
Well, methinks we are getting there soon. The problem lies on how quick we want technology to drive our lives or the trouble of adapting tech at the expense of traditional conventionals. Maybe we need to shift our focus on creating an enabling environment for technological advancement. On 23/06/2009, Paul Roy <roykoikai@gmail.com> wrote:
Rome was not built in a day...so goes the famous say, I would counter with the following facts besides Joburg, Cairo, Khartoum, Djibourti...(add any city better than nairobi), Nairobi is actually having far much more better infrastructure than all the other cities in Africa not counted. If I look back 3-5 years ago, what we had as infrastructure compared to now so much has changed.
I have all the reasons to believe that we will get there, though I share in your disappointement cause we started late. We have in the past been dragged by bad governance and serious corruption.
A food for thought... The cost of calling using a mobile phone in Kenya is far much more cheaper than in the US. AT&T will charge you for receiving calls and your sim expires within 30 days if you dont reload on prepaid network...
Regards, Paul.
On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 8:50 PM, aki <aki275@googlemail.com> wrote:
I'm sharing my opinion on tech sector, so any bashing welcome. :-)
I spent sometime in joburg. it was one city I wanted to know more about, and I did. arrived back and disappointed with our progress in tech sector. Eg, I could buy an HDMI cable in a smaller but well laid out city called bloomfontein than I can in nairobi. Policy makers and planners travel all the time to conferences etc. have they ever questioned themselves on how things should be? An eg : BMW have an assembly plant in SA, while we have a GM plant that mostly deals with buses!
Our tech sector is more like a inward internal operation than a global one. My impression is that of disappointment, our tech sector is very weak and has a bleak outlook besides things like micro solutions and short term stay alive injections of many solutions. We are missing a very vital link to the rest of the world. Something is wrong with our approach, method of doing things and a large portion of something holding us back. Or whatever serious proposals are most likely collecting dust. This is a disturbing trend.
We are trying to become a global player. Someone please tell me how we are achieving this?
A simple techie view....
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Roy.
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