Africa Leaders Emerge from IT Research

At more than 11.5 million square miles, Africa is almost four times the size of the continental United States, and its population now exceeds 1 billion people. At the Tau Institute, we’ve been able to survey 22 of the 50+ African nations, including four among the northern Arabic nations, and 18 that are generally described as Sub-Saharan. We categorize all of them under “Africa,” following a precedent set by the African Union (formerly the Organization of African Unity), which counts all of Africa in its membership with the exception of Morocco.

The Top 10 in the group we’ve surveyed are Uganda, Morocco, Tunisia, Ghana, Senegal, Kenya, Mozambique, Egypt, South Africa, and Zambia.

How does Uganda emerge as the leader? Why doesn’t South Africa rate higher? And where’s Nigeria?

Our Method
As I explained in my recent article about our Middle East rankings, we seek to develop a relative, «pound-for-pound» ranking that can uncover diamonds in the rough and more important, show well a nation is doing with respect to its available resources.

We integrate several technology and social factors into our algorithms — on the one hand including average bandwidth, access to broadband, number of dataservers, on the other hand including income disparity, perception of corruption, human development, and the local cost of living.

This results in rankings that show how well the nations of the world are doing compared to what they already have, with the dynamic that the top performers will continue to outpace the laggards.

We will have another major update at Cloud Expo in Silicon Valley the week of November 4. We are also working on developing regional and city rankings, a massive undertaking for us that won’t be complete until sometime next year.

Meanwhile, to answer the above questions:
Uganda scores well primarily because of what it has achieved in the face of one of the lowest per-capita income levels in the world. It has provided access to 13% of its citizens, actually the second-highest ratio of access to income in the world (trailing only Kenya). Its income disparity level, while high, is lower than many of its neighbors. It has a relatively high average bandwidth speed, given its income. Integrate all of our factors, and Uganda emerges as the true diamond in the rough in Africa.
No one familiar with South Africa today needs to be told that the country remains unfulfilled in its potential. Income disparity that remains among the highest in the world means benefits of IT are not flowing comprehensively through the nation. The country is in the lower quartile for Internet access and broadband connectivity vs. income. Nonetheless, South Africa does still crack our Top 10 for Africa. We don’t factor the sheer size of a nation’s economy, but of course South Africa’s continues to make it an attractive venue for businesses and investors.
Less can probably be said about Nigeria, which has well-known problems accompanying (and perhaps exacerbated by) its oil wealth. In our rankings, it comes up 12th among the African nations, between Tanzania and Malawi. Its large population and size of its economy continue to make it attractive. Separately, it may serve as a model for our incipient efforts to look at specific regions (ie, Lagos State).

Conversations
A major thrust of our work is to identify and explore those countries that may not come immediately to mind. To that end, our rankings can be used to start conversations about the top countries I’ve listed above. Ghana is a country that has received a lot of recent attention (including that of President Obama), and its official use of English makes it intuitively attractive to many. However, also in West Africa, French-speaking Senegal should not be overlooked.

Committed to Non-Violence
As I noted in my earlier piece, our Institute is small, headquartered on a former liberal-arts college campus in Northern Illinois, and in Metro Manila, Philippines. We have a few selected advisors in Africa.

We are also committed unequivocally to peaceful means of solving all problems. This can be a difficult point of view to adhere to, but having seen enough violence on small scales and larger scales, I for one take the view that no further human progress is possible through violent means of any type. Violence has been a great scourge to Africa and the world up to the present day. We’re committed to our research and applying it in a non-political way that (with hope springing eternal) can improve economies and lives.

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Cloud Expo: The Cloud Needs to Look More Like the Data Center

Why are most Enterprise applications and trillions of dollars in Enterprise IT budgets staying out of the cloud?
In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Nelson Nahum, CEO & CTO of Zadara Storage, will compare the requirements of enterprise applications with cloud offerings, from Amazon Web Services to OpenStack, and analyze the gaps that exist. We will then show how to make the cloud a much more inviting place for Enterprises.
Nelson Nahum is CEO & CTO of Zadara Storage. A thought leader for software-defined storage, he brings 20+ years of storage experience to the company. Prior to co-founding Zadara, he was Fellow and VP of Software Engineering at LSI. Previously he was CTO and co-founder of StoreAge (acquired by LSI), where he invented out-of-band storage virtualization. He holds multiple patents and a BSEE from the Technion.

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Think You Know About Storage Devices? Take a Quiz To Find How Much

“From punched cards to disks, from CDs to SSDs, impressive technological progress has enabled us to store more and more data – and access it with increasing speed. But how well do you know these storage devices that make our lives so much easier?”

Tech Week Europe has an online quiz to test your knowledge.

Datapipe Acquires Newvem

We at Newvem have worked hard to provide a better cloud experience with Newvem’s cost and usage analytics for Amazon Web Services (AWS) users over the past three years. Since the beginning we have relentlessly pushed the edge in innovation and cloud adoption for both beginners and experienced professionals, helping our users aligning their cloud operations with their business.
“This is a great moment for us as a team. We started more than three years ago with a pioneer idea in a small coffee shop in Tel Aviv, at a time when cloud usage was just in its infancy,” says Ilan Naslavsky, co-founder and CTO. “It’s amazing to think of the progress we’ve made, not only as a company, but in impacting the way that DevOps adopt the cloud and consume utility computing for a variety of needs within their organizations”.
Your Newvem account will continue unchanged for the time being. This includes access to Newvem Cloud Care features for free as well as advanced capabilities for paying customers. Newvem’s service and product will now be supported by one of the leading cloud companies in the world and we have new great features coming your way soon.

