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Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? - Foreign Affairs (64) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Foreign Affairs / Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? (186146 Views)

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Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 11:48am On Sep 22, 2013
Mthimbane.ZA:
1 person 1nce asked Van Damme: "Describe South Africa".
Van Damme: " This country is fresh".
'This country is fresh' could mean it is a country still living in the past slavery mentality.
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 12:27pm On Sep 22, 2013
CraigB:

Let your tears flow all the way to Timbuktu, you won't get the love you yearn for. South Africa doesn't do monkey, thanks. No South African passport for you.

You have the highest AIDS infection rate in the whole of Africa. You overtook India last year and are set to overtake SA. And we aren't even talking about your unrecorded cases. Shoot yourself. A country than marries 9-year-olds off to 60-year olds. Legalised pedophilia and molestation in Naai-geria. We all know about it.

All you have is the Zuma rock and nothing else. That's why you are upset that South Africans can brag and you can't. You have nothing to brag about.

Nature gave you the ultimate resource - oil; and denied you brains. The British left you a country and you turned it into a zoo.

I don't see people dying in Marikana, but I sure do see Boko Haram killing Naai-gerians off. No South African owes you any respect - black or white. You don't deserve it. A stone in the back of your head - that's what you deserve.

If you had something to brag about, you'd have let us know by now. You've been around long enough and have produced nothing.
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 12:38pm On Sep 22, 2013
zetdee:

Lol, dude the only person crying here is you.. I lol at all the SA vs naai e-wars where you always get beaten to the pulp, this thread is probably where you come to blow some steam..

Where is the evidence to that statement in bold? It is only in the reflections of the white people of that society you can be compared to Nigeria. Let's compare Nigerians and South African blacks, now. Apart from Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu you have nothing to brag about in the black community. Bwahaha...
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 2:47pm On Sep 22, 2013
SKA a game changer for African science and technology revolution
Author: SKA Project | Monday, 16 September 2013


The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) project is more than a major feather in SA’s scientific cap – it could also catalyse significant science, technology and engineering business opportunities, jobs and innovation. It also has the potential to put Africa firmly on the map as a world Big Data and analytics hub. This is according to Simon Ratcliffe, technical lead for scientific computing at the SKA office in Cape Town.

The multi-billion rand SKA, to be hosted in South Africa and Australia, will extend into eight African countries and will be the world's biggest telescope. It is also one of the biggest-ever scientific projects and multinational collaborations in the name of science. The project has already entered its first phase, with radio astronomy scientists and engineers finalising its design, with construction to start in 2016. The radio telescope should be operationally mature by 2020.

With thousands of linked radio wave receptors in Australia and in Southern Africa, the SKA radio telescope will constantly scan space and feed the data to astronomers around the world. The amounts of data being collected and transmitted will be staggering – the SKA says the data collected by the SKA array in a single day would take nearly two million years to play back on an iPod.

This means the project requires supercomputing power and Big Data management and analytics capabilities on an unprecedented scale. SKA is working with the world’s most significant ICT powerhouses – such as IBM – on the project. One aspect of the project will see ASTRON, the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy and IBM collaborating to research extremely fast, but low-power exascale computer systems, data transport and storage processes, and streaming analytics that will be required to read, store and analyse all the raw data that will be collected daily. The SKA project will also have unprecedented data connectivity needs.

Meeting the advanced technological and engineering needs of this massive project will result in significant local skills development, revolutionise science and technology research and enable innovative new businesses and employment in the science, technology and engineering fields, Ratcliffe says.

“Aside from the benefits to African science, Big Data capabilities could be our biggest spin-off from the SKA project,” says Ratcliffe. “The innovations, skills development and commercial potential emerging as a result of the project are huge. The potential is not just academic – we develop the taxpayer-funded intellectual property to a point where it’s ready to become commercialised and benefit the economy. We will increasingly be an incubator of science and technology innovation.”

Ratcliffe says the human capital development is already taking place as a result of the SKA project, with bursaries and scholarships already being granted to allow students to learn the necessary cutting edge science, technology, maths and engineering skills to support the project. “We have a business development unit looking at making the innovations already developed for the SKA viable as commercial public space entities. Because the SKA is a long term project over decades, its impact will increase,” says Ratcliffe.

"Going forward, there will be a strong drive to leverage the SKA as a spearhead for other programmes – including next generation high performance computing challenges and Big Data challenges. Throughout Africa, we now have an extraordinary opportunity to become an important global player in Big Data processing innovation,” he says.

"The SKA project is much more than a exercise in academia," says Sean McLean , Sub-Saharan Africa, University Relations Leader for IBM. He says that leaders in education, government and business need to be prompted to not only support this but take action now to foster a new generation of talent with the technical expertise and disruptive ideas needed to make the most of this Big Data opportunity. " If they do , they can not only kick-start the next wave of innovation and growth in Africa’s business ecosystem, but establish the continent as the world’s go-to source of skills and counsel for Big Data.

