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Konza City featured on K24 all week this week
a4architect.com
#161 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 8:08:31 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 1/4/2010
Posts: 1,668
Location: nairobi

Quote:
They say, the best time to have planted a tree was 20 years ago and the next best time is now.

So far we know 18 unis local and international want to set base in Konza is it vital that something should be done?


@ murchr..good quote on the trees part.

My question is, why cant these 18 universities go to Konza, strike their land buying deal without Govt buying for them?

In this case, they could even have gotten a much lower deal than the kes 200k per acre.

Islamic,Daystar,Kampala and other unis have done that in recent years.

Why is the Govt buying then reselling to them?

All the Ministry of Info needs to do is lobby Ministry of Local Govt to rezone the area into educational. Very easy.

Tax payers kes 1 B will be left free to lay in ICT infrastructure and support startups.
As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
alma
#162 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 8:09:53 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/20/2007
Posts: 4,432
Can someone somewhere in this project come up with real figures and numbers instead of dreams.

My view since the first time I posted was that Juja would be perfect for ICT growth. KU and JKuat have proven that they have what it takes to buck the trend and go for new age ideas.

The history of the best cities in the world has shown that human capital is essential in city growth and sustainability. Silicon valley for IT skills, Hollywood for actors, Boston for Finance, New York as a harbor, Nairobi as Finance, London for trade etc

So what is Konza?

I argue that Juja, Ngong Road have already started the path towards ICT. Yet, the ict board has seen it fit to ignore these ict entreprenuers, history and facts in the pursuit of a dream.

This will be the first human experiment where you move whole industries from where they started to another place simply because the buildings did not have fire hydrants.

Like I have said, I will be here in 2030 with my kaplot in Konza. But I'm hundred percent sure that the next google will be somewhere in Zimmerman. My expensive kaplot will be in Konza.
Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
murchr
#163 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 8:14:56 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
alma wrote:
Can someone somewhere in this project come up with real figures and numbers instead of dreams.

My view since the first time I posted was that Juja would be perfect for ICT growth. KU and JKuat have proven that they have what it takes to buck the trend and go for new age ideas.

The history of the best cities in the world has shown that human capital is essential in city growth and sustainability. Silicon valley for IT skills, Hollywood for actors, Boston for Finance, New York as a harbor, Nairobi as Finance, London for trade etc

So what is Konza?

I argue that Juja, Ngong Road have already started the path towards ICT. Yet, the ict board has seen it fit to ignore these ict entreprenuers, history and facts in the pursuit of a dream.

This will be the first human experiment where you move whole industries from where they started to another place simply because the buildings did not have fire hydrants.

Like I have said, I will be here in 2030 with my kaplot in Konza. But I'm hundred percent sure that the next google will be somewhere in Zimmerman. My expensive kaplot will be in Konza.



Can u picture juja in the year 2030 with google africa head quarters in the middle of those cracking unplanned apartments
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
a4architect.com
#164 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 8:17:31 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 1/4/2010
Posts: 1,668
Location: nairobi
alma wrote:
Can someone somewhere in this project come up with real figures and numbers instead of dreams.

My view since the first time I posted was that Juja would be perfect for ICT growth. KU and JKuat have proven that they have what it takes to buck the trend and go for new age ideas.

The history of the best cities in the world has shown that human capital is essential in city growth and sustainability. Silicon valley for IT skills, Hollywood for actors, Boston for Finance, New York as a harbor, Nairobi as Finance, London for trade etc

So what is Konza?

I argue that Juja, Ngong Road have already started the path towards ICT. Yet, the ict board has seen it fit to ignore these ict entreprenuers, history and facts in the pursuit of a dream.

This will be the first human experiment where you move whole industries from where they started to another place simply because the buildings did not have fire hydrants.

Like I have said, I will be here in 2030 with my kaplot in Konza. But I'm hundred percent sure that the next google will be somewhere in Zimmerman. My expensive kaplot will be in Konza.


@alma..good observation.

