Technology
How Digital Transformation Helps African businesses to thrive

Published
9 years agoon

Standard & Poor’s predicts that the South African economy will grow by only 0.8% in 2016. Three different finance ministers in four days, a downward trend in its stock market, and plummeting currency values are all contributing to the slowdown.
Despite the grim predictions, South Africa’s enterprise software market is growing. According to Gartner, IT spending in South Africa is expected to reach $26.6 billion in 2016, an increase of 5.1 percent from 2015. IDC also believes that in 2016, South African organizations will invest more in digital transformation initiatives to streamline their costs and improve their flexibility.
There is a good reason for the increase in IT costs. Automation saveslabour, energy and material costs that can help reduce expenses to help keep companies profitable even in a recession.
Here are examples of how African businesses are succeeding with digital transformation:
1. Reducing Errors – Manual processing is costly and slow, and can lead to inconsistent results and a high error rate.Many companies have enhanced their customer-facing, front-end operations with digital solutions. Internet banking, for example at Standard Bank, offers consumers convenience while reducing labor costs and improving data accuracy.
2. Speeding Payments – Boloro provides mobile payment solutions in South Africa, enabling quick check out and a safer alternative to carrying large quantities of cash.
3. Reducing Labor Costs – Smart meters are being used to measure household utility usage in Johannesburg, putting meter readers out of business.Similarly, robotics are replacing many of the manual tasks on South Africa’s automotive assembly lines.
4. Improving Safety – South African mining companies are using sensors to detect methane and rock movement, fuel pipelines have been fitted with sensors to monitor leaks.
5. Lowering Inventory Costs – Health care organizations are using radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags to monitor their equipment inventory, reducing over-purchasing and equipment rental costs, increasing equipment utilization, and reducing equipment loss.
6. Increasing Manufacturing Efficiency – South African bulk wine producers have ordered automation technologies, valued at the price of ZAR 18 million, from Germany to improve plant production efficiencies.
7. Increasing Agricultural Yields – Fruitlook allows farmers to build up a long-term database of growing parameters, enabling them to compare different orchards or vineyards as well as trends for different seasons. It also allows farmers to benchmark themselves against each other and identify ways to improve production efficiency.
Digital transformation is increasing efficiency and reducing costs for agriculture, banks, utilities, mining companies, manufacturers and healthcare organizations across South Africa. Automation can make companies more profitable and competitive, resulting in greater demand for their products which can translate into more jobs and contribute to an economic turnaround.
Whether it’s automation in the way of robotics on the manufacturing floor, or automation features which eliminate manual process, or automation features that provides data on mobile devices, businesses need robust and versatile application development and integration platforms. And those that can work together make the digital transformation process even easier and more cost effective. Those businesses that undertake digital transformations are most likely to thrive, especially during an economic downturn.
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Blog
Facebook is experimenting with prompts that ask users whether they are concerned that a friend is ‘becoming an extremist.’
Published
4 years agoon
July 2, 2021By
Editor
In the United States, some Facebook (FB) users are receiving a prompt asking if they are concerned that someone they know is becoming radical. Others are being alerted about the possibility of being exposed to extremist information.
It’s all part of a test that Facebook is conducting as part of its Redirect Initiative, which tries to tackle violent extremism.
This experiment is part of a wider project to see how we can provide tools and help to people on Facebook who have interacted with or been exposed to extremist content, or who know someone who is.
“Are you concerned that someone you know is becoming an extremist?” one of the notifications reads, a screen grab of which went viral on social media Thursday.
According to a screenshot shared on social media, the alert stated, “We care about avoiding extremism on Facebook.” “Others in your situation have gotten discreet help,” she says.
The user is then directed to a support page by the alert.
Another alert reads, “Violent groups try to use your anger and disillusionment.” “You have the ability to protect yourself and others right now.”
The user is also redirected to a help page as a result of the notice.
Facebook is sending users to a range of resources, including Life After Hate, an advocacy group that helps people quit violent far-right movements.
Over the last few years, Facebook has been blasted by detractors for failing to take sufficient steps to combat extremist content on its platform. For example, in 2020, the firm was chastised for failing to take down a militia group’s Facebook page, which encouraged armed residents to go to the streets of Kenosha, Wisconsin.
The company has also committed to do a better job of preventing the spread of false information and conspiracy theories. In May, Facebook’s independent oversight board encouraged the corporation to look into the role of its platform in the January 6 uprising.
