UN sec General Using a Kenyan Made Computer

UN sec General Using a Kenyan Made Computer

what are you guys arguing about?We are all the best in different sectors,so don't criticize your fellow development
 
..and he is also fvcking a Kenyan pussy! Ooh, before I forget-he uses Kenya made toilet papers.
 
Wacha maneno mengi nimekuuliza inahusiana vipi na ubishi wako kwamba motherboard unaweza kuichora kitaa. Hayo mengine ya ni bla bla, by the way taaluma yangu inahusu kufuatilia kwa karibu kila aina ya teknolojia inayochipuka, hivyo huna haja ya kuhangaika kuandika maneno mengi humu. Anyway hata sijui kwanini nakujibu kwa hili wakati nilishabaini huna lolote kwenye mada husika.
Duh, hata usigesema kama unajuwa chochote wakati unauliza hiyo ndio nini. SMH.
 
ha! povu la mwagika hadi latoka huku kwa simu yangu



one step at a time, tutafika tu, hii hapa nyengine

Flip over most any Apple product, and you’ll find the company’s famous tagline: "Designed by Apple in California. Assembled in China." It’s no doubt a point of pride, even while the labor practices of the company’s vendors in China have come under in recent years.
Far from Silicon Valley, there is a place that some are calling "Silicon Savannah." It is here, constellated around Nairobi-based nonprofit collective , that an explosion in African tech is taking shape. This month, for the first time, backers of the collective’s
, are finally getting their hands on , a long-awaited device that, in many ways, is the antithesis of Apple’s shiny products, yet potentially just as revolutionary. True to form, on the bottom of every BRCK is the declaration "Made in Kenya, Assembled in America."
Ushahidi originally billed BRCK as a "backup generator for the Internet," though their messaging has evolved into "The go anywhere, do anything, self-powered, mobile Wi-Fi device." It is essentially a mobile Internet router. It connects to the web in three ways: by plugging in a standard ethernet cable, by bridging with other Wi-Fi networks, or by accessing 3G or 4G data via a basic SIM card.
Ushahidi invented it in order to overcome infrastructure challenges—specifically, inconsistent electricity and Internet connectivity—plaguing young upstarts in Nairobi. Turns out, plenty of other people and places face the same challenges; the first run of BRCKs are being delivered this month to users in some 45 countries.
Lest you think Internet outages are reserved for the developing world, both the U.S. and U.K. encountered major, multi-hour blackouts recently, in what appear to be unrelated events: Virgin Media customers across London lost service, while millions of Time Warner customers across the U.S.—with high concentrations in Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, and Tampa—were knocked offline.
"Everyone in the U.S. is so used to basic infrastructure ‘just working’ that few have a response when things don’t," says BRCK CEO Erik Hersman. The company’s best bet, for U.S. and related markets, may be to position BRCK for those exceptional moments—times of disaster, extreme weather, or super remote travel.
But even just focusing on the so-called developing world, BRCK’s potential market is enormous. While only a quarter of people from the developing world are currently connected, they already account for a staggering two-thirds of all people online today.
BRCK is not exactly cutting-edge by most standards. "I describe it as a new remix of old technology," says Hersman, who cut his teeth as a tech blogger. "That’s the key to understanding Africa’s technology."
Beyond its three connection methods, BRCK can keep users—as many as 20 at a time—up and running for as long as eight hours during an electrical outage. Most mobile hotspots can handle no more than a few, and drain both power and data rapidly. Should the Internet be down or not available in a given locale, the device continues operating offline, syncing up when its connection is restored. The stock hard drive is 4GB, with up to 32GB storage capacity.
Born in Sudan and having settled in Kenya with his young family, Hersman believes, "If it works in Africa, it’ll work anywhere." He sees the company’s base in Nairobi as one of its greatest assets, particularly given its target market. Hersman recounts a pivotal situation, about a year ago, just as Ushahidi had finished its Kickstarter campaign. Kenya was struck with a power outage across the entire country, culminating in a surge of 400 volts that lasted five minutes.
To put that voltage surge into perspective, it’s roughly 70 to 80 times more than the power used to operate most electronics. A telecom executive that Hersman spoke with estimated that the surge blew more than 3,000 routers in Nairobi alone. "So we committed to ensuring that BRCK could handle at least 400 volts of power," Hersman says. "We’re playing with dirty power and crappy Internet, so the device has to be resilient." Meanwhile, BRCK’s lithium battery can charge on as few as 5-18 volts.
While designed in Kenya, BRCK is manufactured and assembled deep in the heart of Texas, by a company called Silicon Hills. Located outside of Austin, the company has the key ability to iterate and do small runs. According to its CEO, BRCK couldn’t also be manufactured in Kenya because of the considerable import taxes and time delays when bringing components into the country.
With its matte black, rubberized case, BRCK is elegant, but mostly unassuming; it has the relative dimensions of an actual brick. It’s far too big to stick in your pants pocket, but plenty small enough to toss in a backpack, place on a desk, or even on the hood of your Land Rover in the African countryside. Safari outfitters Sandstorm Kenya, a Nairobi-based company, already has a customized carrying case for BRCK.
By weight, BRCK is substantially heavier than a plastic router, but it’s also much more than one. In addition to its battery, BRCK has multiple ports, including a general-purpose input/output, enabling users to program and connect other hardware—such as sensors or a solar charger—to the device. "It’s like a Swiss Army knife; if you describe every feature, you get lost," Hersman says.
What is perhaps most compelling about BRCK, however, are its potential applications. "We see enormous resonance with the work of other organizations," Hersman says. "Take the proliferation of web-enabled laptops and tablets in schools; why is it that each of these devices connect to a mobile tower? Why not to a single, centralized point?"
Education, health, environmental, and even military and governmental organizations are already in conversation with BRCK and multiple entities are testing it out. For consumers in emerging markets, BRCK’s $200 price tag may be a stretch; the company is looking at purchasing plans, which have worked well in the cell phone and energy sectors. But BRCK’s business model is ultimately based on companies than individual consumers, according to Hersman.
"The reason that we backed BRCK and that I’m excited to see it come about is because it fills an important gap in hardware and tools," says Emily Jacobi, founder and executive director of nonprofit , which has worked in two dozen countries around the world. "We’re going to remote areas and training groups—indigenous groups, refugees, and other at-risk populations—to map the land and communities using GPS devices and cameras. We’re particularly excited about BRCK’s ability to facilitate collaborative work, as well as function offline."
"We’re at a place in history where the barriers to entry are no longer in the software space, but in the hardware space," Hersman says. "Because we don’t yet have fully functioning maker spaces and rapid prototyping abilities here in Nairobi, the design process is still relatively slow and expensive, but the barriers are coming down."








