APC. I decided to run for the position so as to contribute my quota to the development of the people of my local government in particular and the state in general.”

    He said he is aspiring as a party man and not as ‘group’ man, noting that he does not belong to any group but only to the APC as a party.

    He said he decided to run for the position so as to contribute his quota to the development of the people of his local government in particular and the state in general.

    He explained that he had executed projects that impacted positively in the lives of the people of his town.

    Akinola promised to do more for APC both at state, local and ward levels for the development of the party.

  • Computer traders allege violation of constitution by leaders

    Members of the Computer and Allied Products Association of Nigeria (CAPDAN) have accused their leaders of violating their constitution.

    They said no election has been held in 10 years, which, according to them, is contrary to their constitution’s provision that there must be new leaders every four years.

    The traders alleged the tenure of the Ibrahim Tunji-led executive had since elapsed but the officers have remained in office in breach of their rules.

    They marched on the Computer Village in Ikeja, Lagos, and adjourning streets, bearing placards, some of which read: “Election must hold now!” “Saving the market is a must” “12 years in office is a slap!” “In credible election we believe, not selection!” “We need a change now!” among others.

    The traders urged the association’s board of trustees to “put a mechanism in motion” towards holding an election, saying: “We request that an Electoral Committee should be constituted immediately to enable them publish the election modalities as well as manage the electoral process.”

    A founding CAPDAN executive member, Mrs Abisola Isokpehi said another election is long overdue. Her words: “Why won’t a change be necessary in 10 years? Have you heard that a set of executives will be in office for 10 years? I’m one of the ‘excos’. We don’t call meetings, nothing; just two or three people parading themselves as CAPDAN executive officers and doing things we don’t know about. But that’s beside the point. How can we be in power for 10 years? As I speak we don’t even have an office or a secretariat. I am ready to let go as the auditor if an election will hold.”

    One of traders, Bayo Olawunmi, said: “Nobody is happy with the way the market is being run. All the stakeholders are complaining. They feel the present executives are not doing enough and they want a change. Up till this moment, no election of transition committee has been constituted.

    “We’re urging the state government to intervene. The Constitution says after four years, there must be an election, but none has been held for over 10 years. We need a lot of changes to be effected because the market is not well-regulated. We have a bad name of selling fake products because of lack of proper regulation and we are losing customers,” he said.

    However, CAPDAN’s Board of Trustees’ chairman Mr Ganiyu Alimi said arrangements were on to hold an election soon.

    “We had started the process before this agitation by the traders. We plan to appoint a caretaker committee. The president actually said he has stepped aside, giving room for an election to hold.

    “Before any credible election is held, there must be a new roster of members. That’s why we’re saying there should be a committee that will be in place to arrange these things. It is not automatic. Ask these people to show you their membership cards, many of them cannot,” he said.

  • Road to ‘Nigeria’s computer age’

    Road to ‘Nigeria’s computer age’

    How can Nigeria develop its Information Communication Technology (ICT) sector? It is through software awareness, say Computer Science students at their convention at the Delta State University (DELSU) in Abraka. PHILIP OKORODUDU (Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering) reports.

    They came from different campuses with a mission: they wanted the domestication of Information Technology (IT) in Nigeria, using software strategy as tool. This is the aim of Computer Science students, who gathered at the Delta State University (DELSU) in Abraka for their national convention.

    Under the auspices of the National Association of Computer Science Students (NACOSS), they resolved to lead the nation into an era of software awareness and development to facilitate the migration from digital computing to quantum computing.

    The convention with the theme: Software strategies for equipping the Nigerian higher institution’s work force, featured the presentation of well-researched papers by scholars in the discipline and software exhibition.

    In his keynote address titled: Domestication of Information Technology in Nigeria: Software Strategy Imperatives, the immediate past president of the Institute of Software Practitioners of Nigeria (ISPON), Mr Chris Uwaje, said Nigeria could only streamline its fragmented IT structure through transformational strategy, which could be achieved by building software talent and mentoring youths in IT.

