Showing posts with label TECH. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 October 2022

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Tech Tools That Can Take Your Small Business to the Next Level


 



Today’s consumers have come to expect the businesses they interact with to be able to keep up with their own level of technology. If your small business doesn’t have what today’s consumers expect, it’s time to get yourself into the game using the latest technological trends your client base demands. After all, you use technology in your personal life, it’s time to harness that power for your business now, too.

 

And it isn’t just at the consumer end, either. There are some excellent tech tools your business needs to stay competitive and relevant. They can not only help you earn more but save more, too.

 

Deloitte found that digitally advanced small businesses earned two times as much revenue per employee and experienced revenue growth over the previous year that was nearly four times as high.

 

 

Your Business in the Clouds

 

Working in the cloud means that computing services like servers, storage, databases, networking, software, analytics, and intelligence over stored and used over the internet. Cloud computing makes data backup, disaster recovery, and business continuity easier and less expensive because data is stored in multiple redundant sites on the cloud provider's network, so nothing gets lost, and everything can be accessed from anywhere. Cloud services are also exceptionally flexible. They don’t tie down your people to one particular location. They can use any internet-enabled device, including laptops, smartphones, or notebooks, to share critical documents.

 

 

Data Analytics

 

At its most basic, data analytics is the science of analyzing raw data to make conclusions about that information. Data analytics techniques can reveal trends and metrics that would otherwise be lost in the mass of information businesses accumulate but can be invaluable for your marketing team. Data analysts have a broad range of software tools to help acquire data, store information, process data, and report findings. First thing first: you need data to analyze. That’s where customer management software comes in.

 

 

Customer Management Software

 

Customer relationship management (CRM) is a technology for managing all your company's relationships and interactions with customers and potential customers. Client management platforms like CRMs connect all the data from your sales leads and customers all in one place. Communications like form-fills, calls, emails, text messages, meetings, documents, quotes, purchases, and tasks that are associated with each lead and client. You and your entire team can access all of that to improve your business's bottom line.

 

 

Social Media

 

You can use social media to attract new customers, convert them to leads, and maintain engagement with existing customers. The first step is to create an account on social media sites like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn. These sites are all free to create an account on and offer many features for small businesses. Making use of social media is not just about posting updates and ads on your page. It is about engaging with your followers and providing them with information that they want to see. Keep your target audience in mind. Younger audiences are found on TikTok, while older consumers lean more toward Facebook.

 

 

Time Management Tools

 

There are a number of tools and techniques that you can use to stay on track by managing tasks smarter, getting a clearer picture of where time is being spent, and reducing distractions.

 

Whether your employees are being paid hourly, salaried, or both, software like Timesheets can track billable hours or time spent on projects. It can also track employee time, mileage, and expenses on the road via its mobile app.

 

Though computers and smartphones often have built-in calendars, collaborative calendar apps offer enhanced features that facilitate task management, automation, and scheduling.

 

As a small business owner in today’s high-speed, high-tech world, it can be easy to get overwhelmed, But with the right tools, like time management apps, data analytics, CMS, social media, and more, you’ll be able to grow your business and keep your customers and employees happy and engaged.

 

For breaking news in Nigeria and other parts of the world, like politics, entertainment, sports, and celebrities, follow Trezzy Helm here.

 

Saturday, 23 February 2019

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FUTO Student Unveils His Self Made 12hrs Portable Prototype Inverter(Photos)



FUTO student identified as Okpala Sixtus has unveiled his self made 12hrs prototype inverter.

Below are basic specs of the inverter

1. CAPACITY = 2kva(Upgradable to 10kva)

2. MAX INVERTER OUTPUT VOLTAGE AND CURRENT = 250volts A.C (Alternating current) at 7amps 50hz

3. INPUT D.C (DIRECT CURRENT)=12volts

4. Low battery indicator/sounding alarm and overuse shutdown protection

5. Battery status indicator LEDs for usage/charging monitoring

6. Overcharge/over usage protection circuit.

7. Built in superfast charger circuit.

8. Optional battery full alarm circuit.
Note: This inverter can last more than 12hours depending on your battery bank capacity.
What a marvellous innovation.

Place your Order: 0816 099 3963






Sunday, 17 February 2019

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Nigerian Man Manufactures A Robot(Photos, Video)



https://youtu.be/UylWM8FlZaQ
A student of Federal Polytechnic Nekede Owerri, Imo State has invented a robot.The robot wheels itself, moves its neck and hands.It is powered by engine.