pictures kwa link

Made In Kenya, Assembled In America: This Internet-Anywhere Company Innovates From Silicon Savannah


Hili la BRCK linatumika sana huku!...hili watz walikua hawalijui.
 
Your comprehension skills are terrible. I never said that laptop wasn't made in Kenya. I was just inquiring about the validity of the claim that the UN secretary used that laptop, He might've used it for all i care ( and i don't really give a shit if he did) i just wanted to be sure that the image posted above wasn't fake.

You could've easily used google reverse image check to look it up yourself if you wanted to know whether it was a fake image or not,fool!
 
Let's put one thing right, safaricom is still majority owned by UK Vodafone in the tune of 40%. Second, Mpesa style money transfer didn't do well in South Africa or Nigeria. In fact, it has died in SA. Why, because there far better tools to deliver an excellent service to the customer like NFC or contactless cards. Safaricom yenyewe was going bust just before Bob Collymore came, the way he sweetened wakubwa it shows on their current position. Election results, communication, mpesa, loans, technology, SME's, data, R&D. Matokeo yake, mna drive away other telecom companies out of kenyan market like Orange na sasa Airtel. Bila kuwapa wakubwa ile 25% share wangeweza kufanya yote haya? Talking about putting all your eggs in one basket.

Tukirudi kwenye mada, kama wakenya mna moyo na computer zenu, mbona serikali haizinunuwi na kuwapa watoto wa shule kama ilivyo ahidi?

Is 40% MAJORITY?...dumb https://jamii.app/JFUserGuide!
 
You could've easily used google reverse image check to look it up yourself if you wanted to know whether it was a fake image or not,fool!

You don't even know me(even if you did) and you called me a fool already, that says a lot about you. If you can't provide an answer without disrespecting people why don't you just calm your titties and shut up? and how would a google image search prove the validity of the claim? We're here to converse like civilized people, don't abuse that.
 
You don't even know me(even if you did) and you called me a fool already, that says a lot about you. If you can't provide an answer without disrespecting people why don't you just calm your titties and shut up? and how would a google image search prove the validity of the claim? We're here to converse like civilized people, don't abuse that.

Arguing with you and the other dumb ass is pointless,bye
I got some work to finish!
Nice weekend, my off starts tonight,lets continue on Sunday morning as I start my work week.
 
Hebu semeni vitu vinavyo eleweka...Made by Kenyan or Assembled by Kenyan. Hata mimi nime assembling my computers tangu enzi za i386. Kwa wanojuwa computers watajuwa nasema nini.

