Nairobi

OpenMRS Meetup in Nairobi

If you are a developer (mobile & web) or part of the health industry or generally just interested in knowing more about Electronic Medical Records, join OpenMRS on Monday 24th of January from 11am-12pm and learn about the exciting opportunities in the areas of electronic medical records systems development, implementation, training and project management.

OpenMRS Meet up in Nairobi

Speakers lineup:

1. Paul Biondich- OpenMRS & Regenstrief Institute
2. James Kariuki- AMPATH
3. Fred Fries- Regenstrief Institute

What is OpenMRS?

OpenMRS is a software platform and a reference application which enables design of a customized medical records system with no programming knowledge (although medical and systems analysis knowledge is required). It is a common platform upon which medical informatics efforts in developing countries can be built. The system is based on a conceptual database structure which is not dependent on the actual types of medical information required to be collected or on particular data collection forms and so can be customized for different uses.

Wayan Vota's picture

Wayan Vota

Inveneo

Wayan Vota is a technology expert focused on appropriate information and communication technologies (ICT) for rural and underserved areas of the developing world. He is a Senior Director at Inveneo and is the editor of ICTworks

Why Open Collaboration Spaces like *iHub_ Matter

Last week I attended the much anticipated iHub Nairobi launch, as well as participated in a pre-launch gathering of African tech hub pioneers (more on the latter in a follow-up post). A number of bloggers in Kenya and elsewhere have already covered the iHub event much better than I could have.

The event was aptly described as “Geek Heaven” with a broad cross section of techies, entrepreneurs, university students, journalists, hackers, financiers, researchers and digirati all converging on the top floor space overlooking the Nairobi skyline.

I later told Erik, half-jokingly, that you couldn’t swing a dead cat without hitting half a dozen TED Fellows as well.

Long before the March 3rd iHub launch, it became clear that something truly unique was taking shape here. Too often, young African software engineers, designers, researchers and innovative thinkers (often referred to as the “Cheetah generation”) labor in isolation and with limited resources, working on the same or similar problems that someone else, somewhere has likely already solved. Just as important, others may be venturing down a path filled with insurmountable obstacles and dead ends.

The idea behind the iHub - and other new technology labs cropping up across Sub-Saharan Africa - is to put a group of exceptionally smart “doers” under one roof, provide them with a top notch work environment, generate ideas at a rapid pace, filter out the dead ends, present the best candidates to investors and produce viable businesses (and success stories) along the way. The end goal isn’t to generate wild profits for the iHub itself under an exclusive brand, but rather to grow a stronger technology community that hackers, researchers, policymakers and VCs are naturally drawn to.

iHub opening party

It’s not a far-fetched idea that world class products and services can grow out of a place like the iHub. Africa is a continent renowned for innovations conceived and built from limited resources. Countless examples exist of indigenous technologies borne from constraints that have led to hugely successful solutions. Among them is M-Pesa, Kenya’s popular mobile banking and payment system, whose model has only recently been prototyped in the West.

Likewise, witness how Ushahidi, an open source software effort conceived in the wake of Kenya’s 2008 post-election violence has elevated Africa’s global tech status and attracted worldwide acclaim for its rapid deployments in conflict and crisis zones such as the DRC, Gaza, Haiti and Chile, as well as serving as an invaluable tool for election monitoring. Even Washington DC has Kenya to thank for the part it played in cleaning up after Snowmageddon.

When the “Why I blog about Africa” meme made the rounds of the blogosphere awhile back, I mentioned the spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship I observed in Cameroon and elsewhere on the continent. I made reference to bearing witness to “an African Renaissance” fueled by ICT and led by a young generation of idealists.

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It’s an open secret now that the African Renaissance is already in its early stages. The continent is undergoing a period of rapid transformation due in part to increasingly faster and cheaper bandwidth which is being utilized by young Africans armed with laptops, smart phones and bright ideas.

This video, produced by the iHub’s neighbors the 1Percent Club in the iLab, captures some of the buzz and creativity on the ground in Nairobi:


We’ve observed the same enthusiasm and immense potential for open collaboration in our coworking and incubation space at Limbe Labs. Ideas get cross-pollinated, professional networking occurs spontaneously and businesses are accelerated at a faster pace.

In a follow-up post, I’ll discuss some ideas brainstormed in Nairobi for how this emergent tech hub network can better support African entrepreneurs.

Why Open Collaboration Spaces like the *iHub_ Matter was originally published on 27months

Bill Zimmerman's picture

Bill Zimmerman

I'm a software guy originally from Seattle, WA. I worked for 10+ years as a software engineer for Microsoft, Visio and smaller companies in the greater Pacific Northwest. During this time, I did a stint with an internet incubator at the height of the dot-com boom, and gained valuable insight into the world of venture capital, private equity and what it takes to get a technology startup off the ground. After exiting my own startup, I packed up and moved to Cameroon where I've lived for the last four years. I am the co-founder of VC4Africa and ActivSpaces, an open coworking space, innovation hub and seed-stage incubator for Cameroonian techies. Big promoter of social change and innovation in Africa.

Nairobi Google Tools User Group Meeting on Saturday

This Saturday, March 27th, the Nairobi Google Tools User Group is meeting at Nairobi Institute of Technology from 10:30am – 1:00pm.

The Nairobi GTUG holds regular meetings to keep you updated on Google technologies and how potential they can be for your Internet enabled application or even enterprise.

During the meetups, GTUG members share resources, skills & knowledge about Google technology & services, spreading dirty little tricks about Google's technologies, or simply chat with each other talking about all of Google's tools.

To stay updated, please join the mailing list at: http://groups.google.com/group/nairobigtug/

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Wayan Vota's picture

Wayan Vota

Inveneo

Wayan Vota is a technology expert focused on appropriate information and communication technologies (ICT) for rural and underserved areas of the developing world. He is a Senior Director at Inveneo and is the editor of ICTworks

Nairobi - the innovation lab for East Africa

Ben White has written a great post on the rising power of Nairobi as a web and ICT hub for East Africa - nay, Africa as a whole. He points to several reasons for this:

  1. iHub: which I agree is a great space to get ICT ideas going. Doubt it? Then look up "Home Brew Computer Club
  2. The ICANN meeting, which saw the launch of the .af domain name campaign
  3. Tandaa, and by extension the Kenya ICT Board and Google Kenya
  4. The Map Kibera project to map the thirteen different Kibera towns.

Read "Nairobi rises as the innovation lab for East Africa"

Wayan Vota's picture

Wayan Vota

Inveneo

Wayan Vota is a technology expert focused on appropriate information and communication technologies (ICT) for rural and underserved areas of the developing world. He is a Senior Director at Inveneo and is the editor of ICTworks

Navigating Google Maps of Naiorbi

If you're used to the poor selection of maps for African cities, let me show you the future, today. Google Maps has an amazingly accurate and detailed map of Nairobi, Kenya, where you can do detail searches, for restaurants or computer stores for example, and you'll get almost exact locations.



This is a great resource that apparently got its start when Google opened an office in Nairobi and realized the office couldn't be found on Google Maps. From there, Google added its own map points and then opened up Map Maker to users who want to add their own data to more than 122 countries, including most of Africa.

Now you too can make a little difference - create or edit your own Map Maker data for places you know in African. Even big cities like Lagos, Nigeria could use the love.

As Google says, "Let's map Africa!"

Wayan Vota's picture

Wayan Vota

Inveneo

Wayan Vota is a technology expert focused on appropriate information and communication technologies (ICT) for rural and underserved areas of the developing world. He is a Senior Director at Inveneo and is the editor of ICTworks

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