Ofondu Princewill, an ND one student and indigene of Mbaitoli had this idea when he was about 13 - 14 years. His love for robots especially humanoid robots is among the inspiration he got before engaging on this dream task.

According to him, robot can achieve many tasks as well reduces human stress.He said that is one of the reasons he wants to have a robot to communicate with and also help him do his tasks.

He further emphasised that this creation could generate jobs for people in the field of electrical, electronics and mechanical engineers in Nigeria because no one could singlehandedly build such a robot without having a lot of hands on deck.

I wish him goodluck as he goes on in creating more robots that will change our future for good. 

You can contact him on: 08109296939



Friday, 11 January 2019

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Lofty Dreams: How The Flying Taxi May Finally Realize Our Desire for the Flying Car





If you thought that the future of transportation was just electric cars and autonomous vehicles, well, there’s a push to take things a little higher.


Certainly, gasoline-free, self-driving cars are all the rage right now, and rightfully so. We are deep into the testing phase of cars that reach level four automation (level five means they are fully autonomous).


However, other transportation technologies are aiming to leave the road behind and take occupants above the fray of cars and traffic, delivering them to their destinations through the air versus across the ground.


While the promise of the flying car introduced in Back to the Future Part II may have missed the mark by a few years, the next decade will see a revolution unlike any since humans first took flight.


What is a Flying Taxi?


Traditionally, the term flying taxi is often confused with established transportation services known as Air Taxis. The latter evokes smallish airplanes or helicopters that shuttle occupants short distances, city to city, usually from one airport to another.


The modern iteration on a flying taxi, however, takes the terminology of a short-haul flight to a whole new level.


What makes the flying taxi concept both unique and potentially viable in a modern setting is the ability for the aircraft to take off and land anywhere – no airport is necessary.


Thanks to vertical ascent and descent capabilities the aircraft currently being tested are more akin to helicopters, but the design isn’t merely limited to well-known methods of flight. In fact, some prototypes now resemble oversized drones and gondola cabs with an array of small rotors attached to the roof.


Many of the designs carry only a handful of riders – from as few as two up to between five and seven, not including the pilot for the non-autonomous concepts. Indeed crewless flight is still one to two decades away, but much like the driverless automobile the drive for flying taxis to one day be pilotless is an aggressive one.


The small size though is the key to the technology proving a significant addition to an already crowded transportation network. So too is the plan for many of these crafts to be electric, eliminating the noise and nuisance of a gas powered engine.


In rising above gridlocked avenues and streets, flying taxis would utilize every aspect of the urban setting. From the ground level (in some areas) to the airspace in between or just above a cities mid and high rise buildings to the rooftops of those same structures, the tech would undoubtedly make the most of its operational field. Most proposals call for those rooftops to transition into launch and landing pads for the taxi network.


An actual airborne taxi service to get occupants from point A to point B within a densely packed city won’t just stop at the city limits though. There are also plans that would expand that reach, flying short haul, low occupant flights between closely networked cities.


Places within an hour’s drive of each other such as Dallas to Fort Worth or Baltimore to Washington DC are obvious candidates. However, taxi flights also offer the opportunity to bridge locales like Boston and New York or Los Angeles and San Francisco.


More Than Just Flying Cars




While on paper the whole enterprise seems ridiculously cool and simple enough, the reality is something different.


Uber, the peer to peer ridesharing behemoth, is one of the most visible players in the race to get the flying taxi up and running with its Elevate and UberAir programs.


In partnership with space agency NASA, Uber is working towards their taxis taking flight in 2020 in Dallas-Fort Worth, Los Angeles, and Dubai. It’s an aggressive goal considering that Uber remains in the design phase and have yet to produce an actual working, to scale prototype.


But they are undeterred.


Jeff Holden, head of product at Uber, has said, “there’s been a great deal of progress that’s been hard to see from the outside because a lot of this is just hard work at the drafting table.”


He goes on the to note, “we feel really good. It’s been a really interesting process getting our vehicle manufacturing partners aligned on performance specifications so that they’re building vehicles that align with what we need to make Elevate successful. So lots of good progress there.”


Expanding upon the ideas of their uncrewed traffic management protocols or UTM, NASA helps to nail down the infrastructure side of the endeavor.


The UTM system is currently helping to corral the unruly nature of the growing drone industry. In theory, NASA’s UTM would lead to the creation of an entirely new system of air traffic control to guide the taxi flights.


Although the push for localized flying transports has yet to generate the same publicity as that of their earthbound automobile counterparts, Uber is far from the only player in the field. More than 15 different companies are working towards similar goals, and in many cases, a lot of investment dollars are flowing into these efforts to get them off the ground.


