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Sonntag, 19.05.2024
eGovernment Forschung seit 2001 | eGovernment Research since 2001

ICT4D

  • India leads ICT research in South Asia

    India has emerged as a leader in research on Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in South Asia with the highest number of research publications on the subject, says a new study.

    According to a report of the study published online this month (2 August) in Scientometrics, about 88 per cent of ICT publications in South Asia originate in India.

  • ‘250,000 IT, telecoms professionals too small for Nigerian ICT landscape’

    The 250,000 IT, telecoms professionals in Nigeria, constitute only 40 percent of the actual figure needed, and are inadequate for a market and population of over 170 million people.

    This was the summation of experts in business, legal and ICT sectors across Nigeria and India that gathered in Mumbai, India, at the 2015 Indian Nigerian Business Forum (INBF), organised by the law firm, Perchstone & Graeys in collaboration with the Federation of India Chamber of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), last week

  • 2012: India to be 97% broadband enabled

    Even as India is stepping into a future, which is poised to be digital across all platforms, a lot of questions face the media and entertainment industry. For starters questions like does India have the talent pool for digital content creation? Are the digital platforms able enough? In which year will digital content see a boom in India?

    Addressing the industry at the ASSOCHAM Focus conference in New Delhi, Planning Commission member secretary Raajeva Ratna Shah disclosed the 11th five year plan for 2008-2012. The plan is in keeping with digital content production and distribution in India.

  • Asean ministers ink ICT deal

    Telecommunications and information technology ministers of Asean member-countries agreed to strengthen cooperation on strategic ICT programs during the recently concluded Telecommunications and Information Technology Ministers Meeting held in Mactan, Cebu.

    Chaired by the Philippines’ Department of Science and Technology Secretary Mario Montejo, the two-day meetings were preceded by meetings with senior officials and regulators in charge of telecommunications and information technology in their respective countries to see to it that they were on track for implementing the Asean ICT Masterplan (AIM) targeted for completion in 2015.

  • Azerbaijan’s revenue from ICT sector reaches $8 bln during past 5 years

    Azerbaijan’s ICT sector doubles in every three years. During last decade, annual growth rate on the ICT sector made 20-25%, said the annual report of Ministry of Communication and Information Technologies.

    The report says that the incomes from ICT sector rose 17.3% to $ 1.9 bln. In general, the revenues during past 5 years made $ 7.7 bln. In 2012, more than $410 mln was invested in ICT sector.

  • Community Information Centres: Seeking ICT relevancy in rural Africa

    Countries within and across the great African continent are still far behind in strategic utilisation and management of information. This is so because the provision of information services in Africa has been dispersed and access to various information services has become more difficult.

    Sadly, the principal victims of poor access to information are rural people. This is despite the fact that rural communities require information, inter alia, on supply of inputs, new technologies, early warning systems (drought, pests and diseases), credit, and market prices.

  • E-Government ‘key to Qatar’s digital future’

    Qatar’ e-Government Strategy 2020 would make it impossible to envision Qatar’s digital future without embracing technology, to create a more efficient, effective, accessible and transparent government that meets the needs of individuals and businesses.

    The Prime Minister and Interior Minister H E Sheikh Abdullah bin Nasser bin Khalifa Al Thani launched it on Monday while inaugurating the third edition of Qatar’s ICT conference and exhibition ‘QITCOM 2014’ at Qatar National Convention Centre.

  • E-mpowering rural India through Internet

    Shyam – an Indian villager is a hi-tech person. Although he is not a tech geek, but still he is equipped with modern communication devices like mobile and a computer powered by Internet connection through which he extracts the latest information regarding the local weather conditions, crop prices in local markets and trade in the commodity market.

    Yes, this is actually the “Rising India” or the “Changing face of India” in which villagers are getting as technology savvy as people in metros are, in their day-to-day life.

  • End-to-end ICT is vital for growth in Africa

    Information Communication Technology (ICT) opens up a huge range of potential in the business environment, delivering integrated solutions that actively enable the modern business. Previously disparate tools such as voice, mobility, video, broadcasting and data have merged to deliver powerful enterprise solutions that enable organisations to compete on a global scale, all driven by connectivity.

    From basic Internet and telephony to sophisticated cloud offerings, connectivity and communication are the heart of ICT, and central to delivering these services is the network backbone, enabling access for connectivity. While multiple undersea cables have landed on the African continent, providing the potential for high-speed connectivity, much of the population remains unable to access this, which is slowing business growth.

  • GCC is tech-savvy but needs human capital

    Three of the six GCC members are among the Top 30 global achievers

    Interestingly enough, there are wide differences among the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) states in regard to their performance on the “Network Readiness Index”. To put it more simply, the extent of their technological readiness.

    At least, this was the judgment in the “Global Information Technology Report 2014” issued by the World Economic Forum in partnership with INSEAD, the business school, and Cornell University.

  • Government initiatives underpin ICT growth in Oman

    A range of government initiatives are driving ICT adoption in Oman, as the sultanate works to connect all homes and businesses to the national broadband network by 2040.

