Tag: Internet of Things

  • Cybercrimes, smart cities rev demand for tech skills

    Multinational ICT vendors, businesses and government are collaborating to ensure more data scientists, software developers and cloud specialists enter Africa’s Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystem.

    This collaboration is geared towards ensuring that cities leverage intelligent systems and digitally transform to smart cities.

    At AfricaCom 2018 in Cape Town this week, the Chief Technology Officer, OpenLab South Africa, Steve App, said the facility is working closely with tech training and innovation initiative Tshimologong Precinct in Johannesburg, to help nurture innovation around cloud and other key technologies, including artificial intelligence (AI).

    “We have been presenting there and working to start getting entrepreneurs together. It’s a new initiative. I have presented cloud to them, and I saw that maybe some of the thinking and direction to go in needs to be slightly adjusted.

    “They saw the cloud but were almost wanting to put in point solutions in the cloud rather than ‘the cloud should give you access to a data link’ … and they were thinking about ‘how do we build a cloud’, rather than ‘you don’t build a cloud, you use it’.

    “We were saying ‘try work out how to use existing data’, because the vision of the cloud [is that] whatever data you collect should be available for anybody to use to provide the right services.”

    App said the budding entrepreneurs are receptive and the intention going forward is to demonstrate the kind of equipment that can be built, how they can interface and develop.

    “There is another session planned which is focused on AI. It’s a scarce skill. We need more data scientists and we need more artisans who can actually work with sensors, work with devices, put them in and understand them. We are in a catch-22 between creation of talent versus the opportunities.”

    The rising cost of cybercrimes too is also pushing the drive to get experts in that field.

    Currently, Nigeria and other countries are facing shortage of skilled cyber security personnel. It is estimated that this could potentially lead to financial losses of $6trillion in few years time.

    President, Information Security Society of Africa (ISSA)-Nigeria, Dr David Isiavwe, said there are too few professionals in the cybersecurity space. According to him, about six billion people would be attacked by 2021 cybersecurity spend is also expected to exceed $1trillion by 2021.

    The cost of damages as a result of ransomware will reach $11.6 billion by next year because victims pay for their freedom with cryptocurrency.

    But Huawei has partnered with the United Nations Agency for Education, Science and Culture (UNESCO); African universities and industry players to launch an ICT Talent Ecosystem Programme for the region.

    As part of this initiative, Huawei carries out several ICT certification programmes, including the Huawei ICT Academy and Huawei Authorised Learning Partner for university students and industry practitioners, providing industry-recognised certification across ICT technologies.

    The company also organises events, including an ICT competition and career expos for tertiary students, to promote a greater understanding of and interest in ICT-related job opportunities.

    Huawei Enterprise Business Group Services Director for the Southern Africa region, Michael Meng, said: “We are launching this platform to demonstrate the young talent in sub-Saharan Africa have the potential to mature into world-class experts.

    “Today, we re-dedicate ourselves to working even more closely with partners across the continent to better equip the next generation of technology leaders. By enhancing industry-academic cooperation, we, as an international ICT company, hope to make our contribution to achieving the continent’s development goals,” he noted.

    These tech skills will become more sought-after as cities in Africa pursue opportunities linked to a mature IOT ecosystem and smart city development.

    According to Huawei, they will underpin key factors associated with successful smart city construction, including top leadership projects, strong execution teams, industry-leading digital partners and solid investments.

    Huawei believes the smart city concept is a critical phenomenon in urban development. It likens the concept to a living organism that has a central nervous system and ‘brain’, and advocates a one cloud approach.

     

     

     

  • Taking technology to next level

    Taking technology to next level

    Secondary school pupils may be in the forefront of Nigeria’s adoption of the Internet of Things (IoT) Technology, which is beginning to gain ground with the establishment of an innovation centre in Lagos, reports KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE.

