Category: Science &Technology

  • Kenya’s newest tech hubs are sprouting outside its “Silicon Savannah” in Nairobi

    For years, Nairobi has been the cradle of technological innovation in Kenya, and the center of the country’s thriving tech ecosystem, famously known as Silicon Savannah.
    Most of the innovation spaces, incubation centers, accelerators, and maker labs were also concentrated in the capital—making Nairobi an attractive spot for both technologists and investors. Some innovation spaces, such as the iHub, which was founded in 2010, have launched as many as 170 startups.

    But over the last few years, tech hubs have sprouted up in other Kenyan cities and towns, including Mombasa (SwahiliBox), Kisumu (LakeHub), Eldoret (Dlab Hub), Voi (Sote Hub), Machakos (Ubunifu), and Nyeri (Mt. Kenya Hub and DeHub). Some of these hubs work independently, while others operate within the framework of academic institutions. But all of them support entrepreneurs working at the intersection of the technological, creative, and cultural sectors.

    For years, Nairobi has been the cradle of technological innovation in Kenya, and the center of the country’s thriving tech ecosystem, famously known as Silicon Savannah.
    Most of the innovation spaces, incubation centers, accelerators, and maker labs were also concentrated in the capital—making Nairobi an attractive spot for both technologists and investors. Some innovation spaces, such as the iHub, which was founded in 2010, have launched as many as 170 startups.

    But over the last few years, tech hubs have sprouted up in other Kenyan cities and towns, including Mombasa (SwahiliBox), Kisumu (LakeHub), Eldoret (Dlab Hub), Voi (Sote Hub), Machakos (Ubunifu), and Nyeri (Mt. Kenya Hub and DeHub). Some of these hubs work independently, while others operate within the framework of academic institutions. But all of them support entrepreneurs working at the intersection of the technological, creative, and cultural sectors.

    Source: Quartz Media

  • ​WhatsApp: Now one billion people send 55 billion messages per day

    The eight-year old messaging app WhatsApp is now used by one billion people every day.

    As ZdNet reported, WhatsApp reached the one billion active monthly user milestone a year ago, and now has 1.3 billion monthly active users, most of whom use it daily, according to WhatsApp.

    WhatsApp shared the daily active user numbers in a blogpost along with other metrics showing how people use the app following Facebook’s Q2 2017 earnings yesterday.

    WhatsApp said 55 billion messages are sent each day on platform, and users also shared 4.5 billion photos and one billion videos per day.

    “Whether it’s sharing personalized photos and videos, connecting through video calling, or keeping friends updated throughout the day with Status, communicating on WhatsApp has never been easier or more personal,” WhatsApp said in a blog.

    At F8 last April Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said messages sent on Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp combined totaled 60 billion per day.

    After announcing Messenger had 1.2 billion monthly users this April, Facebook’s head of Messenger, David Marcus told TechCrunch it had seen “double-digit growth percentage-wise” in terms of messages sent per user on Messenger.

    Facebook last month said it had reached 2 billion monthly users, and yesterday noted that as of June it had 1.32 billion daily users.

    Asked yesterday by an analyst about WhatsApp’s revenue prospects compared to Messenger, Facebook’s CFO, David Wehner, said the company isn’t sharing detailed engagement figures by messaging platform, but noted differences in usage for each by region.

    “WhatsApp has demonstrated significant engagement with crossing a billion daily actives. So I think that indicates the engagement that you have on that platform. There are different geographies where the messaging platforms are stronger,” he said.

    Zuckerberg said it was “still early on the monetization side” for WhatsApp.

    Facebook also reported metrics for Stories for WhatsApp and Instagram, each of which have 250 million daily users. More users of course supports Facebook’s ad business, which received $9.16 billion in revenues, up 47 percent year-on-year.

  • YouTube Red, Google Play Music services to merge

    Google has revealed plans to merge YouTube Red and Google Play Music to create a new, streamlined service.

    As reported by The Verge, Google Music chief Lyor Cohen revealed at a panel session for the New Music Seminar conference in New York that the tech giant needs to bring the two services together to entice new subscribers, especially in light of rivals such as Amazon Prime Music, Spotify, and Apple Music.

