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Deals Site Rupu Launches “Green November” to Woo Customers This Festive Season

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rupuOnline deals portal Rupu Kenya has launched a 6-week campaign dubbed “Green November” in a move to bring bigger and better bargains to  its customers across Nairobi as the festive season jets in.

In a statement, General Manager of Operations at Rupu James Gathere said that the campaign is aimed at bringing the best products to Kenyans at great discounts.

“Green November is our way as Rupu of helping you stretch the almighty shilling. We have partnered with all the best vendors in town to bring you the most amazing deals. If you were looking for a great and affordable Christmas gift – Rupu will have the best selection of ideas.”

rupushops

This campaign will feature deals daily from the best restaurants, spas, salons, events and a variety of great electronics and household items. Customers can purchase these deals at more than 50% off the regular price. Apart from the campaign allowing customers to get bargains for a wide range of products and services, partnering vendors are expected to sign up new customers who they convert into long-term clients.

Mr. Gathere also outlined the effectiveness of Rupu as a marketing tool. “Rupu is a result-driven online marketing tool: we take a commission from deals running on the website and in return market our merchant’s services and products to our loyal fan base. Everyone wins: Rupu gets a revenue-share, the merchant receives many new loyal customers and Rupu users can explore the very best businesses in Kenya at a discount.”

ruputravel-bannerFounded in 2010, Rupu has grown to be Kenya’s own eCommerce success story. The firm recently launched Rupu Shops to allow retailers sell online and Rupu Travel, a travel deals section with great places to visit in the country at affordable rates.

Nigeria’s Konga.com Meet Dealdey.com In an Offline Battle of Ecommerce Titans

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Konga matchNow, this is fun. Nigeria’s eCormmerce brands are meeting at the gym to show their tactics, wits,and see who is the winner.

Nigeria’s fastest growing online mall, Konga.com and Nigeria’s biggest daily deals site, Dealdey want to show off their muscles, offline. Football teams from both brands will be coming together for the ultimate ecommerce showdown on Saturday, Nov 9 at Campos Stadium by 10am.

Both teams have released their full team lists, here for team Konga, and here for team Dealdey.

konga match 2  And it seems the captains are ready for the showdown.

According to the team captain of Konga FC, DealDey FC may have trained well for this game, but there is no team plan that can beat team work as exemplified by Konga.com FC. All our attributes as a company will be shown in 90 minutes on the pitch.” 

DealDey is not afraid of Konga’s online might.

Konga v dealdey”Konga is a big company with a set of dedicated and hardworking guys.  However, they are looking up to us as the pacesetters in the industry. We intend to prove to them that we are the big brothers,” said The team captain of Dealdey FC. Fans will also walk home with exciting prices.

Who do you think is going to win? Team Konga or Team dealdey?

Tigo Tanzania to Invest Over $75,000 Into Social Entrepreneurs Addressing Kids Challenges

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tigorfcTigo Tanzania has partnered with Swedish non-profit organization Reach for Change to launch the ‘Tigo Reach for Change’ initiative in a move that will identify and support local social entrepreneurs with solid ideas on improving the lives of Tanzanian children.

According to Tigo Tanzania General Manager Mr. Diego Gutierrez, “Statistics show that children less than 18 years of age constitute almost half of Tanzania’s population. But to date the investment in addressing their needs is not proportionate with their share of the population or their role as tomorrow’s leaders and human capital. Investing in children is the single most important investment in national development’’.

Mr. Gutierrez added that “Tigo has for many years been deeply involved in addressing challenges concerning children and youth in Tanzania. We believe the most effective way to bring about sustainable change is to empower motivated individuals with the right tools to bring to life innovative ideas that can change their society. Tigo Reach for Change initiative allows us to do just that!”

Those interested can apply online  on the Tigo Tanzania website. Top ideas will join a three year incubator programme  to help transform the ideas into sustainable ventures and will receive funding of USD 25,000 a year for up to three years, as well as mentoring and professional advice from senior employees of Tigo.

For the duration of the 3 years programme the social entrepreneur’s business idea will undergo evaluation to ensure that they attain required key performance indicators until their project is fully developed and self-sustainable.

Tigo last year, received over 1000 applications and selected three projects aimed at giving children with disabilities vocational skills; mobile classes for street children; and a project aimed at bridging the rural-urban digital divide.

Oracle Cloud Is Taking Kenya By Storm

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oracle

Kenya is one of the African countries that is quick to take up the newest trends in the market, not only in their lifestyle but also in business as well as technology.

The spirit of high interest has made a good number of businesses and technology adopt the cloud technology and not only cloud technology but the Oracle technology.

In the Kenya Oracle day that took place in the Safaripark Hotel, Nairobi, Dr. Andrew Sutherland of Oracle Europe told TechMoran that, Kenya has  great potential in making their businesses better because they are quick to show interest in the cloud technology compared to other African countries.

“Kenyans have shown great interest to the cloud technology compared to other African countries, this shows that the technology has the potential to grow. However there is that notion of technology being a difficult thing to do, people are afraid that it is too complicated. This can however be fixed by proper education as well as training,” He said.

This being the Third year, the Oracle day held today was geared towards demonstrating the Power of Hardware and Software normally engineered to work together as well as enlightening participants on how the power of  simplicity can change IT to a force that drives business innovation.

Dr. Sutherland believed that Kenya’s SME’s have a potential of blossoming if they embraced the cloud technology. Technology comes with a lot of flexibility in that one can get so many services, the ability to access work anywhere as well as transform the small scale business to a very large business.

Oracles solutions have received praises in a  number of organisation including Copycat and Commercial Bank of Africa (CBA).

Nazir Noordin, Manging Director of Copycats Kenya said that Oracle has made efforts so partner with many organizations include copycat to give the best solutions to their clients.

Dennis Volemi of CBA said that Oracle solutions have greatly made the M-Shwari service, a product of Safaricom and CBA, a success. He said that they have used a number of solutions in the system that has so far been a success.

“I am pleased with the Oracle solutions because apart from making IT solutions easier, it is a one stop shop as you can find many solutions in one body,” he said.

Other than Nairobi, Oracle day events took place in more than 30 cities across Europe, Middle East and Africa, as part of a global event series under the theme Converge. Connect. Empower the Modern Enterprise

SAP Software Keeps Track Of Shea Butter In Ghana

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SAP AG, a German software corporation that makes enterprise software to manage business operations and customer relations is targeting a network of 15,000 women in the Ghana based Shea butter industry, with the aim to create a reliable supply chain that generates security for both buyers and farmers of Shea butter.

The SAP developed a mobile app that scans and traces each sack of Shea huts and each box of Shea butter, providing the product traceability demanded by global export markets, while also sending price and market information straight to the buyers’ mobile phone.

Yet, at a time when organic certification is in process in Ghanaian farming for Shea butter, Fair Trade certification was achieved earlier this year. In addition to other multi-national corporate clients, StarShea that extracts and distributes Shea butter recently began a collaboration with one of the leading suppliers of fats and oils to the global food industry, IOI Loders Croklaan, in addition to relying on SAP technology.

In Ghana, with 62 metric tons of shea butter sold in its first year, StarShea Ltd. is already one of the top four exporters in the country, reports say. Moreover, revenues for women participating in StarShea transactions have grown by 59 to 82 percent, and a Stanford University School of Business study discovered that women who sell hand-made Shea butter to international buyers generate three to for times as much revenue compared to women who do not participate in social business activities like StarShea , noted Mary Mazzoni a writer on sustainability.

However, SAP hopes the enterprise will have an even greater impact, especially after profitability is achieved, it’s the company’s ultimate goal to see Shea farmers become co-owners of the business.

