What a show! My favourite images….
My client WTL picking up an award. My client Liquid Telecom picking up an award.
...helping telecom vendors raise their profiles in Africa...
What a show! My favourite images….
My client WTL picking up an award. My client Liquid Telecom picking up an award.
At this year’s AfricaCom, WTL had two announcements which received a lot of interest and helped to drive traffic to its booth.
You can read one of their announcements written up by Developing Telecoms here: WTL’s new SMS hub service in Africa.
And more here on IT Web: Mobile Number Portability in Nigeria.
In addition, the company came 2nd in the AfricaCom awards. Not bad for a small vendor competing against the big boys of telecoms! How happy do the guys look?!
World Telecoms Labs picking up their gong for 2nd place in the Best Connectivty Solution for Africa at the 2013 AfricaCom awards.
So I’m back from the greatest show on earth! Exhausted and catching up. Look at the coverage my clients got though – amazing and the result of months of hard work!
Many people asked me about my client OMC Power which was not at the show because it is concentrating on the Indian market.
You can read more about OMC in this story which I got for the company in The Economist. OMC has also been named as one of the World Economic Forum’s Technology Pioneers and is off to Davos in January. Here’s a story in India’s Economic Times newspaper.
Of course, the Grand Daddy of telco shows in Africa is AfricaCom which takes place in Cape Town every year – 11-13 November next year. More details here: http://africa.comworldseries.com/
Other Informa shows in Africa are
Cloud World Forum Africa, 6-7 May 2014 in Joburg
East Africa Com, 20-21 May 2014 in Nairobi
Connecting West Africa Com, 10-11 June 2014 in Senegal
Aitec Africa run a number of well-attended shows. Here’s a list of its 2013 schedule:
Liquid Telecom has built the largest fibre network in Eastern, Central and Southern Africa. Here are some of recent stories:
Reuters, November 2013 – Liquid builds first cross border fibre to Somalia
The Africa Report, November 2013 – General update on Liquid.
Telecompaper, September 2013 – Liquid connects to TTCL in Tanzania.
Balancing-Act, June 2013 – Liquid acquires assets of Rwandatel.
Financial Times, January 2013 – Liquid expands across Africa.
Nov 19 2012 – Liquid named Best African Wholesale Carrier at Annual Awards of Capacity Magazine Pictured is Ramzi Shalak Network Operations Manager at Liquid Telecom who picked up the award.
Nov 14 2012 – Liquid lays fibre in DRC…
This story was run in a multitude of places including:
Inmarsat interviewed at AfricaCom 2012 by Informa’s telecoms.com:
Suntrica has developed numerous solar-powered chargers for phones, ipods, cameras and other electronic devices. These provide consumers in developed markets with a portable environmentally-friendly power supply and people in emerging markets with a reliable way to charge their devices in areas where there is little or no electricity
This review was written by the legendery Duncan McLeod and appeared in South Africa’s Financial Mail.
Financial Mail – Mobile sun charger april 2009 Mobile sun charger
How many times has your cellphone’s battery gone flat at the most inopportune moments? It’s happened to all of us. Worse, you could be out in the bush without access to electricity, or on a five-day hiking trip across the Drakensberg. Anything could happen out there, and a fully charged battery could save your life.
The SolarStrap, developed by Finland’s Suntrica and introduced at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February, is an ingenious solar-powered cellphone charger ideal for these situations.
The 60 g device uses the sun to charge its battery – but it can also be charged via USB or the mains. Simply connect a phone using the correct power adapter – a wide range of adapters is included in the box – to give it a quick charge.
The SolarStrap – which is robust, highly flexible and water resistant – can easily be attached, using its Velcro strips, to a hiker’s backpack, a mountain bike’s handlebars, or even to a pants belt.
However, the really exciting application for the SolarStrap is not for Sandtonites at leisure, but rather for people in emerging markets who do not have a reliable electricity supply. Because the device is cheap and robust, it could sell millions of units in Africa.
Zephyr Corporation sells wind turbines to operators in MEA.
Click here to read an article we prepared for Connect World magazine.
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