    “The important thing is combining YouTube Red and Google Play Music, and having one offering,” Cohen said.

    YouTube Red, available in the US, is a subscription service which offers ad-free music and video streaming. The music service is already streamed through Google Play Music and YouTube Music, and while ad-free videos are accessed through YouTube, you can also watch YouTube Red Original television shows and films as a paid subscriber.

    The current ecosystem seems somewhat confusing and fragmented, with some services available to subscribers and others available with the support of adverts.

    However, should YouTube Red, YouTube, YouTube Music, and Google Play Music be brought together more cohesively under one umbrella, more potential subscribers may be enticed towards a new service.

    With so many rival services competing for the same business, making life simpler for consumers makes sense.

    Back in February, Google confirmed that the YouTube Music and Google Play Music teams were being combined, which started off rumors that the tech giant may be looking at streamlining how they offer music subscriptions.

    In a statement, Google acknowledged that users will be told before any major changes take place.

    “Music is very important to Google and we’re evaluating how to bring together our music offerings to deliver the best possible product for our users, music partners and artists,” Google told The Verge. “Nothing will change for users today and we’ll provide plenty of notice before any changes are made.”

    In April, streaming service Spotify acquired blockchain startup Mediachain. While you may not necessarily link blockchain ledger technology with music streaming automatically, Spotify said the deal took place in order to link content to the identity of the creator, offering a channel for attribution, analytics, and payment in a time when such content is distributed without control online.

  • There may be a lot of water hiding under the moon’s dusty surface, researchers say

    For decades, scientists have thought the moon was a dry, dusty place, but it may be time to re-write the astronomy books.

    New findings are upending decades of understanding about our closest neighbor in space; an analysis of satellite data suggests the moon’s interior may actually be pretty wet, which could help make it easier to fly to the moon and back, or even stay there awhile, reports CBS News’ Jan Crawford.

    Using a recent picture of the moon’s surface, and measuring the reflecting light, researchers at Brown University were able to detect water molecules in the colored areas. Red and yellow indicates a high concentration.

    Planetary geologist Ralph Milliken is the lead author of the study.

    “Some of these deposits that we observe on the moon span thousands of square kilometers. They’re absolutely enormous,” Milliken said.

    It works like this: when the moon was young and still volcanically active, violent eruptions released water molecules trapped in the moon’s mantle. As the magma cooled, the molecules became trapped again — this time inside volcanic glass beads embedded in moon rocks left behind on the surface.

    A similar process happens when volcanoes erupt here on Earth.

    On the moon, Milliken says most of the water is dispersed deep below the crust, locked away in its rocky interior.

    “We can bake that water out of those rocks,” said Derrick Pitts, Chief Astronomer at the Franklin Institute.

    He says the moon’s water could be used for drinking, as well as to provide oxygen for breathing and hydrogen for rocket fuel.

    “We wouldn’t have to carry so many basic commodities to the moon, which turns out to be one of the most expensive things we can do in space exploration,” Pitts said.

    “To actually get, say, a liter of water you probably have to mine and harvest maybe one to 300 cubic feet of material. An important question in all of that would be, is it economically feasible to do so?” Milliken said.

    Milliken doesn’t think the discovery of large amounts of water on the moon means it could support life as we know it. He says the conditions there are still pretty inhospitable to the kinds of organisms we have here on Earth.

  • Rwanda tops Africa in First Global Robotics Challenge


    Represented by a team of 7 students in the “First Global” Robotics Challenge, an international competition that was held in Washington DC, from the 16th to 18th July 2017, Rwanda emerged in the 9th position among 160 participating countries, and first in the African region.

    “First Global” Robotics Challenge, is an annually held international competition, with the aim of expanding Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). This year’s theme hinged on constructing a robot that can assist in preserving water.
    The Rwandan group consisted of seven students of ages between fifteen and nineteen from different schools: Mugisha Aubin Marc (Remera Rukoma Secondary School); Rugerinyane Aime Regis (Lycee de Kigali); Ikirezi Paola (Excella High School); ByshimoShema Serge (SOS Technical School); Ishimwe Benitha (Stella Matutina); UwihoreyeJoselyne (Saint Ignace Secondary School); Muhirwa Frank Marcel (College saint Andre).