Headquartered in Walldorf, Baden-Württemberg, with regional offices around the world, SAP is the market leader in enterprise application software. The company’s best known products are its enterprise resource planning application (SAP ERP), its enterprise data warehouse solution – SAP Business Warehouse, SAP BusinessObjects software, and most recently, Sybase mobile products and in-memory computing appliance SAP HANA

Thus far, reports say that SAP is already looking into how the mobile applications and supply chain management systems it developed in Ghana can be used to address similar challenges around the world. According to the UNEP, small holder farmers manage approximately half a billion farms worldwide and SAP said these software solutions could be used to address value chain inefficiencies regardless of crop.

 

Microsoft’s Releases New Report Of Cyber Security Risks Of Unsupported Software

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 viruses

Microsoft  released its Security Intelligence Report volume 15, which analyzes threat intelligence from over a billion systems worldwide to provide in-depth perspectives on exploits, vulnerabilities and malware to help customers manage risk.

Among other intelligence, the report examines the security risk that consumers and businesses face when using unsupported operating systems and software and looks at the implications of using Windows XP once support, including security updates, ends on April 8, 2014.

For the Windows XP some of the top threats include:

  • Sality – Malware family that can steal your personal information and lower your PC security settings
  • Ramit – Malware that infects Windows executable files, Microsoft Office files, and HTML files.
  • Vobfus – Family of worms that can download other malware onto your PC; can be downloaded by other malware or spread via removable drives, such as USB flash drives.

Apart from this there others that are prevalent in Kenya, they include; Autorun a family of worms, which spread by copying itself to networks or removable drives of infected computers, this takes about 4.9 percent of the ‘infections’; Comame, which is a collection of all Trojan detections added by advanced automated analysis, and covers 5.5 percent and Comroki, which consisted of Trojans and can gain an authorized remote access to your PC, try to spread using autorun functionality, run applications without your knowledge or concent and disable your security products.

In the first half of 2013, about 17 percent of computers running Microsoft up-to-date real-time security products worldwide encountered malware. While Windows 8 encountered a similar amount of malware as Windows XP, people using Windows XP were six times more likely to actually be infected with those threats.

“The data helps illustrate the impact security innovations in newer operating systems are having. Modern operating systems, like Windows 8, include advanced security technologies that are specifically designed to make it harder, more complex, more expensive, and, therefore less appealing for cybercriminals to exploit vulnerabilities.” says Kunle Awosika, Country Manager, Microsoft Kenya.

He added that once Windows XP stops receiving security updates on April 8, 2014, security risks associated with continuing to use the outdated software will increase as cybercriminals seek to exploit new vulnerabilities discovered. The last version of Windows XP to go out of support was Service Pack 2. In the two years following, malware infections jumped 66 percent when compared to Windows XP SP3, the version for which support ends next year.

“The importance of upgrading from Windows XP cannot be overstated,” said Kunle. “We truly want people to understand the risks of running Windows XP after support ends and to recognize the security benefits of upgrading to more modern operating system – one that includes the latest in security innovations, provides ongoing support and can in turn better protect them.”

Flying Donkeys Will Soon Land In Africa, Say Researchers

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Huge robots identified as flying donkeys with rugged air frames capable of lifting heavy suitcase loads over long distances will in the next seven years be available in Africa once selected tech savvy individuals participate for this year’s challenge to help achieve this dream.

Once applicants send their CVs and registrations this month of November 2013 through to February 2014, they would be able to help develop creative ideas of ensuring that the donkeys that are due in the continent by 2020, would be able to carry at least 20 kilos over 50 kilometers in less than an hour by air.

At a time when Africa is expanding to build its road network, creators of this concept: La Fondation Bundi and the Swiss National Centre for Competence for Research in Robotics (NCCR) thought of an idea that would utilize the sky as a means of transport, christened “Flying Donkey”. Thus, it is Aspired that Africa would be the first continent to be the first continent to develop unmanned air cargo at massive scale.

Yet, reports say that Africa would need to invest some $93bn USD each year in infrastructure but it is only deploying 45bn USD.

Nevertheless, apart from reducing road carnage, Flying Donkey hopes that thousands of the cargo robots would be operating on established networks in Africa and globally with a generation, through the creation of jobs at the same time enabling e-commerce.

“If we are going to use flying robots to transportation goods on a massive scale, it makes more sense to do in Africa first (size, demographic growth, rise of e-commerce)!” notes The Director and Board Member of the NCCR, Simon Johnson.

Moreover, the concept developed would work to ensure flying donkeys are a friendly service, dependably exploiting the sky while enhance e-commerce. “Flying Donkey will create jobs, new trades and industries in Africa that will benefits others around the world.”

For this year’s challenge, the initiators have set their focus on majority African designed and assembled flying donkeys. It is expected that for tens of thousands of donkeys would be operating globally within a generation.

Thus far, the foundation has identified technical, legal, logistics and architectural and design challenges. It will award large cash prizes to teams with the best solutions ranging from $50, 000 to 30,000 USD for team grants, 20,000 to 100,000 for annual sub-challenges while the winner of the Flying Donkey Challenge walks away with $2million USD.

“Overall, we will select teams from around the world, in all four tracks: Technology, Legal, Logistics & Design, with doable projects, high level of innovation, right skills and African collaboration,” noted Johnson.

In all, the first annual event will be hosted by Kenya’s North of Mt. Kenya, that’s big enough to allow the creation of a lab to enable a global emerging industry.

Moreover, starting this month of November 2013 through to 28th February 2014, individuals can send their CV and they would be put them in touch with teams that are applying. Application deadline for the First Edition is end in February 2014.

For details, send an email to Fondation Bundi-Afrotech address: fly@flyingdonkey.org.

AccessKenya Develops New Traffic Solution For Kenyan Drivers

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Since 2010, AccessKenya has provided live feeds on traffic in Nairobi and Mombasa through its portal traffic.accesskenya.com. This month, it has moved a step further to develop a public pilot program launched recently in conjunction with IBM targeted to reduce traffic on Kenyan roads.

Reports say that over two million vehicles on Nairobi’s roads congest roads each day, accounting for loss of Ksh50 million in productivity costs.

According to AccessKenya Group MD Kris Senanu, the newly launched initiative is of great value to both IBM and AccessKenya Group as a practical solution that would help control traffic, thus benefit the driving public. Thus, the mobile phone service will provide drivers with live updates on traffic while suggest alternative routes with less traffic.

In conjunction with IBM Research Africa, IBM has provided mathematical algorithms and analytical solution that allows commuters to access data from cameras through their mobile phones in real time while providing suggestions on less congested routes.

“We have availed our huge database of video feeds captured on our 36 CCTV Cameras covering various Strategic roads within Nairobi and Mombasa,” Senanu MD said in an interview.

According to IBM Research Africa Chief Scientist, Sid Dr Uyi Steward, Nairobi city stands to benefit from the use of technologies to manage their transport systems effectively. He noted that improving human mobility across Africa through the use of intelligent and analytical technology would remain a key focus set to be inaugurated in coming days.

In all, ahead of the public pilot officially launched recently, the USSD or short code based system has undergone two developmental tests. To sign up for the service based in Kenya, dial *384*3# on your mobile phones.

 

Warid Congo Partners With Telemune to Launch WAP Portal, Low Balance Suite and Phone Back Up Services

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Warid-LogoWarid Congo has partnered with Telemune, an Indian founded firm developing value added services for telcos in emerging markets  to launch WAP Portal Services, Low Balance Suite and Phone Back Up Service.