    With the inauguration of the Internet of Things (IoT) Innovation Centre at the Federal Science and Technical College (FSTC), Yaba, Lagos Mainland, Nigeria may have begun breeding its own army of Elon Musks, the award-winning scientist-entrepreneur credited for innovations in transportation, space travel and energy.

    The centre is the first in sub-Saharan Africa that provides students with a platform to innovate and find solutions to challenges using technology.

    The Internet of Things (IoT) refers to the inter-connection of gadgets such that they communicate to solve problems.  It is gaining influence in various areas of human endeavour and is already in common use in advanced countries – in the management of healthcare, precision agriculture, energy, building management, transportation and the like.  IoT is the reason doors open when a person approaches; alarms ring when certain sensors are activated; a car can operate without a driver, and things can be remotely controlled.

    The establishment of an IoT facility by the UNITeS CISCO Networking Academy in a secondary school attracted visits from two ministers within a week – the Minister of State for Education, Prof Anthony Anwukah, who inaugurated the centre Thursday last week, and the Minister of Communication, Mr Adebayo Shittu, who toured the facility on Monday.

    To the uninformed, the centre looks like any other Information Communication Technology (ICT) facility, equipped with computers, servers, internet connectivity, a projector, and other gadgets that would make it functional.

    However, beyond those, it is equipped with the raspberry pi (single board computers useful for teaching basic computer science and robotics), the Arduino (single-board microcontrollers for creating digital devices and interactive objects that can sense and control objects in the physical world), capacitors and jump cables and some other small multi-coloured wires with plastic and metallic heads placed in containers on each table.

    Twenty-two IoT ambassadors and FSTC pupils aged between 11 and 17 have been enlisted to pioneer innovative solutions at the centre. They are expected to surpass the record of five pupils of the school (now alumni), who excelled in an international competition, the Netriders Competition, which tests students’ proficiency in Information Technology Essentials, a CISCO programme, last year.  They competed with university undergraduates and emerged among the top 10 in Nigeria.  They were also among the top 50 in sub-Saharan Africa – the best among them was in the eighth position.  It was their performance as well as the school’s record of training up to 1,000 pupils in the IT certification programmes that fired up the interest in establishing an IoT Innovation centre in the school.

    Principal of the school, Rev Chris Ugorji, who has seen how IoT Technology operates in Berlin, Germany, is excited about the potential of the centre in solving local problems in Nigeria.

    “My team and I witnessed a lot of innovations in technology that we were entirely moved.  There, we saw technology being used for numerous day-to-day activities, e.g. – controllingerosion, fighting poverty, climatic change, etc.

    “This centre is going to take ICT to another level.  It will be a training centre; people will leverage on it to veer into new things; it is going to be a solution arena for businesses,” he said in an interview with The Nation.

    He urged the Federal Government to replicate the same facilities in other schools across the country.

    Already, the pupils have started testing their skills, which they demonstrated at last Thursday’s launch.  They showcased a remotely controlled fire alarm system as well as the automatic control of gadgets in a home.

    Christiana Ekekezie, Head of the UNITeS CISCO Academy in FSTC, said her team of 22 ambassadors is revving to go.  She said they would start by looking into solving local problems when the school resumes for the next academic session.

    “We have a lot of projects in mind.  We have plans to search around and identify problems in the school.  We look forward to making FSTC a smart school.  With such centre in the school, it should not be an analogue school.  For instance, we will look into changing how students clock in when they come to school instead of manually signing an attendance register. Also, we want to help the school solve problem of identifying those students who have not paid school fees but attend classes with others who have paid,” she said.

    Christiana is confident that her pupils can come up with innovations that will become common place in Nigeria and reverse the country’s status as a consumer of technology.

    “These things are already in existence in European countries.  How come we cannot have it in Nigeria?  We need to embrace it; it is possible. If we believe it is, it will come to be.  Nigeria is used to being a consumer of technology but with this, we will begin to create new things,” she said.

    She also said the centre would be open to users outside the school but priority would be given to the pupils.