    It was the first time Rwanda participated in this contest but made an outstanding robot that helps in obtaining water for people. This brilliant project earned themthe first place in Africa, against South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, Mauritius, Gambia, and Missouri and 9th in the world.

    The countries which surpassed Rwanda’s performance were Singapore, Israel, Myanmar, a jointure of European nations (Team Europe), as well as Italy, Poland, Ukraine and Lithuania.

    Reacting to the victory, the minister of Education in Rwanda Papias Musafari has encouraged the youth to look up to the Rwandan Team as a model of success and follow into their steps, exposing and grooming their skills in the fields of STEM.
    Ivanka Trump, daughter of the American president and an advisor in the American government was present at the competition.

    The competition organized by the company First and supervised by Dean Kamen is expected to take place in Mexico next year.

    The Rwandan winning team will talk to IGIHE as soon as they come back, explaining the nature of their invention and the technology they made during for the global competition.

  • AuraSoft to launch RIHA Mobile Wallet system

    The remittance industry has evolved in recent years, with mobile operators and fin-tech companies providing attractive alternatives to the traditional models by offering more convenient and cheaper methods of sending remittances via mobile phones.

    Aurasoft a young and dynamic Rwandan multi-skilled software service provider has announced it will launch a new remittance system called “RIHA Mobile Wallet” to offer similar services.

    Riha Mobile Wallet is said to be a consumer engagement payment platform for retail and brands, it is said to deliver a fast, secure, and convenient way of making and receiving payments.

    Speaking to IGIHE Alain Ndayishimiye the boss of Aurasoft said that RIHA Mobile Wallet is different from the regular system but it offers same services when sending money in local Rwandan currency.

    “It brings to proximity of your money to one place, let it be from separate banks accounts and even from your mobile money account. As you continue using the RIHA, you continue to get used to it which then helps you to manage your money in an appropriate manner on top of other offering you services that you need.

    The payments system will see buyers making payments for a good and services before without waiting to receive them, for instance payment of food which is ready in a restaurant.

    The service will also assist business to gather customer and service information; the system does not cost payment when one wants to send money to a friend’s separate bank account.

    Ndayshimiye further says that the reason why they decided to introduce the new system to Rwanda is because the Government introduced paperless payment systems to boost business to try and eliminate carrying huge paper currency and receipts altogether.

    RIHA Mobile Wallet uses Bluetooth, Tap&Pay, NFC (Near Field Communication as well as POS machines (Point of Sale Machines). The system will be started in January but will be launched in next month in August, 2017.

    The National Central Bank (BNR) reported that over 3.3 million send and receive money using mobile phones operated by three telecommunication companies MTN, TIGO and Airtel.

    National Bank of Rwanda (BNR) reported that despite the slowdown in the global economy, remittances’ receipts grew by 7.7 percent in 2016 compared to a decline of 11.1 percent in 2015, following the emergence of mobile network operators (MNOs).

    AuraSoft Ltd is a young and dynamic Rwandan multi-skilled software service provider with a highly competent workforce and a presence in the East African market.

  • Rwanda ranks 2nd in cyber-security in Africa

    The report released recently indicates that Rwanda being the 36th comes right after Mauritius in the world ranking, and is followed by Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda, and South Africa.

    The report says Rwanda has been ranked the second in Africa because it has good cyber-protection policies and practices. The GCI analyses each country’s level of cyber-security development within five categories, namely; legal measures, technical measures, organisational measures as well as capacity building and cooperation. Singapore leads the world in cyber-security, followed by the USA, Malaysia, Oman, Estonia, Mauritius, Australia, Georgia, France, and Canada.

    The report further observes that there is still a gap between countries concerning the knowledge, understanding, and capacities to establish policies that deter cyber intrusion.
    Universally, 50% of countries have no policies in place on supervising cybersecurity.

  • Star’s birth may have triggered another star birth, astronomers say

    Astronomers using the National Science Foundation’s Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) have found new evidence suggesting that a jet of fast-moving material ejected from one young star may have triggered the formation of another, younger protostar.