According to Mr. Imossio Begoume, Marketing director, Warid Congo, “We want to keep our customers up-to-date in the simplest and most convenient way possible – and ensure they have access to fun services on their mobile. We see WAP Portal services as a key means for our customers to stay in touch with what is happening in their world. We also want to make sure our customers are always in touch. With Low Balance services they can ask friends for balance or to call them or to pay for their call – or even ask Warid to extend credit. Phone Back Up provides users with access to their contacts at any time – and is really helpful if they lose their mobile or mistakenly delete contact details. We think these services will have great appeal and we are proud to be broadening the types of service our customers can enjoy from us.”

Telemune will be managing the services end-to-end and apart from deploying the solutions, managing operations and ensuring quality service and feature enhancement, Telemune will also manage content and content partners and create campaigns and promotions to drive service uptake for WAP Portal services.

Harish Bansal, CEO, Telemune said the services will add fun and utility to customers’ service experience.

“Telemune has extensive experience in delivering and managing successful WAP Portal services and we will work closely with Warid to build a popular and engaging service that is easy-to-use and offers a great range of constantly changing content. With Low Balance services, we are confident that mobile users will enjoy the new options they have to keep in touch and request credit. And Phone Back Up is a highly practical service that ensures users always have access to their contact details.”

Apart from the new services, Warid Congo also offers Warid Musik, Ezee chat, Warid Messenger, Warid World, to name a few.

 

A Look at Nigeria’s SmartWoman Initiative

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omobola
Mrs. Omobola Johnson (Image from Ynaija.com)

Launched recently by the Federal Ministry of Communication Technology, the SmartWoman Project is a mobile service aimed at empowering women in Nigeria and around the world.

SmartWoman Nigeria will allow Nigerian women to connect with one another, share their knowledge and learn from each other; and through that empower themselves. Using ICT, the project aims at helping women improve their business performance, be more efficient and effective in their jobs, and also generate new employment opportunities.

The initiative was launched in partnership with ChangeCorp, a US based social enterprise ChangeCorp and WIMBIZ.

Apart from SmartWoman Nigeria, the ministry has also partnered with Huawei in a three-day training to give over 1000 girls essential ICT skills to help them get jobs or pursue their careers.

According to the Minister of Communication Technology (FMCT), Mrs Omobola Johnson, the initiatives aim at addressing the ICT gender gap apart from just helping them get jobs and become efficient and effective in their careers. To her ICT has an unlimited potential to significantly contribute to upping women’s social welfare.

“‎Nigeria’s ICT sector has increased tremendously in the past 12 years growing at 20 per cent annually, making it the fastest growing in the country and women must be part of the revolution,” Mrs Omobola Johnson said.

Her ministry aims to see more women and girls embracing ICTS so as they reach their potential and add to the country’s economic development.

Rwanda’s New Online Archive Becomes a First in the Region

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Rwandapedia

The project dubbed, Rwandapedia is aimed to collect information about the country and put it online in a format similar to Wikipedia.

A report by Rwanda Focus shows that the project which was primarily aimed to put up government records, is now being populated by other sectors.

The site allows users to contribute to topics and even upload images on the site. This is the same format embraced by Wikipedia.

The project was initiated by the Office of the Government Spokesperson and funded by the African Development Bank.

“It is Rwandan developed, owned, and managed. In the past, information would come from non-Rwandans. Along with putting our traditions on display, Rwandapedia allows us to tell our own story, our own way, as fully and honestly as we can,” Foreign Minister and Government Spokesperson, Louis Mushikiwabo said.

“With technology, we have the opportunity to do this online, through the audio and video files,” Joel Ndoli Pierre, Rwandapedia Project Lead said.

Kenyan Government to automate its payment by April 2014

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Online payments

The Kenyan government will not be taking physical cash payments come April 2014. This is according to the head of state, H.E President Uhuru Kenyatta.

The president announced this directive as he officially opened the IBM Research Lab in Nairobi Kenya. The president said that the new directive is in line with the government policy in embracing technology.

Kenyatta said that the government will put up a website where all government payments for licenses, applications, and fees will be paid through the single system.

The move is expected to expedite payments to various government bodies while eliminating the threat of corruption that have been synonymous with government offices.

It is early to say what kind of system will be put into place or whether private companies will be allowed to bid.

Government online systems have been on the receiving end, negatively due to their slow or even offline modes. The Kenya Revenue Authority site has been accepting online applications of its Personal Identification Number but users often complain that the site is usually offline or terribly slow.

The new directive by the president will usher Kenya into one of the few countries in Africa where payments are made exclusively online.

South Africa Can Now Enjoy The Nokia Lumia 1020

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The Nokia Lumia 1020 is now available in the South African market, this attractive device has interesting imaging features that are hard to ignore.

This device carries a second generation 41 megapixel sensor (yes 41) and is designed to reinvent zoom by enabling the users to discover more detail than the eye can see, with a new application called Nokia Camera, which makes it easy for anyone to take professional quality images.

This phone has a feature called the dual capture which allows the user to take high resolution 38 megapixel image and that’s not all, it has endless editing opportunities. It also  creates a 5 megapixel picture that is easy to share to social networks with Windows Phone 8.

The Nokia Lumia 1020′s 41 megapixel sensor features leading ZEISS optics with six physical lenses; with this getting crystal clear photos is inevitable even in low lights.

Adding to that, the Nokia Rich Recording will capture blur free videos with stereo sound as it handles sound pressure level six times louder than conventional smartphones.

The personal nature of Windows Phone makes it the perfect platform for the Nokia Lumia 1020, showcasing live images on the Start screen with the Photos tile, quick sharing to social networks, and easy access to files across a number of devices with SkyDrive. With the dedicated camera button, Windows Phone is designed with imaging in mind.

Let’s call it awakening the sleeping giant, Nokia has proved that it equally has good devices to take it back to smartphone competition league. Let’s wait and see how the consumer market of South Africa will place this device.

Kenya Government’s Huduma Centre Goes Live

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hudumaPresident Uhuru Kenyatta  has today unveiled a state of the art public service centre to serve as a one stop centre for provision of e-government services.
Unveiled a few minutes ago at the Teleposta towers, the  centre is open to computer literate Kenyans to access e-government service such as title deeds, business permits, tax filing, report corruption cases, duplicate national ID’s  and many others via an online portal dubbed e-Huduma.
Set to be launched across the country, the centres will provide services offered by various government ministries, departments and agencies and have been integrated with Posta Pay payment gateway for users to pay for the services simply. Users will need an ID to access the services.

Some of the services to be offered are listed in the table below.

RECOMMENDED SERVICES MINISTRY/COUNTY/AGENCY
1. Title Deed Search Ministry Land, Housing and Urban Development
2. Title Deed Issuance
3. Single Business Permit Nairobi City County
4. Seasonal Parking Tickets
5. Registration of welfare groups Office of the Attorney General and Department of Justice
6. Search and Registration of Business names
7. Student Loan application and Loan repayment Services Higher Education Loans Board 
8. Duplicate Identification Cards Ministry of Interior and National Government coordination
9. Late Registration of Births
10. Reporting of Corruption and Breach of CODES Ethics and Corruption Commission
11. PIN Application & Registration Kenya Revenue Authority
12. Online filing of Tax Returns & Payments
13. Tax  Compliance Certificate
14. Drivers License and Log Book Search
15. Status of Pensions Application Pensions Department
16. NSSF Registration applications National Social Security Fund
17. NSSF Member Statements and Benefits Claims
18. NHIF Registration, Claims, Account Queries and List of accredited institutions National Health Insurance Fund
19 Filing a Review and or addressing complaints in Procurement and disposal.

Chinese NGO Sponsors 600 Zambian Youth For Technical Skills Training

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Many African youth are unemployed

Some 600 youth in Zambia are set to receive employment in addition to various technical skills training following an agreement that The National Project for Poverty Reduction (NPPR) signed with a Chinese NGO.