Kahawa Wendani, where most KU students live is currently abuzz with all sorts of ICT gizmos.ICT business is already thriving.All that is needed is to nurture ICT talent by introducing ICT courses e.t.c


As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
a4architect.com
#165 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 8:20:42 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 1/4/2010
Posts: 1,668
Location: nairobi
Quote:

Can u picture juja in the year 2030 with google africa head quarters in the middle of those cracking unplanned apartments


@murchr..
thats why we have architects, engineers, interior designers, valuers, QS e.t.c.

Those ugly buildings with proper renovations would look very beautiful.

Local authority only needs to enforce such a bye-law. E.g its mandatory to paint your building in CBD every so often.

Juja area still has hundreds of thousands of unbuilt acres of land.
As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
murchr
#166 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 9:26:11 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
a4architect.com wrote:
Quote:

Can u picture juja in the year 2030 with google africa head quarters in the middle of those cracking unplanned apartments


@murchr..
thats why we have architects, engineers, interior designers, valuers, QS e.t.c.

Those ugly buildings with proper renovations would look very beautiful.

Local authority only needs to enforce such a bye-law. E.g its mandatory to paint your building in CBD every so often.

Juja area still has hundreds of thousands of unbuilt acres of land.



The topography of juja as we know it today is pathetic and no renovation would do unless the buildings are demolished and the place planned afresh. I dont know if the cost of doing that would be cheaper than acquiring new land. Thika is an industrial town and juja is now a dormitory. Where is tatu supposed to be?

FYI ICT is not typing documents printing and photocopying businesses, that is what happens there, that even mama mboga can do Laughing out loudly
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
eboomerang
#167 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 10:01:36 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/27/2011
Posts: 301
Location: Nairobi
jamplu wrote:
eboomerang wrote:
jamplu wrote:

@alma there is saying where i come from that you don't climb a tree from the top you start from the bottom. ihub and the rest of the incubation centers is our starting point. what if each of the 300 leaving ihub each started a start-up and assume 150 of them failed we have 150 start-ups what if each employed 10 that == a growing ICT sector and your Konza city will be filled up in 10 years
Lets look at your facebook example how many people started it or even Apple and the rest with large campuses these started in dorm rooms and garages.

Most of the IT companies are no longer waiting for graduates with 100% capacity they have stepped up by training new entrant so stop thinking nothing is happening in terms of building capacity.

@jamplu, based on your comments, I have confidence to tell you the following...

You do not know or understand what you are talking about, period!

I hope the people behind this Konza City are not of the same mindset.



@eboomerang probably its you who has no clue what you talking about! if you think you know better why don't you say what you think you know stop behaving like the whole world ends in your mind!

Lol :)

I've given my thoughts on this issue enough times and I do not see the need to repeat the same.

In this same thread, go to page 2 and comment #24, page 5 and comment #81, page 5 and comment #85.

I'm yet to see any one who can respond to those issues I raised there, especially the one on page 2.
eboomerang
#168 Posted : Thursday, April 12, 2012 10:45:23 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/27/2011
Posts: 301
Location: Nairobi
.
a4architect.com
#169 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 9:30:14 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 1/4/2010
Posts: 1,668
Location: nairobi
eboomerang wrote:
muthoniruth wrote:
Yes Eboomerang, plus more interviews daily all week this week. Yesterday was Dr. Bitange Ndemo, Today was Mugo Kabati of Vision 2030.
Jeff Koinange is interviewing different ple daily.
Thanks for the link!

We have had a very lengthy discussion here in wazua related to this Konza City project under a thread titled "Konza city Reality."

First things first, I have a lot of admiration and respect for Dr Bitange and Mr Mugo and all others who are pioneering these projects. They have atleast seen some light and created the confidence in the country that it is all possible if we commit to work for the good of the nation.

Having said that, I have a bit of challenges in agreeing with the bigger picture they are pursuing.

As rightly mentioned here, if you trully and sincerely understand how the ICT industry works, you would agree that they are totally missing the target. It is rather ironical that the discussion is purely being focused on infrastructure and real eastate.