    Sector growth is being driven in part by government efforts to promote connectivity, a key element of the broader Digital Oman Strategy (eOman) launched in 2003, which is focused on developing IT skills, digital literacy and e-government services.

  • Government Of Kenya launches ICT Master Plan

    The Kenyan government on Wednesday launched the revised national Information, Communication Technology (ICT) Master Plan 2017 to spur economic growth in the country.

    The Kenya National ICT Masterplan 2017 document will guide the country’s ICT direction in the next three years. The Masterplan was first launched in February 2013 and is a five-year plan. It covers the vision 2030 pillars as well as focusing on other functional areas.

    ICT Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiangi said three key ICT projects have been identified—Citizen Service Portal, Government Shared Services and National Digital Registry Services.

  • How can the UK learn from India’s commitment to ICT?

    When Education Secretary Michael Gove said that "almost every career in every industry sector is being transformed by technology" he was by no means exaggerating. Twenty years ago, IT may have been viewed as the realm of the "geeks" but it has long since established itself as a key driver behind modern business success. Despite this, many people still associate IT skills with the ability to navigate Microsoft PowerPoint and Excel. If the UK's economy is to remain globally competitive, the government must dramatically address this perception.

    The UK has traditionally viewed Silicon Valley as the trailblazer of technological advancement, but environments producing innovation and success in the IT industry extend well beyond the USA. To drive success, the UK needs to expand its horizons and look to emerging markets, such as India, which has seen its ICT sector grow from being a $5.7bn industry in 2000 to a staggeringly large $100bn industry just 12 years later.

  • How technology can unleash India’s full potential

    Indians are fed up with government inaction and corruption. They want accountability, better education for their children, improved health care, and economic prosperity. And they want change now. Technology-led solutions may be the only way for India’s new government to rapidly uplift its population. Large-scale government programs and social welfare will take too long. Here are seven ways technology can help:

    1. Smartphones: A great equalizer.

    Note how mobile phones transformed India within a decade: from being objects of luxury, they became a basic necessity. Landlines were once scarce, and phone service was unreliable and unaffordable. Now, India has amongst the best and cheapest phone connections in the world and has a billion cellphones.

  • ICT sector set to provide a fillip to Qatar GDP

    Qatar’s overall development will fuel the growth of the Information and Communications Technology (ICT) sector, which is set to contribute $3bn to the country’s GDP by 2015, Kuwait Financial Centre (Markaz) has said in a report.

    The ICT sector contributed about $1.5bn to GDP in 2010. The report pointed out that Qatar leads the Arab world in the Network Readiness Index, which ranks 144 countries on broad criteria to determine the present status of their ICT sector.

  • ICT skills shortage hampers deployment of e-government In Kenya

    Shortage of information, communication technology (ICT) skills is hampering efforts to deploy e-government systems, a senior Kenyan official said on Thursday.

    ICT Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i said in Nairobi the shortage has forced some county governments to depend on private sector in order to deploy ICT systems.

    “We are therefore fast tracking efforts to increase the number of highly skilled personnel in ICT sector,” Matiang’i said after signing a Memorandum of Understanding between Huawei Technologies and ICT Authority of Kenya.

  • ICT Usage To Be Enhanced By University Of Ghana

    The University of Ghana is committed to promote the increased use of information and communication technology to enhance teaching, learning and research particularly for the distance education programme.

    The Vice Chancellor, Professor Ernest Aryeetey, made this known on Friday at the congregation ceremony held at the Great Hall on the Legon campus of the University.

    Addressing the media during the occasion, he said the school has introduced new graduate programmes including Master of Science and Master of Philosophy programmes in Computer Science and Professional Master of Science programme in Medical Laboratory Sciences at the School of Allied Health Sciences.

  • Ignoring tech, are you? Kikwete thinks ICT could pull Tanzania out of the dark ages

    President Jakaya Kikwete has called for enhanced use of Information Communication Technology (ICT) platforms to link and uplift economic sectors.He asserted that ICT is a crucial tool for national development and planning, especially through the creation of a knowledge-based economy.

    “Access to relevant information and technology will surely catalyse the transformation of industries, formal and informal sectors, defence, education and financial services, among others,” he said here when inaugurating the Kipawa Institute of Communication Technology on Monday.

  • Kenya still faces shortage of ICT experts, says official

    The Chief Officer in charge of Information Communications Technology and E-government at the Uasin Gishu County government Edwin Kemboi has said that the public sector is still facing a shortage of Information Communication Technology skilled experts.

    According to Mr Kemboi, youth have failed in taking up the ICT and opportunities in the sector therefore creating a gap that requires ICT skills in a bid to streamline the public sector.

  • Kenya targets 70% internet usage by 2018

    Kenya plans to boost its internet penetration rates from 41.6% to 70% while also growing mobile phone and digital television usage in the country.

    This is a goal outlined by the Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK), which launched its third five-year strategic plan on Friday.

    In terms of broadband consumption, the country plans to boost usage in this category from the current 2.4% to 10%.

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