While reports say that the youth are pursuing courses in power electrical, general agriculture, plumbing and metal fabrication, others are already admitted to various trades colleges in the country are pursuing training in food production, Information Communication Technology (ICT), cosmetology and auto mechanics, noted NPPR Board Chair Ngosa Simbyakula during the launch of the project held in Lusaka.

The launch came at a time reports have revealed the increasing trend of Zambian youth being unemployed. Nevertheless, while the NPPR is aware that the tasks of creating employment cannot be tackled by the Government alone, Simbyakula noted that the involvement of majority stake holders complimented by partnership with International agencies, NGOs, foundations is essential if the goals and potential of many youth and women in Zambia are to be realized using skills training in various fields.

Yet, over 80 per cent of the 13 million Zambians especially the youth under 35 years, lack regular  sources of income with concerts that the government has not created jobs for youth.

During the launch in which at least 50 youth that were studying at Lusaka Business and Technical College received the NPPR and CFPD scholarships, he emphasized that it was the intention of his team to contribute to the transformation of Zambia’s economy by focusing on skills development in sectors with high employment opportunities.

Thus, the NPPR has set its eyes on promoting skills development for youth and women in agriculture, manufacturing, tourism and construction sectors to enable them to earn a living.

Also during the launch, the NPPR executive secretary Antony Kasandwe noted that technical and vocational skills training are essential in the country’s development process, adding that to achieve necessary material growth, to make youth and women constructive, the initiative has its focus on empowerment through skills training.

To support the Government’s industrialization efforts the NPPR is now expanding access to skills training to address the inadequate supply of requisite skills that target areas such as Tourism, Agriculture Construction and Manufacturing.

 

Organizations Join Hands To Stop Online Child Abuse

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online child abuse

 

African Risk Mitigation (ARM) leader in security distribution in partnership with NetClean are in a mission to fight against contents of child sexual; abuse images.
The two companies will be working together with ISPs companies and law enforcement across Africa to stop the handling, downloading or distribution of child sexual abuse content.

Statistic done by the UN estimates that 750 000 people are looking at child sexual abuse content online at any given time.

“Child sexual abuse images are not pornography,” explains Christian Berg, CEO of NetClean. “They are images of assault, physical abuse, torture and rape committed on children under the age of 18. They can involve photos or photomontages, videos or gifs; all depicting rape and torture. Child pornography is not the correct word to use. It has nothing to do with porn. Porn is consent between two adults who knows what they are doing. This is something completely different.”

The media say that most child sexual abuse arrests have been linked to Canada, the UK, the US, western Europe and Australasia, but now South Africa ha itself involved as well as any other country.

Even Google and international ISPs have done so many investments worth millions to help stop the proliferation of child abuse images on the net.

The images are however are not only spread through public internet addresses, but also Digital cameras, the Internet and USB sticks make production, distribution and storage even easier. So while the efforts of Google and the other Internet companies are to be applauded, they are merely a drop in the ocean.

NetClean was formed in 2003 with the idea of making use of the latest technical inventions to curb the spread of this nuisance. Today, NetClean’s products have millions of users worldwide. Law enforcement agencies in more than 30 countries use NetClean Analyze to conduct their investigations.

NetClean products consists of:

  • NetClean WhiteBox, ideal for ISPs as it blocks child sexual abuse content on the Internet and uses lists from Interpol and the IWF to filter http addresses.
  • NetClean ProActive, for businesses, stopping child sexual abuse images and videos by identifying the actual content, regardless of source or transfer protocol, including USB devices
  • NetClean Analyze, which is provided free to law enforcement authorities.

Microsoft Introduces ‘Microsoft City Next’ To Decrease SA’s Socio-Economic Challenges

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Microsoft SA wants to make the best of technology to create new cities.  The technologies that the software giant is looking to work with include cloud technology, mobile devices, data analytics, and social networks.
The initiative called ‘Microsoft CityNext’, main idea is to use the current cities’ technology infrastructures to connect functions like energy, water, infrastructure, transportation, public safety, tourism, recreation, education, health and social services, and government administration. An important element of the programme will be a focus on helping cities create small businesses, develop skills and reduce unemployment.
What inspired Microsoft is the fact that the cities currently hold a large number of people, more than it can handle. Which make resources scarce and life unbearable yet it is in this places that South Africa’s GDP is generated.

Microsoft SA MD Mteto Nyati said: “The bigger picture is that cities can become the engine-rooms that will drive Government’s National Development Plan objective of eliminating poverty and reducing inequality by 2030.”

One potential Microsoft CityNext customer, the Western Cape Government,  is investing in more modern technology capabilities to help it operate more efficiently and to give services that enable better interaction with its citizens.

Lance Williams, chief information officer of Western Cape Government, said that the ultimate beneficiaries of a more sophisticated technology infrastructure would be the citizens of cities, who would enjoy more responsive and transparent government services, many delivered online.

A key focus area for Microsoft CityNext is safety and security,  not forgetting  crisis management.

Many of the socio-economic programmes contained within Microsoft CityNext link to Microsoft’s 4Afrika initiative, which was launched this year to help accelerate Africa’s economic development and to improve its global competitiveness by empowering African youth, entrepreneurs, developers and business.

“If we can work with cities to help small companies to succeed in the first 3-5 years of their lives, we will help grow job creation and economic development significantly. This will have a major impact on the well-being of cities and entire communities,” said Nyati.

Microsoft, he said, would also work with its network of solution partners to help cities transform their operations and infrastructure; engage their citizens and businesses; and accelerate innovation and opportunity.

“According to IDC’s Smart City Maturity Model, many cities are now in the first stages of implementing smart technology solutions as part of a 10- to 15-year path to realising full transformation potential. The result of ‘smart city’ initiatives will ultimately enable cities to attract businesses and citizens to build more vibrant city landscapes and competitive economies,” he says.

Cisco Launches First Data Centre And Cloud Solution

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cisco

Business in Kenya are bound to unlock new ways to innovation and profit through the newly launched Application-centric infrastructure from Cisco.

“A new paradigm shift driven by cloud, mobility and big data is redefining IT, with the web-based economy shifting to an app-based economy,” said Sabrina Dar, Cisco General Manager East Africa.

“Today’s data center and cloud application and infrastructure requirements call for a new approach. We need solutions that are simple and that cut across different technological and organizational silos without compromising on scale, responsiveness, security and end-to-end visibility. We need solutions that deliver network automation and programmability, and we need models that are designed from the ground up to be explicitly application-centric,”she added.

Complemented by associated professional services and an open partner ecosystem, Cisco is now able to deliver the first data center and cloud solution built around the needs of applications.

Cisco’s launch comes as technology-focused market intelligence firm IDC predicted that worldwide service providers will continue to drive IT spend and will account for a quarter of the entire datacenter space by 2016.

The challenges facing data-centers was highlighted in Cisco’s recent Global Cloud Index, saying that annual global data center IP traffic, will reach 6.6 zettabytes by the end of 2016. Global data center IP traffic,by 2016, will reach 554 exabytes per month (up from 146 in 2011), at an annual growth rate of 31 percent.

In 2016, about two-thirds of all data center workloads will be processed in the cloud, with annual global cloud IP traffic rising to 4.3 zettabytes. This amounts to around 355 exabytes per month (up from 57 in 2011). Overall, cloud IP traffic will have grown at a CAGR of 44 percent from 2011 to 2016.

The ACI system can reduce application deployment from months to minutes by unifying physical and virtual networks and offering unprecedented security, compliance and real-time visibility at system, tenant, and application levels.

Furthermore, Cisco data center switching innovations allow the network to rapidly respond to application development teams while delivering up to 75 percent total cost of ownership savings compared to merchant, silicon-based switches and software-only network virtualization solutions.

