Sunday, February 28, 2016

Samsung introduces innovation in cleaning

Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. a global leader in home appliance innovations, has announced a significant addition to its laundry lineup for 2016, which features intuitive and clever design changes that translate into big benefits for consumers. The new product showcases simple, yet truly practical innovation that changes the way consumers look at cleaning. Samsung will debut this innovation alongside its other groundbreaking home appliance introductions at Samsung Africa Forum 2016.

"Samsung’s focus is on marrying beautiful design and practical innovation to create appliances that help consumers be more efficient. Taking note of the way consumers tackle cleaning in their home, we set out to create simple yet meaningful solutions to address obstacles they often just accept as part of their routines," said Sunil Gupta, Africa Regional Product Manager, Digital Appliances. "Our latest washer reflects Samsung’s commitment to infusing refined style, thoughtful innovations and unmatched performance into everything we do."


Making the Washing Machine Work on Your Schedule
Samsung recognises that in the rush to get laundry done on a frenzied weeknight or during a crazy weekend, a stray sock may simply get overlooked in the race to get everything else done so Samsung’s simple, practical response to that is to add the industry’s first "AddWash" door to its front load washer. The Samsung AddWash Front Load Washer has a distinctive access door that makes it convenient to add any item such as a piece of forgotten laundry or extra detergent in mid-cycle without needing to drain the washer and open the main washer door.

All it takes is a push of the Pause button, and in a second the extra door can be opened, and it’s big enough to add a sweater or even a pair of jeans. Users can also put in hand-wash items or add extra amount of fabric softener at the start of the rinse cycle.


Samsung’s core technologies applied
The new Samsung AddWash model features Samsung’s innovative technologies to deliver superior time saving and washing performance making sure you get the clean you need in as little time as possible. From gently caring for delicate fabrics, to advanced technologies that make detergent work harder, to a full load washed in as little as 59 minutes, Samsung’s AddWash can easily keep up with your family’s toughest laundry tasks.

The SuperSpeed cycle, for example, is enabled by the SpeedSpray technology, which shoots out jet sprays of water, so detergent gets rinsed quickly and cleans clothes faster. The water sprays then shower the laundry with clean water, which is drained away simultaneously.

The ecobubble™ technology pre-mixes detergent with air and water, and then fills every inch of the drum with bubbles that penetrate the fabric 40 times faster than the normal mix of water and soap. The ecobubble™ offers both gentler fabric care and outstanding wash results even in cold water, while delivering energy savings as well.

Samsung’s AddWash also has a Digital Inverter Motor, which delivers superior energy efficiency, minimal noise and longer-lasting performance.


A smart washing machine
The Samsung AddWash Front Load Washer comes with an array of smart functions, which work with both Android and iOS smartphones. That not only makes it easy to monitor the progress of the laundry program, but also offers the option to alert users on their smartphone just before the start of a new washing cycle, for example if they want to add a few delicate or hand-wash items towards the end of the wash cycle





Africa’s first solar powered airport set to launch in South Africa

 
South Africa is set to unveil  Africa’s first solar powered airport. The airport will be completely functional without the country’s electricity grid as the installation of photo-voltaic panels will generate sufficient electricity through harnessing energy from the sun. It has been reported that the solar airport project was spearheaded by the agency of the Department of Transport‚ Airports Company South Africa (ACSA) and the Minister for Transport, Dipuo Peters, is set to officially launch the airport located in the city of George, South Africa.
Before South Africa, the Cochin International Airport located in the city of Kochi, Southern India, opened the world’s first solar powered airport back in 2015. The airport took nearly $9.5million and 6 months to complete. As of 2013, the airport already had a 1 MegaWatt solar power plant, which could produce 4,000 units of electricity daily. However, in 2015, the solar plant was set to produce 60,000 units of electricity every day, more than enough to meet its daily requirement. Today, the Cochin airport is still operational and can save enough energy to run on rainy nights as well during night operations.
Answering questions on the sustenance of South Africa’s solar powered airport plans, a renewable energy expert working in the United Kingdom, Chukwuemeka Ukwuaba, has said this airport does not need to be less functional if there is no adequate solar energy (sunlight).
"Just like we have airports which run on conventional power supply, a solar powered airport will have its power supply coming from solar energy using different solar systems. Solar systems are being integrated with power storage these days and are also being hybridized with other power systems in order to maximize generation capacity. Obviously, sunlight does not last the whole day and the adequate amount of sunlight that can be harnessed by solar systems is only available for barely 6 hours in a day," he said.
Ukwuaba cited certain challenges associated with having an airport of this nature in South Africa, which is rife with economic, academic and employment challenges. For instance, capital and operation or maintenance cost of running a solar system is higher than that of a conventional power system, so if the economy of the country is shaky at best, will the government be able to keep the place running?
However, he presented a few advantages to the presence of a solar powered airport in South Africa. To him, every amenity basically creates new job opportunities. "The airport won’t be an exception, airports being the gateway to businesses, will obviously bring about economic improvement in the country, something South Africans need."
This ought to be a welcome development considering this is Africa’s first solar powered airport. Ukwuaba believes that although the solar powered airport is situated in South Africa, the entire continent will eventually benefit from its services. "Africa has the highest potential of resources in the world, but we are not maximizing these resources. Solar energy, being inclusive in these resources, is abundant in Africa and also free. This project should be a stepping stone and a leading example to other African countries to harness this source of energy," he stated.




Cellphone tech sparks innovation in Africa

The cellphone is to sub-Saharan Africa what the steam train was to 19th-century Europe: the mechanical workhorse driving social and economic transformation.

Seizing the opportunity provided by the first near universally available infrastructure, hundreds of technology start-ups have sprung up across the region to plough new trade routes and seek breakthrough innovations.