    Uwaje said the roadmap and primary take-off point for sustainable solutions was to enthrone and elevate software engineering as a strategic national policy. This, according to him, could be accomplished with the establishment of a national software strategy to be supported by legislation and encapsulated in a national software bill.

    He advocated the need for government to rejig IT, which, he said, is currently in a fledgling state. He urged that the discipline must be made part and parcel of education with a national IT skill-conversion strategy to boost the nation’s capacity in software production.

    Other speakers at the convention included ISPON president Mr Pius Okigbo, Deputy President of the Computer Society of Nigeria (NCS), Prof Adesola Aderounmu, Director, Information Technology and Communications Unit of the Obafemi Awolowo University, Dr Nicholas Ogini, and NACOSS Adviser, who is also a Computer Science lecturer at DELSU, Tope Oguntade.

    Earlier in his address, the NACOSS National President, Kingsley Okotie, a 400-Level student of DELSU, urged members of the association to take advantage of interaction with the speakers to network and improve their knowledge of computing.

    Okigbo donated a trophy and N100,000 on behalf of ISPON to winners of the software exhibition contest. The exhibition was to test the software usage abilities of students through the design and implementation of programs that could solve industry problems.

    Seven institutions participated in the contest, but at the end, Abia State Polytechnic (ABIA POLY) won the first position with its software named Students Activities’ Management System (SAMS). The polytechnic was presented with N50,000 cash prize and a trophy. The Institute of Management Technology (IMT) came second and won N30,000, while the University of Uyo (UNIUYO) emerged third, taking home N20,000.

    John Nnanna, an HND II student, who represented ABIA POLY, said the software was designed to make life easy for students in the management of information relevant to them by downloading SAMS on their smart phones. The software would send reminder of students’ daily activities and help them to access relevant information with on their studies.

    John noted that the software could also be used in e-voting, which is currently trending on campuses, adding that it is being implemented in his school.

    On his part, William Alfred, a 400-Level student of UNIUYO, rated his school the best in the exhibition, saying: “Although we did our best and we presented the best software but the judges rated us as the third best.”

    He said the knowledge acquired at the convention made students to be software-conscious, urging the association to use the recommendation to create IT awareness programmes in higher institutions.

    The association’s outgoing Vice President, Joy Idam, a 400-Level student of Ebonyi State University (EBSU) said she was happy about the success of the event despite hitches at preparation stage.

    “Events of this magnitude are not easy to organise but we are happy that God helped us to surmount the challenges that came our way and we are also grateful to our speakers who have exposed us to new trends in software development and applications,” she said.

    Highlight of the event was the election into the national executive council of the association, which produced Michael Onwugbolu, a 400-Level student of the Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO) as president.

  • Innovative boards for computer whizz kids

    Innovative boards for computer whizz kids

    To promote innovation among computer-savvy students, Intel Corporation, a semi-conductor chip maker, has donated 140 free Galileo Boards to eight universities. WALE AJETUNMOBI reports.

    Nigeria can produce best innovators in the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) if its youths can relate with innovators across the world. Intel Corporation, a semi-conductor chip maker, believes higher institutions can achieve this feat by allowing their students to use trending technology to create new solutions for diverse sectors.

    To promote innovation and entrepreneurship in Nigeria, Intel Africa last week donated Galileo Boards to Nigerian universities. The board is a multi-user socket that enables connections to smart devices on which users can create several applications and codes to control hardware devices.

    Computer Science students are to interact with the technology board to invent applications and software that will create solution to problems. The board also allows users a free access to inventors’ community, where they can interact and exchange ideas with innovators worldwide.

    Speaking to representatives of the beneficiary institutions at the Protea Hotel in GRA, Ikeja, Lagos, the Corporate Affairs Director for Africa, Mr Moise Leye , said the essence was to activate the innovative minds of the youths and make them drivers of the journey to a sustained development in ICT.