“IT leaders want innovations that enable application automation for rapid deployment of infrastructure and dynamic adjustment to real-time events, integrated visibility with telemetry for performance monitoring and resilient recovery from failure. They also demand optimized performance across diverse applications needs with simplicity and control,” said Sabrina.

Cisco’s innovation also addresses other issues like static and inflexible security models, the operational headache of multiple management points, proprietary licensing models, software version control issues, and consistency across multiple hypervisor environments.

Cisco’s ACI comprises the Application Policy Infrastructure Controller (APIC), enhanced versions of the NX-OS operating system and the new Nexus 9000 portfolio.

M-farm App Helps Kenyan Farmers Monitor Markets

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Farmers in Kenya know their value in the agricultural sector and have chosen to embrace technology and have began using M-farm.  It has been noted in the by ICT4Ag Summit that was hosted in Kigali, Rwanda, that technology has made a radical difference in the agriculture production in the East African region.

M-farm has enabled many small scale commercial farmers to get information on the retail price of their produce; it ha also them to directly engage with manufacturers as well as link up with potential buyers of their stock.

It had been established that in the past the farmers had to go directly to these parties to source information about the product, but this has been nade easier thanks to the app. With the ability to link to a homepage through a mobile app farmers are able to stay ahead of trends and use credible information to make critical business decisions, including the right time to go to market with produce.

As for Safaricom subscribers, the service can be used by sending an SMS to the number 2025. The service is also available to android users in the app store under the Utility category.

 

 

Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda Unveil A Joint Visa

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The Eastern Africa spirit of unity is bound to grow stronger as Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda are now planning to introduce a joint East African visa from 1 January 2014.
The Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda Ministers and High Commissioner officially made the announcement of the new cross-border visa this week at the Rwanda Development Board Stand at this year’s World Travel Market held annually at the Excel London.

The Visa is just not about it all; at the moment  each country in East Africa  has their own separate passports, so Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda are partnering so as to make traveling across the border simpler which will be very convenient for holidaymakers as well as creating a new brand for the whole region in turn opening up opportunities for joint marketing campaigns.

Uganda’s Minister of Tourism, Wildlife and Antiquities of Uganda Hon Dr Maria Mutagamba, commented: “Visitors to our region will benefit from the new, more convenient multi-nation visa and will see the improvements in security, immigration systems, infrastructure and capacity building that this system brings.”

“Our three Presidents are strong believers in Regional integration, including in the management of our tourism assets. They changed Rwanda to coordinate the transition to our single tourism visa. Six months later, we are happy to announce the utilization of this objective. Single visa, one destination,” noted the High Commissioner of Rwanda to the United Kingdom, His Excellency Williams Nkurunziza.

It was once predicted that East Africa will become one country, now it is possible to make a prediction that the Eastern Africa region is bound to blossom. With the kind of growth in technology that most of the participating countries is undergoing, it is clear that soon enough the region will be the business and investment magnet in the coming years.

KEMP Technologies Introduces New Virtual Load Balancer Technology

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KEMP Technologies has introduced in the market, two new virtual load balancers; the Virtual LoadMaster (VLM) 200, 2000, and 5000, to the local market.

With these new Virtual Load Balancers, customers will have their application performance increased,enabling them to deploy virtual ADC’s  with greater agility for workloads where hardware appliances were traditionally the only option.

Releasing these powerful virtual ADCs cements KEMP’s position as the leading application-centric ADC vendor.

The VLMs’ high performance is capable of scaling up to 5Gbps throughput and up to 10,000 SSL transactions per second (TPS), fully leveraging the network optimization capabilities of VM hypervisors and high performing x86 server platforms. The VLMs deliver the same comprehensive core feature set available in the entire LoadMaster family of ADCs while offering the flexibility of virtualization technology.

So what’s this about the balancer:

  • Core Features: The VLM provides full Layer 7 ADC functionality including content switching, SSL offloading, application health checking, session affinity, caching, compression, intrusion prevention, pre-authentication and single sign-on.
  • High Performance: Scalability to 5Gbps throughput and 10,000 SSL TPS provides customers with a viable virtual ADC alternative to mainstream hardware solutions.
  • Global Server Load Balancing (GSLB): GSLB expands intelligent load balancing and application delivery beyond a single site to geographically dispersed locations via algorithms capable of selecting the best suited data center for client requests.
  • Optimized Experience: Application session affinity delivers users continuous to connections to the most appropriate endpoint to ensure an optimal user experience.

“KEMP’s deep understanding of the application-centric market and ADC technology has led us to become a prevalent solution providing enterprise administrators with the flexibility and turnaround time needed to meet the needs of line of business applications,” says Peter Melerud, EVP of Product Management at KEMP Technologies. “KEMP’s focus on virtual-based solutions and ability to meet customer requirements regardless of platform has contributed to KEMP Technologies being the 3rd most shipped ADC in the world in Q2 2013.”

This international recognition translates into local value for operations that have to keep up with the changing dynamics of growing markets explains George Zervos, VP Sales EMEA & Emerging Markets, KEMP Technologies.

The VLM-200, VLM-2000 and VLM-5000 are currently available to download.

Konga Nominated For Top Marketing World Awards | Wants to be Nigeria’s Online Retailer Of The Year

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Marketing World Awards 2013Online retailer, Konga.com has had a great year. In this year, it celebrated its one year anniversary, was verified by Facebook and Twitter and launched its offline pick-up points and recently, it unveiled a huge warehouse.

Like that wasn’t enough, Konga has announced that it will be working with Samsung to make shopping for home appliances easier. The promo dubbed Creating Happier Homes Promo , valid only in Nigeria, is targeted at making home appliances like Microwaves, washing machines and Fridges available to families at Mega discounts with a lot of attached freebies and shopping vouchers.

This is promo is similar to one Samsung is doing in East Africa dubbed Jaza Keja-Swahili for furnish your house.

With all these on its plate, Konga will not end the year empty-handed. The startup has been nominated in four categories in this year’s Marketing World Awards (MWA) set to be held on November 8, 2013 at the beautiful Intercontinental Hotel, Victoria Island. The categories include Online Retailer of the year, Best Use of Social Media, Best Company in Customer Care and Emerging Brand of the Year or Fastest growing brand.

The MWA is a platform for the Marketing Industry to demonstrate and celebrate advances made in the key areas of digital,  experiential, media, stewardship, efficiency, innovation, corporate social responsibility and creativity. It will be a true celebration of the exceptional work of marketing professionals over the past twelve months.

Themed “Celebrating brands that work passionately & timelessly” MWA will celebrate brands like Konga.com, Etisalat, Guinesss, Samsung, Techno, Toyota, etc that have powered marketing innovations in Nigeria.

Zomato Raises $ 37 Million From Sequoia Capital & Info Edge For South Africa Expansion | Launches in Durban

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Online restaurant  guide, Zomato has today raised $37 million from Sequoia Capital and its existing investors, Info Edge and launched operations in Durban, South Africa.

The fresh round of  funding  of  $37 million from  Sequoia Capital and existing investors  Info  Edge takes Zomato’s  total  funding  to    over $53 million as it had earlier raised  $16.5  million from Info  Edge over four rounds of  funding.

Speaking about the round, Deepinder  Goyal, Founder  and  CEO  of   Zomato said,   “This  is an exciting  phase for us. We believe that    we can disrupt restaurant search with our rich content-driven model.”

Goyal added the financing will help Zomato be the product that will change  the  way people look  for restaurant recommendations    around them.

“We are excited to partner with Sequoia Capital  as our venture  partner  to help us succeed internationally, and we can look forward to seeing Zomato  in many more countries over the  next couple of years,” Goyal added.