    “The orientation of the jet, the speed of its material, and the distance all are right for this scenario,” said Mayra Osorio, of the Astrophysical Institute of Andalucia (IAA-CSIC) in Spain. Osorio is the lead author of a paper reporting the findings in the Astrophysical Journal.

    The scientists studied a giant cloud of gas some 1,400 light-years from Earth in the constellation Orion, where numerous new stars are being formed. The region has been studied before, but Osorio and her colleagues carried out a series of VLA observations at different radio frequencies that revealed new details.

    Images of the pair show that the younger protostar, called HOPS (Herschel Orion Protostar Survey) 108, lies in the path of the outflow from the older, called HOPS 370. This alignment led Yoshito Shimajiri and collaborators to suggest in 2008 that the shock of the fast-moving material hitting a clump of gas had triggered the clump’s collapse into a protostar.

    “We found knots of material within this outflow and were able to measure their speeds,” said Ana K. Diaz-Rodriguez also of IAA-CSIC.

    The new measurements gave important support to the idea that the older star’s outflow had triggered the younger’s star’s formation process.

    The scientists suggest that the jet from HOPS 370 (also known as FIR 3) began to hit the clump of gas about 100,000 years ago, starting the process of collapse that eventually led to the formation of HOPS 108 (also known as FIR 4). Four other young stars in the region also could be the result of similar interactions, but the researchers found evidence for shocks only in the case of HOPS 108.

    While the evidence for this triggering scenario is strong, one fact appears to contradict it. The younger star seems to be moving rapidly in a way that indicates it should have been formed elsewhere, apart from the region impacted by the older star’s outflow.

    “This motion, however, might be an illusion possibly created by an outflow from the newer star itself,” explained Osorio. “We want to continue to observe it over a period of time to resolve this question,” she added.

    Protostar FIR 3 (HOPS 370) with outflow that may have triggered the formation of younger protostar FIR 4 (HOPS 108, location marked with red dot), in the Orion star-forming region. (au = astronomical unit, the distance from the Earth to the Sun, about 93 million miles.)

    Source:Science Daily

  • Nasa discovers 10 new planets that could have life

    The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) has revealed 10 new rocky, Earth-sized planets that could potentially have liquid water and support life.

    The Kepler mission team released a survey of 219 potential exoplanets — planets outside of our solar system — that had been detected by the space observatory launched in 2009 to scan the Milky Way galaxy.

    Ten of the new discoveries were orbiting their suns at a distance similar to Earth’s orbit around the sun, the so-called habitable zone that could potentially have liquid water and sustain life.

    Kepler has already discovered 4,034 potential exoplanets, 2,335 of which have been confirmed by other telescopes as actual planets.

    The 10 new Earth-size planets bring the total to 50 that exist in habitable zones around the galaxy.

    New planets

    “This carefully-measured catalogue is the foundation for directly answering one of astronomy’s most compelling questions — how many planets like our Earth are in the galaxy?” said Susan Thompson, a Kepler research scientist and lead author of the latest study.

    The latest findings were released at the Fourth Kepler and K2 science conference being held this week at Nasa’s Ames research centre in California.

    The Kepler telescope detects the presence of planets by registering minuscule drops in a star’s brightness that occurs when a planet crosses in front of it, a movement known as a transit.

    The findings were compiled from data gathered during the first four years of the mission, which scientists processed to determine the size and composition of the planets observed.

    The scientists found that the newly discovered planets tended to fall into two distinct categories — smaller, rocky planets that are usually around 75 percent bigger than Earth, and much larger, gaseous planets similar in size to Neptune.

    Unique data set

    Nasa said the latest catalogue is the most complete and detailed survey of potential exoplanets yet compiled. The telescope has studied some 150,000 stars in the Cygnus constellation, a survey which Nasa said is now complete.

    “The Kepler data set is unique, as it is the only one containing a population of these near Earth-analogs — planets with roughly the same size and orbit as Earth,” said Mario Perez of Nasa’s Astrophysics Division. “Understanding their frequency in the galaxy will help inform the design of future Nasa missions to directly image another Earth.”