For example, Kitty Hawk is a startup owned and fully funded by Larry Page, co-founder of Google. Kitty Hawk is currently testing a recreational hovercraft in New Zealand meant to dovetail into their flying taxi program over the next three years.   


Others companies wanting to get in on the action include aviation heavyweights Boeing and Airbus.


Boeing bought Aurora Flight Service Corporation late last year to give both their commercial and military programs in electric and autonomous flight a shot in the arm. Greg Hyslop, the Chief Technology Office for Boeing noted the deal reflects that the “the aerospace industry is going to be changing” and Boeing is aiming to be ready “for whatever that future may be.”


For their part, Airbus made a similar deal, with an investment in startup Blade, which already boasts a charter flight business that is, ironically enough, often cast as the Uber of charters. This in addition to Airbus’ in-house Vahana program.


Elsewhere, showing off at CES 2018 in Las Vegas, was an 18 rotor vehicle called the Volocopter, that until recently was flying around in the futuristic desert playground of Dubai, running test flights.


Straight out of a sci-fi movie, the Volocopter is a German designed pilotless drone that one must really see to believe and appreciate.


Dubai also has a partnership with Chinese firm EHang, whose own ambitions for flying taxis stems from the automation and delivery via drone aircraft of organ transplant materials.


Even part and component manufacturers are playing a pivotal role in making the sci-fi of flying vehicles real.


British engine maker Rolls-Royce has a propulsion system in development for use in flying taxis. They hope to have it available sometime within the next decade.


And yes, some auto manufacturers are getting into the game with Porsche in the early stages of exploring the possibility.


Just How Viable Is A Flying Vehicle?




As with any new technology, growing pains exist. Flying cars are no different. There will almost certainly be a level of turbulence before the population fully embraces the latest tech and its scalable for the masses.


Consider the now ubiquitous iPhone is less than 12 years old and was once a curiosity. The prevalence and the advancements of the device made in just over a decade are definitely remarkable. The hope is that a flying taxi can follow a similar fast-track path to success.


Of course, airborne taxis are a completely different realm. As much as humanity is yearning to see a car fly – and practically – it’s another thing when you ask those same people to take a ride. It will require a convincing sales pitch for commuters to trust a machine that has onboard parachutes as part of its standard equipment.


However, with cities more crowded and street-level gridlock a constant complaint of urban dwellers, it’s not difficult to envision city skies filled with swarms of on-demand taxis.


The CEO of Volocopter, Florian Reuter summarizes the ease of use autonomous flight offers. “Implementation would see you using your smartphone, having an app, and ordering a volocopter to the next voloport near you. The volocopter would come and autonomously pick you up and take you to your destination,” he said.


Discounting that level of simplicity and convenience is hard.


As cool as it all sounds, flying taxis – even with actual testing happening as we speak – remain a construct of the future. We noted that many of the target dates for these aerial taxi programs run between 2020 and 2030. For some, those timelines are highly ambitious.


Even those whose entire reputation derives from their lofty ambitions.


Elon Musk mused to Bloomberg during a recent interview his thoughts on flying cars, and it was less than favorable. “Obviously, I like flying things. But it’s difficult to imagine the flying car becoming a scalable solution,” he said.


Uber’s Holden, however, disagrees. “We’ve studied this carefully and we believe it is scalable,” he noted, also casting Musk’s comments as “off the cuff” and “random.”


Final Thoughts


Regardless of if it can actually happen anytime within the next few years, many are banking on it simply being a matter of time before we are living with the daily sight of flying taxi services buzzing over our heads.


While the initial product may prove a bit different from the original vision, few will argue should one of the longest held fantasies of future progress finally come true.



https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/08/uber-nasa-work-on-flying-taxis.html


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/12/business/dealbook/flying-taxis-larry-page.html


https://www.engadget.com/2017/09/26/dubai-volocopter-passenger-drone-test/


https://www.reuters.com/article/us-autos-flying-taxis-porsche/porsche-could-build-flying-taxis-says-sales-chief-idUSKCN1GF0CB


https://techcrunch.com/2017/09/05/lilium-raises-90m/


https://money.cnn.com/2017/11/08/technology/uber-web-summit-uberair/index.html


https://www.theverge.com/transportation/2018/1/8/16866662/volocopter-flying-taxi-first-us-flight-intel-ces-2018


