Showing posts with label IBM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IBM. Show all posts

Friday, 18 September 2009

Africa Innovation Centre Cape Town

A Satellite
We opened our second AIC (Africa Innovation Centre) yesterday (17th September 2009), this time in Cape Town. The opening of this AIC is approximately a year after the opening on the first centre in Johannesburg. The Cape Town AIC is a satellite to the centre in Johannesburg, which operates as our central hub.

I envision an ecosystem of connected AICs that leverage a shared pool of resources (people and technology) across the Sub-Saharan region - delivering innovative solutions and support to our partners and clients.

Smart
I believe that the Innovation Centres offer an ideal facility for building the type of solutions required to realise a vision of a Smarter Planet.

Firstly we use the centres to develop the required skills; secondly we support our clients and partners in building their own solutions; and lastly we are jointly able to prototype and test the latest technologies that spur innovation.

I am looking forward to the launch of the next centre ...


Press coverage
ITNewsAfrica – IBM launches another Africa Innovation Centre

Reuters – IBM Launches New Cape Town Africa Innovation Center to Help Fuel Skills Growth in...

Trading Markets – IBM opens Africa Innovation Center in Cape Town

IT Online – IBM extends Innovation Centre to Cape Town

ITWeb – IBM opens CT innovation centre

South Africa Info – IBM's second Africa innovation centre

Wednesday, 16 September 2009

ITNewsAfrica: IBM commits to Africa

IBM’s Chief Technology Officer, Clifford Foster, has reiterated his support for business development in Sub-Saharan Africa saying it’s an important market for his company.

Speaking to ITNewsAfrica.com recently, Foster noted that despite the global economic meltdown IBM has shown its commitment to the continent evidenced by its investments across Africa and its recent opening of offices in Nairobi and Lagos.

“ The economic meltdown has impacted on many but for us we have shown resilience through the opening of offices in Nairobi and Lagos, we’ll continue to invest in Africa as a matter of fact we are connected to sub-Saharan Africa,” he said.

The Technology supremo at IBM further explained that his organization has faith in Africa hence the graduate programme which they have established to recruit young professionals and expose them to culture and life at IBM.

“Our graduate programme is meant to show young graduates what it is like to work for IBM,” Foster noted

Upon his appointment in November last year, his stated priorities were to drive innovation through the company’s African Innovation Centre (AIC) and to establish various partnerships with universities across the continent; an initiative he is passionate about.

“My focus for 2009 will be on driving the AIC concept further into Africa. This is not a South African-centric statement; IBM will be tapping into innovation wherever it happens.”

True to his word, the Fortune 500 IT company expanded its operations in Kenya from sales and marketing offices to a fully fledged operation, in order to capture growth in the East African region.

Upon being asked what IBM was doing regarding cyber crime ahead of 2010, Foster, said they were working on a number of projects with the South African government without going into specifics.

“With 2010 coming, we are working on a number of projects, we have technology that can process vast amounts of data in real time. I’ am unable to give you specifics but what I can say is that it can be anything even border controls,” he explained.

IBM has been operating in Africa for nearly six decades and has invested more than $US120 million in the last two years as part of its strategy to focus on the world’s growth markets.

Its investments include a Johannesburg-based Africa Innovation Centre -which has a software solutions lab- cloud computing capability and a banking centre of excellence. Also, IBM has donated a Blue Gene Supercomputer, which is located at Cape Town’s Centre for High Performance Computing, to be used for research by institutions across sub-Saharan Africa.

Original article here