    With the board, he said, students can develop their skills in creating different computer programs and code several hardware devices. He stressed that the board would engender a productive competition among the beneficiary school, from which several inventions could come out.

    He said: “The Galileo Board is an invention that will stoke the interest of students of the partnering institutions. After this donation, it is left for the managements of the beneficiary universities to continue the journey and embark on collaboration among themselves and organise competition among their own students.

    “We have had a lot of jokes about which university is the best in ICT. The best way to settle this argument is to have students from the beneficiary schools to create their own applications, competing among themselves and building friendship network. This is how innovation happens. It will place Nigeria on the world technological map.

    The aim, according to Leye, is to reduce youth unemployment through ICT. After taking delivery of the technology boards, Leye said Intel expected the users to participate in web talk, where they would learn what they could do with the boards.

    He said: “In the next two decades, Africa will need to create up to 200 million jobs for young people coming out of the universities. Those jobs can only be created when youths are able to drive our own innovation through creating companies, products and solutions.

    “We believe in building local skills and capacities to boost expertise from within the continent to drive our objectives in promoting technology. Besides, we are also involved in giving back to the society where we operate. This is the reason we freely donated the board to engage the youth in productive ventures.”

    The Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof Julius Okojie, hailed the firm for the donation, noting that the objective was in line with the commission’s vision.

    Okojie, who was represented by Prof Olaolu Oluwole, urged beneficiary institutions to deploy the board in the pursuit of excellence, stressing that he believed Nigerian universities would produce inventors in the mould of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs in nearest future.

    The firm donated 140 pieces of the board to eight universities, including the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), Covenant University in Otta, Ogun State, Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA), Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) in Zaria, Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti (ABUAD), Ekiti State University (EKSU), and Federal University Technology, Owerri (FUTO) in Imo State.

  • Computer Warehouse Group Plc to restrategise

    The Computer Warehouse Group (CWG) Plc has hinted of plans to change its business strategy, considering the decline in the company’s profitability in the financial report for the half year, ended, June 30, 2014.

    Justifying the need for the decision, the Group Chief Executive Officer, Austin Okere, said: “We were very clear that while our tremendous growth over the years had been propelled by our traditional businesses in hardware and software sales and support, and VSAT bandwidth vending, these represented mature and declining margin businesses, the import of which have been evident in our recent financial statements.”

    Speaking on the company’s result under the period reviewed, the financial controller, Remi Adeloye said that revenue for the period depreciated by 16 per cent to N8.3 billion from N9.9 billion in 2013, while the gross profit also went down by 23 per cent to N1.6 billion from N2.1 billion in 2013.

    “The lower second quarter revenue is a reflection of the continued decline in margins on traditional IT infrastructure business due to commoditization and competitive pressures, as well as viable alternatives in the Cloud Computing Frontier,” he said.

    Expatiating, Adeloye said “the financial position of the group remains strong with adequate liquidity, leverage and efficiency ratios. Half year, 2014 Current ratio improved to 1.5 as against 2013 which was 1.4 signifying strong liquidity and adequacy of working capital to meet transactional needs. Also CWG’s leverage Debt to Equity ratio remains low at 9 per cent as against 10 per cent in 2013.”

    The company got listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange in November, 2013 under the ICT sub-sector.

  • VC hails computer whizz kid

    The Vice-Chancellor of Lagos State University, Ojo, Prof John Obafunwa, has congratulated Raji Rasheed, a Computer Science student, on his recognition as one of the best 10 computer science students in the country.

    In a letter signed by the Deputy Registrar, A.T. Fatogun, Prof Obafunwa said the management was excited over Raji’s achievement. Prof Obafunwa hailed him for being a good ambassador of the institution at the just concluded Odegbami National Information Technology Competition organised by the Nigerian Computer Society.

    Raji expressed gratitude to the management and staff of the institution for instilling in him the knowledge that enabled him to make the institution proud.

    “I always had this belief that I would go this far in the competition, I learnt a lot during the competition and hope to apply them in other aspects of life,” he said.