Thursday, April 30, 2015
Made In Africa: Three Cars Designed And Manufactured In Africa
Four Nigerian teenage girls create urine-fueled generator in Lagos
Four teenage girls figured out a way to use a liter of urine as fuel to get six hours of electricity from their generator. Fourteen-year-olds Duro-Aina Adebola, Akindele Abiola, and Faleke Oluwatoyin, and 15-year-old Bello Eniola displayed their invention this week at Maker Faire Africa in Lagos, Nigeria, an annual event meant to showcase ingenuity.
Here’s how the urine-powered generator works, as explained by the blog on the makerfaireafrica.com website:
• Urine is put into an electrolytic cell, which separates out the hydrogen.
• The hydrogen goes into a water filter for purification, and then into a gas cylinder, which looks similar to the kind used for outdoor barbecue grills.
• The gas cylinder pushes the filtered hydrogen into another cylinder that contains liquid borax, in order to remove moisture from the gas. Borax is a natural mineral, commonly used in laundry detergent.
• The hydrogen is pushed into a power generator in the final step of the process.
A big drawback is that hydrogen poses an explosion risk. But the girls used one-way valves throughout the device as a safety measure.
Friday, April 24, 2015
Nigerian brothers build mobile Web Browser out of 'boredom'
As a matter of fact, these teenagers’ creation is actually on the Google Play Store. Speaking to TechCabal.com, Osine, 13, said he writes the code together with his brother, for their creations and his brother also designs the UI.
At
a closer look, these genius brothers are just like every other teenage
boy but not quite at the same time. Osine likes to play soccer, but also
takes coding as a hobby – which is not something every 13 year old boy
does.
His interest in computers began at the tender age of 7, the same age which he and his brother –who was 9 at the time (born June 1, 1999), decided to start a company of their own. Inspired by Microsoft’s
“Windows” platform, they initially named their new company ‘Doors’, but
later changed the name to ‘BluDoors’ when they found out that the
initial name had been taken.
The two brothers decided to learn to code at ages 12 and 14 respectively. “I
learnt to code by myself. I started in 2013, I used sites sites like
Code Academy, Code Avengers and books like ‘Android for Game
Development’ and ‘Games for Dummies’,” said Anesi.
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Apple Inc. Buys Nigerian Born Chinedu Echeruo’s Hopstop.com For $1 Billion
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Chinedu Echeruo, formerly an analyst at investment banks and hedge funds founded HopStop in 2005. Echeruo is now Chairman of the Board for HopStop.
HopStop has oft been compared to Israel’s Waze which was recently acquired by Google for $1 billion. The move is seen as Apple’s plan to bolster its map offering especially given Google’s recent acquisition of Waze.
A serial entrepreneur, Chinedu Echeruo grew up in Eastern Nigeria and attended Kings College, Lagos. He attended Syracuse University and the Harvard Business School in the United States and founded HopStop.com after working for several years in the Mergers & Acquisitions and Leveraged Finance groups of J.P Morgan Chase where he was involved in a broad range of M&A, Financing and Private Equity transactions.
He also worked at AM Investment Partners, a $500 million volatility-driven convertible bond arbitrage hedge fund.
Young CEO’s Business Summit To Hold In Ghana, Open For Participation!


These CEOs focus more on creating value for all of their stakeholders and then fulfill deeper purpose of their organization which is giving back to society and making it better than they met it, if you are a CEO under 45 and want your business and services to be seen and heard, if you value the power of networking and look forward to connecting with vibrant business community, investment partners, venture capitalists then you must make attending YCBS African Convention Accra 2015 a priority.
Friday, April 10, 2015
Working Endless Hours Does Not Make You a Hero (Infographic)

In the U.S., people tend to brag about working long hours. Clocking countless hours at the office is worn as a badge of honor, brandied about at the water cooler to garner respect.
Turns out, working endless hours may be nothing more than a waste of time.
Germany is among the countries with the shortest workweeks, with employees averaging 35 hours a week at the office, but it also tops out as the most productive nation in the world, according to the infographic embedded below, generated by cloud-based software company PGi.
The marginal benefit of each hour worked on a country’s gross domestic product declines pretty steadily as the number of hours increase, according to the infographic.
How many hours are you working a week? Could you be spending your time more wisely? How many hours are your employees working per week? Do they need to be working that many hours?
Check out the infographic below for additional data on global productivity and some tips on how to maximize your efficiency.
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Non-Disclosures Can Protect Your business Idea, or Destroy It ...learn how
First of all, I will admit that there is some risk involved with talking to any potential investors, even with an agreement, just as there is risk in all the elements of your plan, product and market opportunity. Yet I can assure you that people who are paranoid, or want to avoid all risks, won’t be happy as entrepreneurs, so it’s all about balancing the risk-reward scale.
Related: Your Ideas Have No Value
Thus, based on my experience as an entrepreneur as well as a startup investor, there are indeed situations where a non-disclosure is highly recommended, and others where the potential good far outweighs the risk. Here are the key considerations from my perspective:
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