There is mounting competition between global technology companies IBM, Google, Facebook, China’s Tencent for a slice of what are some of the world’s fastest-growing information technology (IT) markets.

The ethos pervading this new ecosystem centred in Nairobi, Lagos and Johannesburg, but with offshoots across Africa was encapsulated recently by Mark Essien, creator of one of the first hotel-booking websites in Nigeria.

Far from being a handicap, the deficit in physical infrastructure, such as land lines and railways, provided Africans with a unique chance to step ahead, he argued at a recent Lagos conference.

"The future of technology for Africa is not in playing catch-up. But in looking at the things we lack and using each of those gaps as an opportunity for us to invent something we can use to leapfrog the rest of the world," Essien said.

The first big leap came with the adoption of cellphones. The next wave of technological advances is occurring as high-speed internet and smartphone handsets become more accessible.

By 2025, half of sub-Saharan Africa’s billion-strong population will have internet access, 360-million via smartphones, according to McKinsey. Two years, ago its research identified this growing connectivity as providing huge opportunities for IT businesses in healthcare, education, finance, agriculture, retail and servicing governments.

Already there is an app for almost everything: herding cattle in Kenya (i-Cow), private security in Ghana (Hei Julor!), remotely monitoring patients in Zimbabwe (Econet) and in Uganda, an Uber-like service (Yoza) connecting dirty laundry to mobile washerwomen.

Married to this explosion of innovation are the region’s demographics more than 70% of the rapidly urbanising population is under 30. "The first thing they want is a phone and the next is information," says Aly-Khan Satchu, a Nairobi-based investment analyst.

Armed with both, Africa’s youth are hooking up to networks far beyond their immediate communities, creating new outlets for music, TV, fashion and social comment. Nor can the politicians afford to ignore the ramifications.

The social media campaign unleashed when Boko Haram terrorists kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls rebounded to help deprive Goodluck Jonathan of a second term as Nigeria’s president.

"What the Great Western Railway was to Victorian England, the mobile networks are to Africa," says Africa investor, Miles Morland.

For all the excitement, however, there is a caveat: the easy fortunes were made in the past decade. Then, private equity investors such as Morland made five or 10 times their money. They did so by backing African entrepreneurs who recognised the scale of pent-up demand and jumped in to build telecoms companies while their global counterparts hesitated, convinced most Africans were too poor to afford handsets or airtime.

...

PRICE wars and slowing growth in near-saturated urban areas have since thinned margins. So, some of the latest innovation is being driven by commercial necessity. Products such as M-Pesa, the mobile money system pioneered by Kenya’s telecoms operator Safaricom, raise fresh revenues and help the company retain subscribers.

More broadly, the start-up terrain is treacherous and fragmented, and only a few companies have yet proved an ability to scale up regionally and become commercially viable. So far, the companies that have been most successful in attracting investment have tended to be those replicating western models, such as the online retailers in Nigeria Jumia and Konga.

Many technology groups developing consumer apps lack the finances to market their products and are obliged to work with the phone operators.

Ayisi Makatiani, the Kenyan who created pan-African media aggregator Africaonline and now runs his own private equity fund, says the first wave of venture capitalists who backed innovative start-ups were mostly burnt. However, experienced players are arriving, he says, helping to marry international expertise with local knowledge. "I haven’t seen so many Americans arriving in 20, 30 years."

In more advanced markets, the spread of mobile money systems and developments in logistics are combining with increased smartphone use to allow groups to sell everything from insurance to fresh fruit online.

"The question is how do you now use the current digital platforms to disrupt the traditional businesses and offer services in a much more efficient way?" Makatiani asks.

It has taken longer for most companies to find the answer than early enthusiasts anticipated. The constraints presented by data costs, regulation, and financing, have proved a drag.

"We are in an evolutionary phase," says Aly-Khan. "We have not yet found the ways of creating the kind of commercial value US companies have been so brilliant at doing. But we are moving in the right direction."

Tunde Kehinde, co-founder and joint MD of Africa Courier Express, co-founded Jumia in 2012 with a $1m investment from Rocket Internet, the German start-up incubator. Today, it has grown to become one of Nigeria’s top e-commerce websites, with more than 100-million visits last year.
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Microsoft partners Real Madrid and other Football Clubs to Use Windows

Microsoft’s partnership with Spanish football club Real Madrid is going very well, so the software giant is looking into ways to expand into the sports field with more similar agreements with different teams across Europe.
Peter Jaeger, senior director DX and a board member of Microsoft Germany, said in an interview with Sports Business Daily that the company is currently in talks with some other football clubs, but nothing is certain for now, so more announcements could follow soon.
Microsoft already has a similar partnership with Hamburg SV in Germany, but more could be reached as the season will restart soon in most of the countries after the winter break and the closing of the transfer market.
Only “technological partner” for now
And yet, Redmond explained that while it’s looking at the football business for partnerships, it’s still not interested in becoming an official sponsor for a specific team. What it wants, however, is a technological agreement similar to the one in the United States for the NFL – Redmond provides tables and software to teams in order to view stats and comparisons during the games.
“We won’t buy a football club and we won’t invest millions into a sponsorship deal. We are a technological service provider. We can help generate more money for the sponsors and for the clubs. We support them in fan engagement and merchandising,” Jaeger was quoted as saying.
And Germany now seems to be the next destination, with Jaeger adding that Microsoft’s “own team” could soon be announced.
“We started in the U.S. But we are trying to get into the German market with our own team,” he added.
With such agreements, Microsoft not only becomes the provider of key technology for these teams but also strikes important marketing deals that could spur adoption of its products in Europe. Just imagine how many people would buy a Windows Phone if Cristiano Ronaldo were using one every day.

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