    The mission ran into technical problems in 2013 when mechanisms used to turn the spacecraft failed, but the telescope has continued searching for potentially habitable planets as part of its K2 project.

    As of next year, Nasa will continue its scan of the galaxy using Kepler’s successor, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, or Tess, which will spend two years observing the 200,000 brightest nearby stars for Earth-like worlds.

    Scientists also hope the James Webb Space telescope, which will replace the Hubble telescope in 2018, will be able to detect the molecular make-up of atmospheres of exoplanets, including the possibility of finding signatures of potential life forms.

    Milky Way galaxy. Nasa's space telescope has found 10 new planets outside our solar system that could potentially have liquid water and support life.

    Source:AFP

  • Robot uses deep learning and big data to write and play its own music

    A marimba-playing robot with four arms and eight sticks is writing and playing its own compositions in a lab at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The pieces are generated using artificial intelligence and deep learning.

    Researchers fed the robot nearly 5,000 complete songs — from Beethoven to the Beatles to Lady Gaga to Miles Davis — and more than 2 million motifs, riffs and licks of music. Aside from giving the machine a seed, or the first four measures to use as a starting point, no humans are involved in either the composition or the performance of the music.

    The first two compositions are roughly 30 seconds in length. The robot, named Shimon, can be seen and heard playing them at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j82nYLOnKtM and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6MSk5PP9KUA.

    Ph.D. student Mason Bretan is the man behind the machine. He’s worked with Shimon for seven years, enabling it to “listen” to music played by humans and improvise over pre-composed chord progressions. Now Shimon is a solo composer for the first time, generating the melody and harmonic structure on its own.

    “Once Shimon learns the four measures we provide, it creates its own sequence of concepts and composes its own piece,” said Bretan, who will receive his doctorate in music technology this summer at Georgia Tech. “Shimon’s compositions represent how music sounds and looks when a robot uses deep neural networks to learn everything it knows about music from millions of human-made segments.”

    Bretan says this is the first time a robot has used deep learning to create music. And unlike its days of improvising, when it played monophonically, Shimon is able to play harmonies and chords. It’s also thinking much more like a human musician, focusing less on the next note, as it did before, and more on the overall structure of the composition.

    “When we play or listen to music, we don’t think about the next note and only that next note,” said Bretan. “An artist has a bigger idea of what he or she is trying to achieve within the next few measures or later in the piece. Shimon is now coming up with higher-level musical semantics. Rather than thinking note by note, it has a larger idea of what it wants to play as a whole.”

    Shimon was created by Bretan’s advisor, Gil Weinberg, director of Georgia Tech’s Center for Music Technology.

    “This is a leap in Shimon’s musical quality because it’s using deep learning to create a more structured and coherent composition,” said Weinberg, a professor in the School of Music. “We want to explore whether robots could become musically creative and generate new music that we humans could find beautiful, inspiring and strange.”

    Shimon will create more pieces in the future. As long as the researchers feed it a different seed, the robot will produce something different each time — music that the researchers can’t predict. In the first piece, Bretan fed Shimon a melody comprised of eighth notes. It received a sixteenth note melody the second time, which influenced it to generate faster note sequences.

    Bretan acknowledges that he can’t pick out individual songs that Shimon is referencing. He is able to recognize classical chord progression and influences of artists, such as Mozart, for example. “They sound like a fusion of jazz and classical,” said Bretan, who plays the keyboards and guitar in his free time. “I definitely hear more classical, especially in the harmony. But then I hear chromatic moving steps in the first piece — that’s definitely something you hear in jazz.”

    Shimon’s debut as a solo composer was featured in a video clip in the Consumer Electronic Show (CES) keynote and will have its first live performance at the Aspen Ideas Festival at the end of June. It’s the latest project within Weinberg’s lab. He and his students have also created a robotic prosthesis for a drummer, a robotic third arm for all drummers, and an interactive robotic companion that plays music from a phone and dances to the beat.

    Shimon, a robot in the Center of Music Technology and School of Music.

    Source:Science Daily