Software development can be considered to be labor intensive (highly skilled labour) and that is the key factor of production in that sector.

I heard Dr Bitange mention that they new city will create 200,000 jobs. To me that figure is highly debatable if not plain wrong. I'll take a sample of only a few companies and the number of their employees.

-Microsoft has 55,002 employees in the US and 92,000 world wide.
-Qualcomm has 12,520 employess in US and about 4000 out of US.
-Intel has 45,400 in US and 37 125 out of US.

Total revenue of these companies = 138,9 Billion dollars (microsoft $69.94B, Qualcomm $14.96B, Intel $54.0B). I've not even taken Apple and others into account.

-Tata Consulting Services in India has 226,751 employees. TCS' revenue is $7.57 Billion

The three US companies directly employ 112,922 people in the US and have a cumulative revenue of $138,9 Billion. Tata Consulting employs 226,751 people locally in India with reported revenues of $7 Billion.

The US is a developed market with extremely highly skilled engineers. India on the other hand has a large supply of engineers (over 20 million) who we can say have some level of skills but not at par with the US. This explains the discrepancy on the revenues. Either way India has been able to draw investors based on this talent pool.

Now, Dr Bitange where are you hoping to get these 200,000 skilled people in ICT related matters to fill that city?

Will you import them?

This is a case where we are putting the cart before the horse.



Very true..
Software development can be considered to be labor intensive (highly skilled labour) and that is the key factor of production in that sector.

Cities form when factors of production are more efficient than other regions.

Nairobi formed when Britain moved colonial HQ from Mombasa.

Mombasa formed coz of Maritime industry.
Nakuru formed coz of Agriculture/Govt offices.
Kisumu coz of the lake/Govt offices.
Nyeri coz of Agriculture/Govt offices.

New Cities.

Turkana will form because of Oil.

Lamu will form because of Oil refinery plus maritime industry/port.

In an ICT city, the greatest factor of production is highly skilled labour, not real estate.

Thats why Mark Zuckerberg could buy a 560 million house at Silicon Valley and recoup the costs by utilizing high skills at Silicon Valley.

Ministry of Info should concentrate on efficient methods of nurturing highly skilled ICT skills at Konza to make it efficient as a factor of production.



These will in turn attract investors and eventually drive the city's economy.

Availability of land and marvelous buildings will not attract investors since these are available elsewhere.
As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
jamplu
#170 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 10:01:24 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 3/25/2010
Posts: 939
Location: Nai
a4architect.com wrote:
eboomerang wrote:
muthoniruth wrote:
Yes Eboomerang, plus more interviews daily all week this week. Yesterday was Dr. Bitange Ndemo, Today was Mugo Kabati of Vision 2030.
Jeff Koinange is interviewing different ple daily.
Thanks for the link!

We have had a very lengthy discussion here in wazua related to this Konza City project under a thread titled "Konza city Reality."

First things first, I have a lot of admiration and respect for Dr Bitange and Mr Mugo and all others who are pioneering these projects. They have atleast seen some light and created the confidence in the country that it is all possible if we commit to work for the good of the nation.

Having said that, I have a bit of challenges in agreeing with the bigger picture they are pursuing.

As rightly mentioned here, if you trully and sincerely understand how the ICT industry works, you would agree that they are totally missing the target. It is rather ironical that the discussion is purely being focused on infrastructure and real eastate.

Software development can be considered to be labor intensive (highly skilled labour) and that is the key factor of production in that sector.

I heard Dr Bitange mention that they new city will create 200,000 jobs. To me that figure is highly debatable if not plain wrong. I'll take a sample of only a few companies and the number of their employees.

-Microsoft has 55,002 employees in the US and 92,000 world wide.
-Qualcomm has 12,520 employess in US and about 4000 out of US.
-Intel has 45,400 in US and 37 125 out of US.

Total revenue of these companies = 138,9 Billion dollars (microsoft $69.94B, Qualcomm $14.96B, Intel $54.0B). I've not even taken Apple and others into account.