    One of the IoT ambassadors, Samuel Gbangbola, is already dreaming of what he will innovate at the IoT centre.

    The 14-year-old SS1 pupil who wants to be a programmer, said the centre would draw him closer to fulfilling his dream of making android apps accessible to many operating systems.

    “With technology, you have access to a wealth of information. While textbook knowledge restricts you to a certain kind of information which may be limiting, with the internet, you learn so much at once,” he said.

    Moses Imayi, Project Director of Skool Media, which partners UNITes CISCO Networking Academy to run ICT programmes in schools, said the IoT Centre is futuristic and would empower the pupils.

    “The IoT is the future of technology.  The centre will give the students a platform to express their ideas,” he said.

    Commending the innovation, Prof Anwukah said it was in line with international best practices and Nigeria must not remain behind.

    “For our country to run a healthy and responsive education system, we must get our direction from the rest of the world.  We are in a virtually-driven era. Technology is key,” he said.

    He urged the pupils and teachers to take advantage of the centre to improve their skills.

    The Minister of Communication said FSTC was privileged to have such facility which even tertiary institutions in Nigeria did not have.

    He underscored the importance of exposing young people to such practical training to address the problem of unemployment.

    “Nigeria, with a population of 180 million people, most of who are youths, deserves not just theoretical education because there are simply no job places for theories and people who cannot use their hands to work.

    “With a population of 180 million, the job places available for all governments, whether Federal or State or Local government, are not up to five million.

    “If we have less than five million job places in governments, it means that the bulk is in the hands of the private sector.

    “The private sector want to be productive for every kobo they are spending and so, they would want something much more than that and that means that they would need more of skilled personnel ,” he said.

    On his part, the United Nations Secretary General, Mr Antonio Guterres, who spoke through the Director, UN Information Centre Nigeria, Mr Rolland Keyanja, said with young people aged 17-25 making up two of the 7.5 billion people on earth, technology and innovation was a core part of the 2030 Sustainable Development agenda for keeping them engaged.

    “Your focus on technology and innovation is one of those key elements of the Agenda 2030 but we must first of all increase access to information and communication technology for all our citizens to enable them effectively engage in the contemporary economy,” he said.

    He added that advancement in technology had transformed tele-medicine; aero space engineering and other areas of human endeavour with innovations that have changed the way people live and work.

     

  • Cutting cost in Internet of Things (IoT) era

    Cutting cost in Internet of Things (IoT) era

    When implementing an Internet of Things (IoT) application, a platform solution with the right partner can save users 33 per cent over self-built infrastructure.

    What if we took all the data coming out of our everyday devices and connect them? This means we can cook at home using our mobile phones while working at the office, turn on the heater before we get home, watch our children in playpens while we shop. We can have stock re-order levels for business programmed onto electronic shelves; we can have intelligent traffic lights that sync with ambulances on emergency response duty. Factories can run on autopilot and systems could replace fraught manual effort.

    Everything, everywhere, can be ordered intelligently on the Internet. Wired describes this situation thus: “In our houses, cars, and factories, we’re surrounded by tiny, intelligent devices that capture data about how we live and what we do. Now they are beginning to talk to one another. Soon we’ll be able to choreograph them to respond to our needs, solve our problems, even save our lives.”

    In some ways, the IoT is already happening on a small scale, but the global integration of small and big data is yet to happen. Many intelligent embedded systems sit in manufacturing lines, production tables, homes and offices disconnected from a symphony of sorts that could emerge, where they are all hooked to intelligent robotic controls based on Artificial Intelligence (AI) over the cloud.

    Every time technology attempts an advance by a new wave of learning, it is held back by some kind of fear, a fear with devastating consequences could befall mankind. That when the conscious web takes charge of lives, some ill-intentioned terrorists will crash a world wholly reliant on devices and the scare that devices will get a mind of their own and turn against man. Maybe, just maybe, it is the unpalatable concept of change, and the rigour that new thinking and ways of things will demand of humanity that irks.