Apart from Durban, Zomato has also  launched opeartions in Sao Paulo Brasil, Jarkata Indonesia  and in Instanbul and Ankara, Turkey. Zomato has also expanded its services within UK from three  cities to five, with the inclusion of  Glasgow and  Edinburgh.

Pooja  Khanna, CEO of  Zomato South  Africa  said, “South Africa  has been one of our best performing markets. The market  has great  potential  with lots of  restaurants and a growing  internet  and smartphone penetration. The response from  Johannesburg,  Cape Town and Pretoria has been overwhelming  and we expect the trend to continue with    Durban.”

Zomato  believes  that menus,  pictures,  and maps are as important as reviews when it  comes down to    a    customer’s    decision-­‐ making  process  about where to  eat. It  follows a rich-content  approach to restaurant   search, and has a team that collects menu cards, clicks pictures and gets mapping  information  on its own. Reviews and  ratings  on  Zomato  are  provided  by users  from over 160,000 restaurants.

Zomato updates menu cards every three months across all restaurants, and provides updated  scanned menu cards for over 160,000 restaurants across  the 11 countries  of  its  presence.  Users can assess the platform online or download its location-aware mobile    apps for iOS, Android, Windows Phone, or Blackberry.

The New Delhi Headquartered firm was launched 5 years ago in India and employs over  600 people across  35 cities in 11 countries and gets over 15 million visits across its web and mobile platforms monthly.

 

 

 

 

Woolworths Partner With AFB To Give Kenyans The Opportunity To Shop With Credit Cards

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Woolworths has partnered with afb, a Consumer Finance company, to offer customers the opportunity to purchase goods on credit in any Woolworth’s stores in Kenya.

In the partnership, afb will be managing the Woolworths Private Label Card Programme, a customized retail card program that is tailored specifically for Woolworths customers.

Woolworths Kenya currently has 7 stores in Kenya located at the Yaya Center, Sarit Center, Village Market, Junction Mall, Galleria Mall, City Mall Nyali and The Thika Road Mall.

Woolworths Director Muchiri Wahome said: “This partnership with afb is timely and significant and will allow our customers to easily access affordable credit facilities through our stores. Experience has shown that this type of credit program can go a long way in adding value to our loyal customers.”

The Woolworths Store Card offers Woolworth’s customers an unsecured revolving credit facility that allows customers to conveniently purchase the latest quality merchandise and pay it off in 6 affordable monthly installments. Customers can apply in-store for the card and the full application process takes less than 24 hours for customers to be instantly issued with a card in the Woolworths store.

“afb is excited to partner with one of Africa’s most successful and respected retailers. This is the first such program in Kenya which we believe will revolutionize retail sales by increasing spend in Woolworths stores,” said afb’s Managing Director of Cards, Brett van Aswegen.

The availability of credit allows customers to purchase for a greater amount and more frequently than they normally would have been able to.

afb launched a general purpose retail credit card in Nairobi in April this year, that has already grown to an active customer base of over 12,000 customers and a merchant network of over 150 retail partners in Nairobi.

Managed Services Of Network Platforms Joins Cloud

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Companies are now interested in hosted services like cloud computing which is slowly collapsing, Managed Service Provider (MSP) could be the in thing as experts have said that it is now dealing with a dynamic market.

Warwick Ward-Cox is MD of Network Platforms, refers to the increased uptake of the Cloud and cost-effective connectivity as two drivers behind the push towards hosted services.

“For example a Microsoft Exchange server would require a MSP to implement and manage the server. With the move to Cloud, deployments are much quicker and there is no capital investment in terms of hardware onsite. Additional resources can be added quickly without an impact on business from a financial and disruption perspective,” he explains.

MSPs have to consider how to bill for end-user support because more services are removed from the client’s infrastructure. The Cloud has affected billing and the question of the level of control over a client’s infrastructure.

Network Platforms has aligned its service to the Cloud-based service requirements of the market. The Company offers MSP Cloud based solutions on a reseller program so it is possible to create an annuity income from these services.

Looking ahead at 2014, Ward-Cox predicts that as connectivity prices decrease and improve, the uptake will increase and supply will meet demand because ISPs have worked hard to get the hosted platforms in place.

“There is no doubt this is one of the most active and exciting areas of technology to operate in… there is a great deal to look forward to and the Cloud is not going to disappear anytime soon!,” he adds.

SA Vodacom Says Not in Talks to Acquire Botswana’s BeMobile

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South African mobile telecommunications company, Vodacom has denied information about having negotiations to a stake in Botwsana’s BeMobile.

Late last week, the media reported that the South African telecommunication company wanted to take up some of BeMobile stakes or have a technology sharing agreement.

The media report said the soon, the two companies will make a major announcement about a new deal by the end of this year, but now Vodacom has denied that any such talks are taking place.

This news leaves BeMobile in a difficult situation as it is said that the company is facing challenges most especially to compete with its more nimble private competitors and is said to be looking for a technology partner to assist it.

BeMobile’s parent company, Botswana Telecommunications Corporation (BTC) is currently working on plans for a privatization that would see a minority of its shares sold to the public.

Microsoft And Red Cross Assemble NGOs To Discuss Youth Empowement Through ICT In Kenya

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Microsoft commitment to empower the youth cannot go unnoticed as they partnered with the Kenya Red Cross Society and organized a NGO connection day today.

The event which took place in the Boma hotel Nairobi show cased a number of innovations and programs run by different Non-governmental associations that work to help fight the youth unemployment situation in Kenya.

“We believe that technology can be a powerful force that opens exciting opportunities for nonprofits to better achieve their missions and accelerate their impact,” said Microsoft.

Among the NGO’s include Kenya Internship Agencies (KIA), which work together with Net hope, who in collaboration with other international companies are working had to help students as well as recent graduates who have studied IT or Computer science, get internships that could possibly lead to employment.

This also applied to the Rockefeller Foundation, who’s headquarters are in New York, noted that the majority of the African population consists of the youth, (35 years and below) and most of them not having any source of income.

Wairmu Ngondu, of Rockefeller said that the foundation is looking at creating digital jobs that will impact one million people across Africa; as it will activate the job getting process through ICT and working with organizations to help train the youth on entrepreneurship.

Apart from KIA and Rockafeller foundation, other NGO’s present in the event were Kenya Private Sector Allience (KEPSA), Homeboyz Foundation; who will be launching the Y-hub at the end of this month, the Red Cross Society of Kenya and the Kenya Youth Enterprise Fund.

” Youth empowerment is an essential driving factor in sustaining development in today’s evolving world. NGO’s together with different partners can introduce IT training for their youth programs and encourage the larger community to assimilate such technologies into their daily lives,” said Microsoft.

The Psychological Price of Entrepreneurship

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This article was written by for INC.com.

She owns its copyright and we are sharing it among our entrepreneur community to pass down the lesson’s she intended her readers to learn.

No one said building a company was easy. But it’s time to be honest about how brutal it really is–and the price so many founders secretly pay.

By all counts and measures, Bradley Smith is an unequivocal business success. He’s CEO of Rescue One Financial, an Irvine, California-based financial services company that had sales of nearly $32 million last year. Smith’s company has grown some 1,400 percent in the last three years, landing it at No. 310 on this year’s Inc. 500. So you might never guess that just five years ago, Smith was on the brink of financial ruin–and mental collapse.

Back in 2008, Smith was working long hours counseling nervous clients about getting out of debt. But his calm demeanor masked a secret: He shared their fears. Like them, Smith was sinking deeper and deeper into debt. He had driven himself far into the red starting–of all things–a debt-settlement company. “I was hearing how depressed and strung out my clients were, but in the back of my mind I was thinking to myself, I’ve got twice as much debt as you do,” Smith recalls.