-Tata Consulting Services in India has 226,751 employees. TCS' revenue is $7.57 Billion

The three US companies directly employ 112,922 people in the US and have a cumulative revenue of $138,9 Billion. Tata Consulting employs 226,751 people locally in India with reported revenues of $7 Billion.

The US is a developed market with extremely highly skilled engineers. India on the other hand has a large supply of engineers (over 20 million) who we can say have some level of skills but not at par with the US. This explains the discrepancy on the revenues. Either way India has been able to draw investors based on this talent pool.

Now, Dr Bitange where are you hoping to get these 200,000 skilled people in ICT related matters to fill that city?

Will you import them?

This is a case where we are putting the cart before the horse.



Very true..
Software development can be considered to be labor intensive (highly skilled labour) and that is the key factor of production in that sector.

Cities form when factors of production are more efficient than other regions.

Nairobi formed when Britain moved colonial HQ from Mombasa.

Mombasa formed coz of Maritime industry.
Nakuru formed coz of Agriculture/Govt offices.
Kisumu coz of the lake/Govt offices.
Nyeri coz of Agriculture/Govt offices.

New Cities.

Turkana will form because of Oil.

Lamu will form because of Oil refinery plus maritime industry/port.

In an ICT city, the greatest factor of production is highly skilled labour, not real estate.

Thats why Mark Zuckerberg could buy a 560 million house at Silicon Valley and recoup the costs by utilizing high skills at Silicon Valley.

Ministry of Info should concentrate on efficient methods of nurturing highly skilled ICT skills at Konza to make it efficient as a factor of production.



These will in turn attract investors and eventually drive the city's economy.

Availability of land and marvelous buildings will not attract investors since these are available elsewhere.


Konza is not starting with 200,000 ICT guyz. Ndemo used that figure as the number of people whom the governments projects will get jobs when the town is fully functional and that is in all sectors that will be part of Konza city.

What skills do you think are lacking in ICT sector because it comprises of so many areas?
Are we also ignoring the fact that if you are providing a product in ICT most of them you have to collaborate with other professionals?
a4architect.com
#171 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 10:12:24 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 1/4/2010
Posts: 1,668
Location: nairobi
Kenyan ICT industry has skills, judging from the iHub products and other start ups.

The work of Ministry of Info is to think on our behalf and come up with policy to enhace this skill.

I can only advice them as follows:
assuming a KES 1 B budget.

Get a Public Uni eg UoN to buy 1000 acres at Konza=200k x 1000ac=200 mil.

Stanford Uni, the epicentre of Siliocn Valley is around 1,800 acres in size.

Once the public uni uses its own funding to construct the ICT faculty, the balance of KES 800m can be used to support ICT start ups by providing venture capital and ICT infrastructure.

The start ups will attract more venture capital and over the years, this will develop into a mega ICT City, same as Silicon valley.

As we speak, all the kes 1B has been used to purchase 5000 acres for resale to the public. Am not seeing any concrete plans to assist the ICT industry at Konza.

In this situation, the same ICT start ups have contributed to the kes 1 B tax money so if the money is not assisting the economy, they also loose .
As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
eboomerang
#172 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 11:40:33 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/27/2011
Posts: 301
Location: Nairobi
jamplu wrote:

Konza is not starting with 200,000 ICT guyz. Ndemo used that figure as the number of people whom the governments projects will get jobs when the town is fully functional and that is in all sectors that will be part of Konza city.

What skills do you think are lacking in ICT sector because it comprises of so many areas?
Are we also ignoring the fact that if you are providing a product in ICT most of them you have to collaborate with other professionals?


Fine, the city will not start with 200K people but will gradually grow to that number, in otherwords you will have empty buildings waiting to be occupied over a period of time, right?

I have said this before, that the rate with which we are building infrastructure does not at all compare with the rate we are producing talent. I stand to be corrected; most of those people creating apps are self educated in application development, if not they are coming from abroad.