    Trinity Telecoms said in spite of these, the IoT presents a tremendous opportunity for businessmen to exploit the monitoring, management and control of the ‘things’ in their business remotely.

    Forecasts from International Data Corporation (IDC) indicate that billions of things will be connected worldwide by 2020, and companies are citing “internal productivity and efficiency” as the primary drivers for this momentum toward IoT investments.

    However, there is a complex equation of factors to consider in a business plan, with unique challenges regarding Operations, Scale, Cost and Customer Service.

    Where do the major business cost contributors lie in IoT?

    Understanding the operational costs can help businessmen make smart decisions about the technology, processes and partners you need.

    This will help businessmen ensure that their IoT initiatives run at the lowest cost, highest availability and provide the best customer experience.

     

    Top operational costs

    • Connectivity: 19-43 per cent of the costs are associated with connecting devices to the Internet; most often via wireless networks in a combination of local networks (RFID, Wi-Fi, ZigBee and others) and the mobile network (private or public)
    • Administrative operations: 15-28 per cent of the ongoing costs are associated with the day-to-day management and operation of IoT assets and business processes; structured life cycle management
    • Support: 10-28 per cent of the costs are associated with identifying, troubleshooting and resolving field-reported issues with the IoT assets.
    • Time to market: not only for the first minimum viable product (MVP), but also ongoing updates/upgrades. Impacting these costs are implications associates with the time to provision devices with services and testing devices with services before deployment.

    These costs summed together make a strong case to leverage the benefits of a dedicated IoT platform solution using software as a service (SaaS) or platform as a service (PaaS) model.

     

    PaaS vs self-build

    infrastructure

    A self-funded developed platform can cost upwards of R2-3 million taken over then first 12-18 months to reach a MVP.

    Compare this to a value driven per device per month fee model, which could cost 10-15 per cent per annum less for a 1,000 device network over the same period; and can easily be operational in just a few weeks.

    “The opportunity costs lost in the self-build platform can never be caught up,” says Andrew Groves of Trinity, who works with customers to develop intelligent, connected IoT solutions.

    “Similarly, starting business operations on either a savings or new revenue model in month one can easily realise your business case objectives while the platform capabilties keep evolving too.”

    As such, a PaaS system can amount to 33per cent direct savings over self-build infrastructure, while allowing you to choose from multiple local and international mobile network operators (MNOs) connectivity networks.

    “Companies of all sizes, across industries, can use an IoT service platform to capitalise on IoT and get the most out of their ‘things’ by getting them connected,” Andrew added.

     

    Choosing IoT provider

    To choose an IoT provider, look for real-time based monitoring and control; past history and deep experience cannot be substituted when considering an IoT partner; know your core competency, and leverage a platform for supporting elements; and having tools for full life-cycle management on all aspects will simplify operations massively.

     

    Culled from Mybroadband Newsletter

  • Internet of Things World holds Oct. 24

    The Internet of Things (IoT) World Europe 2015 wil take  place between October 5  and 7 at Maritim proArte Hotel, Berlin, Germany.

    Internet of Things (IoT) World Europe is the region’s largest IoT event with hundreds of attendees, 100+ industry thought leaders and 50+ exhibitors.

    With a comprehensive conference agenda covering everything from the smart home, enterprise IoT and industrial internet, healthcare and wearables, supply chain, transport and logistics, connected cars, smart buildings and energy efficiency, energy and utilities and smart cities. Internet of Things World Europe 2015 boasts the most comprehensive IoT agenda in the market.

    Additionally, a pre-event focus day on operator business models and future networks for IoT provides a unique focus to the show looking at the role of the operator as IoT continues to grow.

    Analyst Breakfast Briefings daily provide intimate sessions for attendees to ask specialists questions about trends happening within the industry and the post event workshop on IoT.

    Analytics provides a deep dive session into enterprises, verticals, technology, strategy and hardware.