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Datapipe Acquires Newvem

We at Newvem have worked hard to provide a better cloud experience with Newvem’s cost and usage analytics for Amazon Web Services (AWS) users over the past three years. Since the beginning we have relentlessly pushed the edge in innovation and cloud adoption for both beginners and experienced professionals, helping our users aligning their cloud operations with their business.
“This is a great moment for us as a team. We started more than three years ago with a pioneer idea in a small coffee shop in Tel Aviv, at a time when cloud usage was just in its infancy,” says Ilan Naslavsky, co-founder and CTO. “It’s amazing to think of the progress we’ve made, not only as a company, but in impacting the way that DevOps adopt the cloud and consume utility computing for a variety of needs within their organizations”.
Your Newvem account will continue unchanged for the time being. This includes access to Newvem Cloud Care features for free as well as advanced capabilities for paying customers. Newvem’s service and product will now be supported by one of the leading cloud companies in the world and we have new great features coming your way soon.

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Healthcare “Meaningful Use” Regulation Changes and Cloud Computing

According to Erin McCann, Associate Editor of Healthcare IT News, “Meaningful use will bring about the most significant improvements in the health information technology arena, say health IT executives, who are working tirelessly to meet industry deadlines. However, a new survey finds it’s still a trying task, with officials citing regulation ambiguity and competing IT projects as the biggest barriers to moving forward with MU.”
This was from a survey conducted by the Stoltenberg Consulting firm. The results include insights from HIT management, physicians, clinicians, government agencies and HIT vendors who attended the 2013 HIMSS Annual Conference and Exhibition in New Orleans.

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Healthcare “Meaningful Use” Regulation Changes and Cloud Computing

According to Erin McCann, Associate Editor of Healthcare IT News, “Meaningful use will bring about the most significant improvements in the health information technology arena, say health IT executives, who are working tirelessly to meet industry deadlines. However, a new survey finds it’s still a trying task, with officials citing regulation ambiguity and competing IT projects as the biggest barriers to moving forward with MU.”
This was from a survey conducted by the Stoltenberg Consulting firm. The results include insights from HIT management, physicians, clinicians, government agencies and HIT vendors who attended the 2013 HIMSS Annual Conference and Exhibition in New Orleans.

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Cloud Expo | Big Data & Analytics: Mining for Gold in the Cloud

In his session at the 13th International Cloud Expo®, Tarry Singh, Managing Partner, O&I Services, to discuss how Big Data analytics help companies make better business decisions by enable them to analyze huge amounts of data.
Tarry Singh is Managing Partner, O&I Services, a European Management & Technology Consulting firm based in Netherlands with offices in Germany. An experienced, entrepreneurial and well-rounded professional with 20+ years of experience in multiple industries, he has deep multicultural experience having worked with 40+ nationalities in U.S, Brazil, Singapore, Japan and Europe.

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Are hidden costs dampening cloud computing benefits?

Cloud adoption is not a straight line proposition. It is increasingly the main push for many organizations looking to upgrade their IT strategy. A major reason for the shift includes the cloud’s obvious benefits; another reasoning stems from the fact that older IT models simply cannot deliver the speed and agility necessary to compete in today’s marketplace.

However, just because cloud is new and popular doesn’t mean it doesn’t require as much or more work than existing systems. With an emphasis on management or even relying on an outsourcing partner, many IT organizations can successfully implement cloud for their organization.

Yet, all businesses could run the risk of falling short of maximizing efficiencies within the cloud and running upadded costs that weren’t estimated for at the outset of a project.

So what are some hidden costs you need to know to look out for to …

Automated VM Load Balancing for Multi-Vendor Private Clouds

VMware vSphere 5.x includes automated server workload balancing in the vSphere Enterprise and Enterprise+ premium suites via two feature sets: Distributed Resource Scheduler (DRS) and Distributed Power Management (DPM). DRS and DPM together are intended to provide an automated method for balancing compute capacity and reducing energy consumption in a highly virtualized datacenter.
These capabilities are important to ensure that an organization is efficiently leveraging virtualization host capacity in a manner that provides greatest performance benefits while reducing ongoing operating costs. However, research has shown that 65% to 70% of organizations are running more than one hypervisor. As a result, it’s necessary to provide these capabilities universally on every hypervisor platform in use – not on just the most expensive editions of a single hypervisor.

These capabilities are important to ensure that an organization is efficiently leveraging virtualization host capacity in a manner that provides greatest performance benefits while reducing ongoing operating costs. However, research has shown that 65% to 70% of organizations are running more than one hypervisor. As a result, it’s necessary to provide these capabilities universally on every hypervisor platform in use – not on just the most expensive editions of a single hypervisor.

In this article, we’ll briefly describe each of these key technical areas and contrast with how these same capabilities are delivered in Windows Server 2012, our FREE Hyper-V Server 2012 enterprise-grade bare-metal hypervisor, and System Center 2012 SP1 Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) across multiple hypervisors in a heterogeneous Private Cloud …

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