How I wish we were saying that by 2030 we will have a single world standard university, notice the challenge is to have just one globally competitive university by 2030. Did you see that the govt is planning to close down KARI (Kenya Agricultural Research Institute)? This in a country whose economy is more than half supported by Agriculture, my friend we needs to get real and serious.

-->What skills do you think are lacking in ICT sector because it comprises of so many areas?I think all manner of skills are lacking. Remember I'm looking at the national level, not 200 - 300 people sitting in a building developing apps.

On the other hand, can you please enlighten me and name for me the skills Kenya has in ICT in the various areas?
jamplu
#173 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 6:00:49 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 3/25/2010
Posts: 939
Location: Nai
eboomerang wrote:
jamplu wrote:

Konza is not starting with 200,000 ICT guyz. Ndemo used that figure as the number of people whom the governments projects will get jobs when the town is fully functional and that is in all sectors that will be part of Konza city.

What skills do you think are lacking in ICT sector because it comprises of so many areas?
Are we also ignoring the fact that if you are providing a product in ICT most of them you have to collaborate with other professionals?


Fine, the city will not start with 200K people but will gradually grow to that number, in otherwords you will have empty buildings waiting to be occupied over a period of time, right?

I have said this before, that the rate with which we are building infrastructure does not at all compare with the rate we are producing talent. I stand to be corrected; most of those people creating apps are self educated in application development, if not they are coming from abroad.

How I wish we were saying that by 2030 we will have a single world standard university, notice the challenge is to have just one globally competitive university by 2030. Did you see that the govt is planning to close down KARI (Kenya Agricultural Research Institute)? This in a country whose economy is more than half supported by Agriculture, my friend we needs to get real and serious.

-->What skills do you think are lacking in ICT sector because it comprises of so many areas?I think all manner of skills are lacking. Remember I'm looking at the national level, not 200 - 300 people sitting in a building developing apps.

On the other hand, can you please enlighten me and name for me the skills Kenya has in ICT in the various areas?


@eboomerang for starters konza will be phased the idea of empty building is neither here nor there!

So what is your basis for your conclusion that there are not ICT skills in kenya if you need enlightening on the various ICT skill areas??
if you think all people do is develop apps then you got it all wrong!
murchr
#174 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 6:07:38 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
The last time MPESA was down, we were told its datacenter is in Germany and its the one that went off....are these not jobs that have been exported? Again, if i create an app that will be implemented on a large scale, will i not need engineers to make it better? Will i not need trainers? Will i not need support guys for maintenance, will i not need a platform where the app will run on? How many jobs are these?

ICT is not just about apps....Use google well and find out more
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
QW25091985
#175 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 9:04:44 PM
Rank: User


Joined: 1/24/2012
Posts: 1,675
Location: In Da Hood
i have been reading what you guys are saying and am thinking maybe @a4architect.com should be on that bench instead of those government officials giving all sorts of stories
madhaquer
#176 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 9:10:15 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 11/10/2010
Posts: 281
Location: Nairobi
@murchr I agree ICT is not just about apps. But alot of decisions affecting ICT are not necessarily ICt related.
Political, self interested decisions like Konza affect ict directly.

Can any Wazuan who understands the motivation behind Konza convince me why a company like Samsung or HP would set up shop in Konza and not in the several other global alternatives they have.
ICT grows locally then the multinationals and the big boys follow, and that is the case for all innovative things, disruptive economics are marshaled by startups and the big players catch up through m&a. Look at ICT in India for example, did Microsoft and SAP preceed the Indian programmer or was the programmer the reason MSFT and SAP set up shop there ?
The same applies to Silicon Valley, it's the environment that makes it possible to find the human capital required and thats why investments flow there.

The govt needs to focus on developing human capital within the ICT discipline and leave the rest to the private sector. Paternalistic government activity is a hotbed for corruption and socialist idealism that never materializes. We don't need that! let the govt facilitate, we will innovate.
murchr
#177 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 9:28:48 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
madhaquer wrote:
@murchr I agree ICT is not just about apps. But alot of decisions affecting ICT are not necessarily ICt related.
Political, self interested decisions like Konza affect ict directly.