He had cashed in his 401(k) and maxed out a $60,000 line of credit. He had sold the Rolex he bought with his first-ever paycheck during an earlier career as a stockbroker. And he had humbled himself before his father–the man who raised him on maxims such as “money doesn’t grow on trees” and “never do business with family”–by asking for $10,000, which he received at 5 percent interest after signing a promissory note.

Smith projected optimism to his co-founders and 10 employees, but his nerves were shot. “My wife and I would share a bottle of $5 wine for dinner and just kind of look at each other,” Smith says. “We knew we were close to the edge.” Then the pressure got worse: The couple learned they were expecting their first child. “There were sleepless nights, staring at the ceiling,” Smith recalls. “I’d wake up at 4 in the morning with my mind racing, thinking about this and that, not being able to shut it off, wondering, When is this thing going to turn?” After eight months of constant anxiety, Smith’s company finally began making money.

Successful entrepreneurs achieve hero status in our culture. We idolize the Mark Zuckerbergs and the Elon Musks. And we celebrate the blazingly fast growth of the Inc. 500 companies. But many of those entrepreneurs, like Smith, harbor secret demons: Before they made it big, they struggled through moments of near-debilitating anxiety and despair–times when it seemed everything might crumble.

“It’s like a man riding a lion. People think, ‘This guy’s brave.’ And he’s thinking, ‘How the hell did I get on a lion, and how do I keep from getting eaten?”

Until recently, admitting such sentiments was taboo. Rather than showing vulnerability, business leaders have practiced what social psychiatrists call impression management–also known as “fake it till you make it.” Toby Thomas, CEO of EnSite Solutions (No. 188 on the Inc. 500), explains the phenomenon with his favorite analogy: a man riding a lion. “People look at him and think, This guy’s really got it together! He’s brave!” says Thomas. “And the man riding the lion is thinking, How the hell did I get on a lion, and how do I keep from getting eaten?”

Not everyone who walks through darkness makes it out. In January, well-known founder Jody Sherman, 47, of the e-commerce site Ecomom took his own life. His death shook the start-up community. It also reignited a discussion about entrepreneurship and mental health that began two years earlier after the suicide of Ilya Zhitomirskiy, the 22-year-old co-founder of Diaspora, a social networking site.

Lately, more entrepreneurs have begun speaking out about their internal struggles in an attempt to combat the stigma on depression and anxiety that makes it hard for sufferers to seek help. In a deeply personal post called “When Death Feels Like a Good Option,” Ben Huh, the CEO of the Cheezburger Network humor websites, wrote about his suicidal thoughts following a failed start-up in 2001. Sean Percival, a former MySpace vice president and co-founder of the children’s clothing start-up Wittlebee, penned a piece called “When It’s Not All Good, Ask for Help” on his website. “I was to the edge and back a few times this past year with my business and own depression,” he wrote. “If you’re about to lose it, please contact me.”

Brad Feld, a managing director of the Foundry Group, started blogging in October about his latest episode of depression. The problem wasn’t new–the prominent venture capitalist had struggled with mood disorders throughout his adult life–and he didn’t expect much of a response. But then came the emails. Hundreds of them. Many were from entrepreneurs who had also wrestled with anxiety and despair. (For more of Feld’s thoughts on depression, see his column, “Surviving the Dark Nights of the Soul,” in Inc.’s July/August issue.)”If you saw the list of names, it would surprise you a great deal,” says Feld. “They are very successful people, very visible, very charismatic-;yet they’ve struggled with this silently. There’s a sense that they can’t talk about it, that it’s a weakness or a shame or something. They feel like they’re hiding, which makes the whole thing worse.”

If you run a business, that probably all sounds familiar. It’s a stressful job that can create emotional turbulence. For starters, there’s the high risk of failure. Three out of four venture-backed start-ups fail, according to research by Shikhar Ghosh, a Harvard Business School lecturer. Ghosh also found that more than 95 percent of start-ups fall short of their initial projections.

Entrepreneurs often juggle many roles and face countless setbacks–lost customers, disputes with partners, increased competition, staffing problems–all while struggling to make payroll. “There are traumatic events all the way along the line,” says psychiatrist and former entrepreneur Michael A. Freeman, who is researching mental health and entrepreneurship.

Complicating matters, new entrepreneurs often make themselves less resilient by neglecting their health. They eat too much or too little. They don’t get enough sleep. They fail to exercise. “You can get into a start-up mode, where you push yourself and abuse your body,” Freeman says. “That can trigger mood vulnerability.”

So it should come as little surprise that entrepreneurs experience more anxiety than employees. In the latest Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, 34 percent of entrepreneurs–4 percentage points more than other workers–reported they were worried. And 45 percent of entrepreneurs said they were stressed, 3 percentage points more than other workers.

But it may be more than a stressful job that pushes some founders over the edge. According to researchers, many entrepreneurs share innate character traits that make them more vulnerable to mood swings. “People who are on the energetic, motivated, and creative side are both more likely to be entrepreneurial and more likely to have strong emotional states,” says Freeman. Those states may include depression, despair, hopelessness, worthlessness, loss of motivation, and suicidal thinking.

Call it the downside of being up. The same passionate dispositions that drive founders heedlessly toward success can sometimes consume them. Business owners are “vulnerable to the dark side of obsession,” suggest researchers from the Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Australia. They conducted interviews with founders for a study about entrepreneurial passion. The researchers found that many subjects displayed signs of clinical obsession, including strong feelings of distress and anxiety, which have “the potential to lead to impaired functioning,” they wrote in a paper published in the Entrepreneurship Research Journal in April.

Reinforcing that message is John Gartner, a practicing psychologist who teaches at Johns Hopkins University Medical School. In his book The Hypomanic Edge: The Link Between (a Little) Craziness and (a Lot of) Success in America, Gartner argues that an often-overlooked temperament–hypomania–may be responsible for some entrepreneurs’ strengths as well as their flaws.

A milder version of mania, hypomania often occurs in the relatives of manic-depressives and affects an estimated 5 percent to 10 percent of Americans. “If you’re manic, you think you’re Jesus,” says Gartner. “If you’re hypomanic, you think you’re God’s gift to technology investing. We’re talking about different levels of grandiosity but the same symptoms.”

Gartner theorizes that there are so many hypomanics–and so many entrepreneurs–in the U.S. because our country’s national character rose on waves of immigration. “We’re a self-selected population,” he says. “Immigrants have unusual ambition, energy, drive, and risk tolerance, which lets them take a chance on moving for a better opportunity. These are biologically based temperament traits. If you seed an entire continent with them, you’re going to get a nation of entrepreneurs.”

Though driven and innovative, hypomanics are at much higher risk for depression than the general population, notes Gartner. Failure can spark these depressive episodes, of course, but so can anything that slows a hypomanic’s momentum. “They’re like border collies–they have to run,” says Gartner. “If you keep them inside, they chew up the furniture. They go crazy; they just pace around. That’s what hypomanics do. They need to be busy, active, overworking.”

“Entrepreneurs have struggled silently. There’s a sense that they can’t talk about it, that it’s a weakness.”

No matter what your psychological makeup, big setbacks in your business can knock you flat. Even experienced entrepreneurs have had the rug pulled out from under them. Mark Woeppel launched Pinnacle Strategies, a management consulting firm, in 1992. In 2009, his phone stopped ringing.

Caught in the global financial crisis, his customers were suddenly more concerned with survival than with boosting their output. Sales plummeted 75 percent. Woeppel laid off his half-dozen employees. Before long, he had exhausted his assets: cars, jewelry, anything that could go. His supply of confidence was dwindling, too. “As CEO, you have this self-image–you’re the master of the universe,” he says. “Then all of a sudden, you are not.”