Wapuuzi sana, na wanao jitapa hawajui chochote kuhusu hardware na firmware zinazohunda computers!! Atutajie walao componet moja iliyo kuwa manufactured in Kenya na inatumika kuhunda computer?

Wengi wanao piga debe humu hawezi kutofautisha kati ya kuhunda na ku assemble!!
 
Wapuuzi sana, na wanao jitapa hawajui chochote kuhusu hardware na firmware zinazohunda computers!! Atutajie walao componet moja iliyo kuwa manufactured in Kenya na inatumika kuhunda computer?

Wengi wanao piga debe humu hawezi kutofautisha kati ya kuhunda na ku assemble!!

Weka na yenu ya bongo mlio assemble tu angalau tuone............maneno maneo tupu,koroga sumu unywe,na bado itafika mahali hata nguvu hizi mnazopoteza humu kufoka hamtopata....mtachokaaa...
kalb wahed
 
Arguing with you and the other dumb ass is pointless,bye
I got some work to finish!
Nice weekend, my off starts tonight,lets continue on Sunday morning as I start my work week.
Just go, you don't have to provide us with details about your work, I am not that much interested in what you do for a living or in arguing with you, i just asked someone(not you) for more specifics regarding the image and you piggybacked on it and started talking shit calling me a fool.
 
Wapuuzi sana, na wanao jitapa hawajui chochote kuhusu hardware na firmware zinazohunda computers!! Atutajie walao componet moja iliyo kuwa manufactured in Kenya na inatumika kuhunda computer?

Wengi wanao piga debe humu hawezi kutofautisha kati ya kuhunda na ku assemble!!

Bukyanagandi Wacha kujishusha, maana nafikiri nimeona mchango wako sehemu kwa masuala ya teknolojia, hivyo sitegemei na wewe utachangia kama vila.za wa kila siku. Sasa ina maana huoni kikubwa kilichofanyika katika kudesign motherboard ya hii laptop hadi ikakubaliwa kabisa kwenye mass production.

Wacha hayo ya components maana hata kule Ulaya unakuta computer kabila ije kukamilika inatumia compnents tofauti kutoka nchi tofauti. Cha msingi naomba kama wewe mtaalam uweke unafiki pembeni na kujadili kiutaalam kuhusu design ya motherboard, ufanye rerouting zote hadi ije kukubalika na kutumiwa kama laptop.
 
Wapuuzi sana, na wanao jitapa hawajui chochote kuhusu hardware na firmware zinazohunda computers!! Atutajie walao componet moja iliyo kuwa manufactured in Kenya na inatumika kuhunda computer?

Wengi wanao piga debe humu hawezi kutofautisha kati ya kuhunda na ku assemble!!
Toka Jana tunashinda hilo hilo swali. Mara tunatengeneza, mara tunabuni, mara ni wachima ndio wanatutengeneza. Mkaa ukiwa wa moto wanahamisha goli.
 
Wololo... Maayooo. " Vitu vya uchokozi ? "
Nendeni huko kwa forum yenu. Not stalking us like yule ex wako you've never gotten over with..
Shooo... Out! Gerrrarrahiiaaa! Kwenda
Na MKenya yeyote atakayepatikana akipiga umbeya fora ya TZ naye achapwe
 
Ukiona wametokwa na povu jua wameunda.

Anyway, just a random question. Would a Chinese manufacturer allow Kenyans to assemble a Chinese computer and rebrand it as Kenyan? Food for thought.
 
Povu
JKUAT TAIFA LAPTOPS
Taifa A3 Laptop
The TAIFA Brand Laptop is a product of the Nairobi Industrial and Technological Park (NITP). NITP is a kenyan vision 2030 flagship project between Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Tecnology (JKUAT) and the Ministry of Industrialization and Enterprise Development (MOIED). The project advances the triple heritage of providing worldclass solutions, creating jobs and wealth and creating the pride of our Nation in the spirit of “Buy Kenya, Build Kenya ”

View attachment 470967
Wakenya Nuksii..!! Wamebandua logo ya sony VAIO wameeka ya kwao eti TAIFA
 
Sasa hapo cha ajabu ni kipi? Yeye kutumia American discovered and developed laptop and 50 years later immitated/ duplicated in Kenya. How could this be a kick kwa majirani zetu? Kama mngetaka muonekane mko vizuri endelezeni ile technologia ya yule kijana ya kuzalisha umeme kwa kitanda wakati watu wanakwich kwich hiyo ingekuwa ni Kenya discovery ila hii ya laptop ni uvumbuzi wa wengine so msidandie kwa mbele.
Pole pole wazee mnawaumiza watu wa Kericho na Nanyuki.
Fix tuu hizo!!
 
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