Can any Wazuan who understands the motivation behind Konza convince me why a company like Samsung or HP would set up shop in Konza and not in the several other global alternatives they have.
ICT grows locally then the multinationals and the big boys follow, and that is the case for all innovative things, disruptive economics are marshaled by startups and the big players catch up through m&a. Look at ICT in India for example, did Microsoft and SAP preceed the Indian programmer or was the programmer the reason MSFT and SAP set up shop there ?
The same applies to Silicon Valley, it's the environment that makes it possible to find the human capital required and thats why investments flow there.

The govt needs to focus on developing human capital within the ICT discipline and leave the rest to the private sector. Paternalistic government activity is a hotbed for corruption and socialist idealism that never materializes. We don't need that! let the govt facilitate, we will innovate.


May be you should ask yourself would Google, microsoft, IBM etc be in Kenya if they believe that the country doesnt have the required manpower?
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
.
wesley owiti
#178 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 9:40:40 PM
Rank: Hello


Joined: 4/13/2012
Posts: 1
Konza city in my view should be owned by Kenyans, that is in terms of the vision and mission,other people should just come in later. Most Kenyans should be in position to explain what Konza is all about. The world has discovered Africa and companies are coming here in droves...why are they coming? Its a rhetoric question. Maybe we need to wake up and support each other to success. Check out a marketers perspective on Konza..http://amwesthemarketer.blogspot.com/2012/03/konza-city-marketers-proposal.html
muthoniruth
#179 Posted : Friday, April 13, 2012 10:12:40 PM
Rank: New-farer


Joined: 2/10/2012
Posts: 16
Location: Nairobi
In very layman's language my thinking is that apart from the City being an ICT hub, other things that make it sell are:

It will be a fully planned City therefore there shall be something called order and anyone would like to live work and enjoy life where there is order

It shall have all other facilities and activities going on, just like any other city, like schools, living quarters, offices, recreational amenities, etc.

You cannot ignore the insatiable urge for real estate development so I do not understand why ple have a problem with the city's real estate aspect.

I keep wondering, why is it that the young ple in Kenya are very quick to criticize any proposed good thing? Instead, since the idea is all good, why dont we use the negative critical energy to offer ideas on how to improve the city rather than shoot it down.
All these beautiful plans for the country are meant to benefit us and our children, we need to give support to the projects rather than criticize them, if one project fails, then too bad, if it succeeds then we stand to benefit.

eboomerang
#180 Posted : Saturday, April 14, 2012 12:35:44 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/27/2011
Posts: 301
Location: Nairobi
murchr wrote:
madhaquer wrote:
@murchr I agree ICT is not just about apps. But alot of decisions affecting ICT are not necessarily ICt related.
Political, self interested decisions like Konza affect ict directly.

Can any Wazuan who understands the motivation behind Konza convince me why a company like Samsung or HP would set up shop in Konza and not in the several other global alternatives they have.
ICT grows locally then the multinationals and the big boys follow, and that is the case for all innovative things, disruptive economics are marshaled by startups and the big players catch up through m&a. Look at ICT in India for example, did Microsoft and SAP preceed the Indian programmer or was the programmer the reason MSFT and SAP set up shop there ?
The same applies to Silicon Valley, it's the environment that makes it possible to find the human capital required and thats why investments flow there.

The govt needs to focus on developing human capital within the ICT discipline and leave the rest to the private sector. Paternalistic government activity is a hotbed for corruption and socialist idealism that never materializes. We don't need that! let the govt facilitate, we will innovate.


May be you should ask yourself would Google, microsoft, IBM etc be in Kenya if they believe that the country doesnt have the required manpower?

There is a difference between selling products and creating products.

Most of those companies are here to sell their solutions but none of their products are designed and produced in Kenya.

You have heard even from MJ himself that MPesa (what is usually mentioned as the epitome of Kenyan innovation) was not invented in Kenya, but it has been sold/licensed to Safaricom.
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