You should try to solve local problems first. A popular solution in foreign countries may not have good crossover appeal in Nigeria.
Fortunately or unfortunately, Nigeria has several problems looking for solutions. Examples include helping people travel around more securely, finding affordable healthcare, enabling MSMEs to find more customers.
This is a deeply patronising and offensive statement. The ancient Benin kingdom from which these artifacts were stolen still remains till today and despite corruption in the country, they have managed to keep all their remaining artifacts safe through the centuries.
Nigeria’s corruption problem is orthogonal to its ability to keep its sacred cultural artifacts safe. In fact due to deep cultural and religious reasons, the chances that Nigerians would rob the Oba (King) of Benin’s palace is near zero.
I say this with the full authority of being a native of said country and culture.
It’s because where the money goes is where it circulates, which ultimately affects the GDP.
Every dollar that leaves India, Nigeria or any other developing country is one less dollar that can pay for jobs (plumbers, electricians, doctors etc) in the local market.
South Africa used to have very restrictive currency export controls partly due to apartheid-era sanctions, and one consequence is that it stimulated domestic production and innovation, perhaps far more than any other African country. They’ve now relaxed those controls but it is arguable that they were necessary at that stage of their economic development.
From the article:
“NIBSS Instant Payment is so far, the most innovative and revolutionary e-payment solution designed by NIBSS to service the banking industry. NIP is the first and only point to point funds transfer service that guarantees instant value to the beneficiary. Nigeria is the only country in Africa and essentially, the world to have deployed such a solution.”
From first hand use, the platform delivers sub 30 second Interbank transfers, serves over 180 million people across Nigeria, complete with 2-factor security, and SMS notifications to both parties. The transaction cost is N100 (USD 0.33) and it has been operational since 2011.
It makes you wonder if the $15-$30 wire transfer fees in the US is a severe case of regulatory capture.
2. Does OpenFaas assume that the smallest unit of work for each function or domain of functions is always a unique container? In other words, does it support scenarios where one needs to deploy a new function into an existing/running container?
My team and I are working on solving the 3 biggest problems in mobile app management - distribution, monetization, and enterprise mobility.
Our idea is to build a platform for discovering, managing, and monetizing apps. Kinda like a Spotify for Apps.
So essentially, we've built a mobile app that lets you run embeddable apps (applets) in containers (i.e. webviews with native hooks), and developers can hook the applets up to a mobile backend-as-a-service similar to Firebase.
Businesses can also use it to manage and setup shared workspaces that contain private, work-related apps, and get all the benefits of enterprise mobility (BYOD, security, etc) without all the complexity.
We've just finished a successful private beta and are gearing up for a limited public beta. Check it out - https://formelo.com
If anyone is interested in participating in our beta run, shoot me an email - niyi @ formelo . com
New tech (including dev tools) will get simpler over time and adapt to the needs of the market.
Take web pages as an example. Circa 1995, only a relatively few technical people could weave the HTML magic to create them. Fast-forward 10 years, and 5 year old kids were creating them for fun. The demand for web pages continued to increase and eventually the tools to help the majority of people create them emerged naturally.
IMO, the same will apply to app development tools.
I'm working on a startup that has built a PaaS that helps people with beginner or intermediate tech skills build apps quickly, and I agree that building the platform is like a guiding a mountaineer to Camp IV on Everest. Using the same platform to build a bunch of ready-made apps (that can be easily customized if required) is like helping them reach the Summit.
There is still a ton of value in building the platform because it helps us create a whole bunch of these ready-made apps that address different use cases very quickly. The cherry on top is that customizations are very easy and where the non-technical user has the problem-solver mindset, they can make those changes without us.
>> This is a classic trap for technology entrepreneurs, right up there with 'building tools that makes it easier for non-technical people to build apps'.
Can you kindly expatiate on why building dev tools for non-technical people requires a web of trust?
For any given individual, evaluating whether such tools work for you should be a pretty quick exercise similar to test-driving a car. Why would you need a web of trust?
Fortunately or unfortunately, Nigeria has several problems looking for solutions. Examples include helping people travel around more securely, finding affordable healthcare, enabling MSMEs to find more customers.