How To's
YouTube Is Redesigning Its Descriptions for the Web, With a Greater Focus on Comments
Published
4 years agoon
July 2, 2021By
Editor
YouTube is reportedly putting a new description section on the Web to the test. The revamp aims to make the comments, video view count, publish date, and video description more prominent. The video description, which presently appears beneath the YouTube channel name, will now appear directly beneath the video title. Other improvements are being tested as well, with the goal of putting a greater emphasis on user comments. When these modifications will be available to all Web users is unknown.
The view counts and published date are much bolder than previously, appearing just below the video title. The video description appears right after the publication date and requires more concise content than before. If the video description is too long, the new design makes it appear tight, and if it spills over to the second line, a “Show More” option emerges. With this makeover, the ability to create connections may be more challenging. Depending on the size of the window, buttons for like, unlike, share, and save show next to the video description. In a barely drawn area below the view count is the channel name. The number of comments and the top comment are both noted in different boxes next to it.
The option to add a new comment will be located just below the channel name, followed by other less popular comments located beneath the video. This redesigned description for YouTube Web users is still in beta and is only visible to a select users at a time. There is no guarantee that it will be commercially available, and Google may decide to scrap it during the development phase. The design is also a little confusing and cluttered, and Google may make some changes before deciding to give it out to everyone.
General News
These telemedicine companies are transforming the way doctors will treat patients in the future.
Published
4 years agoon
July 2, 2021By
Editor
Telemedicine exploded during the pandemic, after years of steadily gaining popularity. Companies are now capitalizing on this momentum to bring in the next wave of remote health, expanding beyond simple doctor consultations to a high-tech world of healthcare access without ever leaving the house.
Dr. John Batsis, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, remarked that the pandemic “actually promoted new techniques for remote monitoring, production, and development of devices.” “Wherever there is a customer need, there will be startups, equity, and businesses attempting to meet those requirements.”
Tyto Care, an on-demand medical exam company that aspires to duplicate in-person visits with home medical kits, is one company reconsidering televisits. Dedi Gilad, the company’s CEO and co-founder, came up with the idea eight years ago while his daughter was suffering from recurrent ear and throat infections.
Meanwhile, Sanford Health in the Midwest, the country’s largest rural health care organization, has adopted a similar strategy. Rather of adapting devices for remote usage, doctors taught patients how to record their results at home using the same tools they used during in-person appointments.
According to Sanford Health, “home monitoring kits” containing a fetal ultrasound monitor and a blood pressure cuff were distributed to patients with low-risk pregnancies, allowing women to use virtual care for nearly a third of their prenatal care appointments during the pandemic.
Other telemedicine startups, such as Kiira in Los Angeles, are focusing on increasing access to underprivileged areas. The company’s virtual care app, which links women to primary care providers, OB-GYNs, mental health experts, and more through phone, video, and chat 24 hours a day, seven days a week, aims to bridge the healthcare gap for women in college, particularly women of color.
Historically, black and brown people have faced numerous impediments to healthcare, including fees, access to care, and even access to clinicians of color. Students are frequently hesitant to enter because they do not see a provider who looks like them…. One of the things that has been absent for a long time is the ability to see someone who you can relate to and speak with a provider from the comfort of your own home.
Virtual visits can be conducted, prescriptions can be written, and lab tests can be ordered using the app. Kiira’s monthly fee is covered by colleges, so students don’t have to pay for it. It presently serves four universities and approximately 3,000 students, with ambitions to grow to 22,000 students later this year.
Spora Heath, another affordable telemedicine startup, focuses on offering a primary care network for African-Americans. The $10-per-month service compels its physicians, 90 percent of whom are persons of color, to complete “culture-competence training” and workshops in order to better understand and support the communities they serve.
These technologies are going to be integrally important in managing patient’s health now and in the future.

Facebook is experimenting with prompts that ask users whether they are concerned that a friend is ‘becoming an extremist.’

YouTube Is Redesigning Its Descriptions for the Web, With a Greater Focus on Comments

These telemedicine companies are transforming the way doctors will treat patients in the future.

YouTube Is Redesigning Its Descriptions for the Web, With a Greater Focus on Comments

Facebook is experimenting with prompts that ask users whether they are concerned that a friend is ‘becoming an extremist.’

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