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/27/technology/flying-taxis.html


https://www.engadget.com/2018/07/15/rolls-royce-evtol-flying-taxi/


https://techcrunch.com/2018/05/08/uberair-adds-another-flying-taxi-partner/


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/uber-ceo-dara-khosrowshahi-flying-cars-uber-air/


https://techcrunch.com/2018/04/23/ferraris-to-flying-taxis/


https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/jul/10/flying-cars-taxis-pentagon-us-military-funds-joby-kitty-hawk


https://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/uber-flying-taxi-los-angeles-nasa-news/


https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/mar/13/kitty-hawk-autonomous-drone-flying-taxi-service-regulatory-approval-google-larry-page


https://techcrunch.com/2018/07/16/ubers-head-of-policy-for-flying-taxis-and-autonomous-vehicles-leaves-for-self-driving-car-startup-voyage/


https://techcrunch.com/2018/05/08/heres-how-much-ubers-flying-taxi-service-will-cost/


https://techcrunch.com/2018/03/13/kitty-hawk-begins-certifying-its-self-flying-taxis-for-service-in-new-zealand/


https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/08/electric-flying-taxi-service-lilium-poaches-key-hires-from-audi-airbus/


Tuesday, 1 January 2019

Saturday, 1 December 2018

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Meet Dr Trebi-Ollenu the Ghanaian scientist who built InSight, NASA's latest spacecraft that landed on Mars

On Monday, November 26, 2018, InSight, a spacecraft belonging to America's National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) landed on the Mars. According to the New York Times, the spacecraft is expected to study the Mars' underworld, listening for marsquakes and seeking clues about the dusty world’s formation.

While this may ordinarily be an American conquest or achievement, Ghanaians have every right to join in the jubilation.  This is because at the heart of the historic landing on Mars on Monday is the remarkable work of Ghanaian engineer Dr Ashitey Trebi-Ollennu who is the team lead for InSight at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Dr. Trebi-Ollennu builds robotic components for planetary exploration, a dream that began as a young child in Ghana. He is in charge of the InSight mission’s robotic arm and hand.

Born in Ghana, Dr Trebi-Ollennu has been working at NASA since 1999 and has risen to become the Chief Engineer of Robotics at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. After completing his secondary education, he moved to the United Kingdom where he had his Bachelors in Engineering (B.Eng.) in Avionics at Queen Mary College, University of London in 1991. He then had his Ph.D. in Control Systems Engineering from the School of Engineering and Applied Science, Royal Military College Science located at Cranfield University in the United Kingdom in 1996. Apart from his work at NASA, Dr Trebi-Ollennu is also the founder of the Ghana Robotics Academy Foundation that won the prestigious Google RISE Award 2013. The academy is dedicated to motivating and inspiring young Ghanaians interest and participation in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education through hands-on robotics workshops and competitions. Trebi-Ollennu's granduncle was a barrister and judge, Nii Amaa Ollennu (1906 – 1986), elected the Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana during the Second Republic as well as serving as the Chairman of the Presidential Commission and acting President of Ghana from 7 August 1970 to 31 August 1970.

Tuesday, 21 August 2018

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Nigerian man who met wife through Facebook names son Zukerberg(Photos)

A Nigerian man who lives in Port Harcourt,Vure Kingsley Ovonix Snr, has named his new born son Zukerberg in honour of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and in honour of his wife Vure Victory whom he met on Facebook.

He disclosed this via a post on his timeline.He wrote.....

'Those Who Know,Knows.
Vure Kingsley Ovonix Snr Met Vure Victory On Facebook Few Years Ago,We Settled And Behold Lastly We Agreed To Get Married A Year Ago.Facebook Means Different Thing To Different People,In My Opinion I'm A Huge Beneficiary Of Facebook, It's A Place Of Negativity And Positivity.The Choice Remains Yours.

Join Me As Pastor Williams Wonder Of "Word Grace Assembly" Agudama Epie Graciously Honoured Us To Name Our Baby Boy.

In Honour Of The Founder/CEO Of Facebook I And My Wife Agreed To Name Him (Son) After Him.

Vure Rex  Zukerberg Ovonix Jnr.

To God Be The Glory.
Hallelujah'

Monday, 20 August 2018

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See the face of Toyin Arulogun,the man who suggested that Yinka Ayefele's station should be demolished(Photos)

Below are photos of Toyin Arulogun,the man who allegedly suggested that Fresh FM should be demolished.According to a report shared by Fresh FM fans club,he wined with them at Fresh FM staff end of year party last year December. He did not tell them that they were on a wrong structure when he came and he has been on the radio station more than 3 times with APC propaganda without being charged a kobo.

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