Woeppel stopped leaving his house. Anxious and low on self-esteem, he started eating too much–and put on 50 pounds. Sometimes he sought temporary relief in an old addiction: playing the guitar. Locked in a room, he practiced solos by Stevie Ray Vaughan and Chet Atkins. “It was something I could do just for the love of doing it,” he recalls. “Then there was nothing but me, the guitar, and the peace.”

Through it all, he kept working to develop new services. He just hoped his company would hang on long enough to sell them. In 2010, customers started to return. Pinnacle scored its biggest-ever contract, with an aerospace manufacturer, on the basis of a white paper Woeppel had written during the downturn. Last year, Pinnacle’s revenue hit $7 million. Sales are up more than 5,000 percent since 2009, earning the company a spot at No. 57 on this year’s Inc. 500.

Woeppel says he’s more resilient now, tempered by tough times. “I used to be like, ‘My work is me,’ ” he says. “Then you fail. And you find out that your kids still love you. Your wife still loves you. Your dog still loves you.”

But for many entrepreneurs, the battle wounds never fully heal. That was the case for John Pope, CEO of WellDog, a Laramie, Wyoming-based energy technology firm. On Dec. 11, 2002, Pope had exactly $8.42 in the bank. He was 90 days late on his car payment. He was 75 days behind on the mortgage. The IRS had filed a lien against him. His home phone, cell phone, and cable TV had all been turned off. In less than a week, the natural-gas company was scheduled to suspend service to the house he shared with his wife and daughters. Then there would be no heat. His company was expecting a wire transfer from the oil company Shell, a strategic investor, after months of negotiations had ended with a signed 380-page contract. So Pope waited.

The wire arrived the next day. Pope–along with his company–was saved. Afterward, he made a list of all the ways in which he had financially overreached. “I’m going to remember this,” he recalls thinking. “It’s the farthest I’m willing to go.”

Since then, WellDog has taken off: In the past three years, sales grew more than 3,700 percent, to $8 million, making the company No. 89 on the Inc. 500. But emotional residue from the years of tumult still lingers. “There’s always that feeling of being overextended, of never being able to relax,” says Pope. “You end up with a serious confidence problem. You feel like every time you build up security, something happens to take it away.”

Pope sometimes catches himself emotionally overreacting to small things. It’s a behavior pattern that reminds him of posttraumatic stress disorder. “Something happens, and you freak out about it,” he says. “But the scale of the problem is a lot less than the scale of your emotional reaction. That just comes with the scar tissue of going through these things.”

“If you’re manic, you think you’re Jesus. If you’re hypomanic, you think you’re God’s gift to technology investing.”John Gartner

Though launching a company will always be a wild ride, full of ups and downs, there are things entrepreneurs can do to help keep their lives from spiraling out of control, say experts. Most important, make time for your loved ones, suggests Freeman. “Don’t let your business squeeze out your connections with human beings,” he says. When it comes to fighting off depression, relationships with friends and family can be powerful weapons. And don’t be afraid to ask for help–see a mental health professional if you are experiencing symptoms of significant anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder, or depression.

Freeman also advises that entrepreneurs limit their financial exposure. When it comes to assessing risk, entrepreneurs’ blind spots are often big enough to drive a Mack truck through, he says. The consequences can rock not only your bank account but also your stress levels. So set a limit for how much of your own money you’re prepared to invest. And don’t let friends and family kick in more than they can afford to lose.

Cardiovascular exercise, a healthful diet, and adequate sleep all help, too. So does cultivating an identity apart from your company. “Build a life centered on the belief that self-worth is not the same as net worth,” says Freeman. “Other dimensions of your life should be part of your identity.” Whether you’re raising a family, sitting on the board of a local charity, building model rockets in the backyard, or going swing dancing on weekends, it’s important to feel successful in areas unrelated to work.

The ability to reframe failure and loss can also help leaders maintain good mental health. “Instead of telling yourself, ‘I failed, the business failed, I’m a loser,’ ” says Freeman, “look at the data from a different perspective: Nothing ventured, nothing gained. Life is a constant process of trial and error. Don’t exaggerate the experience.”

Last, be open about your feelings–don’t mask your emotions, even at the office, suggests Brad Feld. When you are willing to be emotionally honest, he says, you can connect more deeply with the people around you. “When you deny yourself and you deny what you’re about, people can see through that,” says Feld. “Willingness to be vulnerable is very powerful for a leader.”

Written by Jessica Bruder for INC.com

Kudus Initiates Interactive Services For Namibian Digital Broadcasting Programme

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 Exset pioneers of TV ecosystems for emerging markets,has made it public that Namibia’s Kudus Technology has developed monetisation applications that can be implemented by Namibian Broadcasting Corporation (NBC) using Exset’s Digital Monetisation System (DMS).

Mr.Albertus Aaocchhamub, Director General of NBC said: “We wish Exset and Kudos the best and feel that this endeavour will bridge the gap between technology, government and monetisation.”

Supplied by Exset, Kudus has worked with DMS in order to demonstrate applications that can be implemented by NBC over digital broadcast networks.

“We compiled a questionnaire to get feedback on the DMS Namibian pages at these demonstrations. The result of the questionnaire indicated that the general public is very enthusiastic and eager about DMS Namibia pages. In addition, businesses couldn’t wait to provide their services on the system as to them it showed a much more effective way to promote their product to those who don’t have internet and newspaper access,” said Himeezembi Kahorongo, CEO of Kudus Technology.

Being the first in Africa, DMS will allow governments, network operators and broadcasters to engage with the implementation of digital broadcast services by doing away with problem of legalizing. Encouraging interactive services, DMS allows operators to monetise not only through low-cost TV service subscription but additionally through selling interactive services using a variety of revenue share models.

Kahorongo adds, “We’re very pleased to be the first in Africa to develop our own applications using DMS. While currently at the demonstration stage, we believe that interactive services that provide both entertainment and a TV-based information platform are very important in the drive towards digital by broadcasters like NBC.”

Andrew Pons, Director of Marketing, Exset, had this to say: “Across Africa the TV screen offers the most low-cost way of reaching populations on the wrong side of the digital divide. In turn, DMS offers the way to monetise those deployments by providing access to the TV screen to governments, magazines, major brands, teleshopping services and more. Exset is proud of the technology that it has developed and the fact it will allow the monetisation of digital TV services where previously impossible.”

Andrew Pons is hosting a panel session at major trade show and conference Africacast in Cape Town from 12-14th November.

VC4Africa Platform Secures Over $12 Million in Funding for Over 90 Companies

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VC4ALogoAfrica’s investor and entrepreneur network VC4Africa has today announced that it has raised over $12 million in funding for 92 companies listed on its platform, making it the largest venture capital network on the continent.

The findings released in  survey byVC4Africa was conducted online with over 800 entrepreneurs participating. Though just 160 entrepreneurs responded, a 20% response rate, the platform found that 92 of the 160 ventures had secured nearly $12,000,000 in funding.

The report also found that early stage companies registered with VC4Africa secured USD $80,000 in funding vs. expansion companies that secured USD $237,000. The report also shows that there is about an 75/25 split for Commercial vs. Grant funding the companies have been able to secure to date, indicating that 75% of the ventures that join VC4Africa are pre-revenue startups while 25% join as ventures seeking growth and expansion capital and by the second operating year, 64% of the ventures had succeeded in generating revenue.

The survey also indicates companies registered on VC4Africa employed  over 2,200 this year compared to over 440 people last year.

VC4Africa’s vision is to enable African entrepreneurs and investors to find each other online. VC4Africa aspires to become the preeminent social network for entrepreneurs and investors focused specifically on innovative business opportunities across the African continent.

You can read the full report here.