The free reign of pirates
Kidnap: The ugly side of internet penetration
Matters miscellaneous
Endless wait for the National ID Card
Endless wait for the National ID Card
Magical side of growing Nigeria’s economy
What publicists, PR firms should know about YouTube
Nigeria as dump ground for all devices
Whither the Rural Telephony project?
On the Microsoft Imagine Cup
Can Lagos be a smart city? (4)
Can Lagos be a smart city? (3)
Can Lagos be a smart city? (2)
Can Lagos be a smart city?
Back to NCC’s draft wiretap law
Revisiting NCC’s draft wiretap regulation
Hey there! Have you ported?
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SubscribeMobile number portability now live
AS I wrote in the last take of this column, mobile number portability (MNP) service is now live in Nigeria, after a public launch of the service in Lagos last Monday at an event powered by telecoms regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission.
Mobile number portability as multi-edged sword
BY the time this column comes your way next week, Mobile Number Portability (MNP) service would be live in Nigeria. The service was supposed to be launched a month ago, but for some reasons, the industry regulator, Nigerian Communications Commission forwarded the planned launch from the initial March 22 date to April 22.
Scrap non-IT compliant MDAs first
THE information technology revolution that is gradually achieving traction in the country is not only commendable, but has led to optimisation and greater efficiency in the delivery of services by several government agencies.
Hackers and Africa’s survival
LAST year in this column, I wrote of Hackers, National Security and Development. Then, I merely explored how useful hackers can be to their national economies, averring that since the wheel can no longer be re-invented, all that nations desiring pre-eminence in the commanding heights of the global economy need do is empower their hackers to “steal”industrial secrets of nations that are already “there”, copy, and launch.
Live in Nigeria, work anywhere in the world
Earlier this month, penultimate Monday to be specific, the Federal Ministry of Communication Technology came out with what we now know as the Microwork for Job Creation Initiative. The first phase of the initiative is tagged NaijaCloud, and the ministry elaborated that it is “the starting point to a longer term involvement by private and public sectors in Nigeria around Microwork and Elancing technologies and capabilities.”
Insecurity and the telecoms sector
TO say that Nigeria has a security conundrum might be begging the issue; the point is that since the civil war was fought and won more than 40 years ago, Nigerians have never been under threat as much as now.
Need for one-stop shops in the ICT arena
IN bits and pieces, I am sure, we will get there. There will be problems and solutions will come, which because of who we are will generate new problems and fresh solutions, but I am convinced we will get there. Where is “there”, anyway? “There” as you know, is a country where things work. It is a country where reasonable expectations of the ordinary citizen are actualized.
Using cheap phones to fleece the poor
IT is not very often that traders here complain about products from a foreign country; in fact, it is a rare occurrence. This is because in this economy, consumers prefer foreign-made goods to locally made ones, even when the foreign ones are visibly inferior to those made locally.
Will we still have land lines like other countries?
What I have always found interesting is whether life can be lived here the way it is lived normally in other countries, especially the ones we are fond of benchmarking our situation with. In the telecommunications arena, land lines are more like it in other climes, than mobile.
Dr Adesina and N60bn phones for farmers
OURS is a very interesting country, a single fact of which I had convinced myself a very long time ago. Here, there is never a shortage of anything to tickle one’s attention, from, as they say, the sublime to the ridiculous. The interesting nature of events here is what for me defined the uniqueness of the average Nigerian, irrespective of any point of the compass he may originate from. This uniqueness also defines our economy, which has defied all doomsday predictions
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