And says McLean by establishing itself as a go-to source of Big Data skills and expertise is only the first step for Africa’s business and technology industries. By fostering creativity around the potential of Big Data – both through start-up communities and scientific research – Africa’s policymakers and industry leaders can influence the course of technological development on a global scale, generating results that enrich not only their but other nations’ economies and quality of life. Developing a generation of Big Data professionals, with the technical skills necessary to manage data and its analysis, is fundamental to all these outcomes: addressing it should be considered a matter of urgency.

“There are only a handful of Big Data drivers around the world,” he says. “The kind of data rates and processing challenges the SKA project will present put it right up there with only a handful of projects around the world.”

SKA says that since 2005, the African SKA Human Capital Development Programme has awarded close to 400 grants for studies in astronomy and engineering from undergraduate to post-doctoral level, while also investing in training programmes for technicians. Astronomy courses are being rolled out in other African countries, including Kenya, Mozambique, Madagascar and Mauritius. Career opportunities will increase substantially and new business opportunities will emerge.

Ratcliffe says the project has already changed the world’s view of SA’s scientific capability. Now it also presents the potential to spark virtually overnight growth in SA’s science, research, technology, ICT and engineering industries.

“This project is a once in a lifetime combination of science and engineering in SA – we won’t see the likes of it ever again. It’s tremendously exciting and an opportunity to change the narrative for SA,” says Ratcliffe.

Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 2:53pm On Sep 22, 2013
SKA Precursor – MeerKAT


South Africa’s SKA Project is building the MeerKAT telescope, located at the SKA site. MeerKAT will be incorporated into Phase one of the SKA. The MeerKAT telescope will comprise 64 offset Gregorian dishes each 13.5 m in diameter. The first seven dishes of MeerKAT are now complete and are known as KAT-7.

Working with South African industry and universities, and collaborating with institutions around the world, the South African team has developed technologies and systems for the MeerKAT, including innovative composite telescope dishes and cutting edge signal processing hardware and algorithms.

The first five years of observing time have already been allocated to international project teams for ten priority large surveys.

Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 3:03pm On Sep 22, 2013
UK science minister to visit SKA project in Karoo, South Africa

10 September 2013, Cape Town, South Africa - Tomorrow, 11 September 2013, [/color]the UK Minister of State for Universities and Science, The Right Honourable David Willetts, will be touching down on South Africa’s new, all-weather, landing strip in the Karoo, where South Africa is building the 64-dish MeerKAT radio telescope, a precursor to the Square Kilometre Array (SKA).

MeerKAT infrastructure under progress at SKA SA site

The MeerKAT, with a further 190 antennas to be built on the same site, will make up the first phase of the mid-frequency component of the SKA. The second phase of the SKA will see further mid frequency antennas constructed across South Africa and in eight African SKA partner countries. Complementary components of the SKA will be located in Australia, the co-host country of what will be the world’s largest radio telescope.



Mr Willetts, accompanied by senior government officials from the UK and SA, and SKA South Africa Project staff, will be on the first aircraft to touch down on the new landing strip.

The UK is a major player in the global SKA project, and is host to the head office of the SKA Organisation, located at the Jodrell Bank Observatory, near Manchester. “It is a pleasure to see our South African SKA colleagues hosting Minister Willetts at one of the telescope sites, a few months after the Minister inaugurated the SKA Headquarters in the UK”, said Professor Philip Diamond, Director-General of the SKA Organisation. “This shows constant support and commitment from the UK government for the global SKA project and this is something we appreciate and value immensely.”

South Africa and the UK are already collaborating extensively in the field of radio astronomy, with 25 research organisations and 88 scientists from the UK directly involved in the large survey teams that will use the MeerKAT telescope for research during its first five years of operation. This includes 16 scientists from Oxford University and 11 from Manchester University. Mr Willetts’ visit will further strengthen the science collaboration between South Africa and the UK.

Mr Willetts says “The SKA is an extremely exciting project. I am delighted that the UK’s world-leading astronomers are working closely with their South African colleagues at this important site. From how the first stars and galaxies formed to the nature of gravity, their work will vastly increase our understanding of the universe. SKA is one of the UK’s highest priority astronomy projects, and we are planning to invest £19 million (305 million SA Rand) in the design phase of the project. I look forward to the UK and South African scientific communities working closely together as they harness Big Data, one of the eight great technologies of the future, to explore some of the most fundamental problems in astronomy.”

Pouring of first MeerKAT dish foundation

During his visit to South Africa’s SKA site, Mr Willetts will have the opportunity to view the significant progress taking place on the first large-scale global research infrastructure project ever to be co-hosted in Africa. Mr Willets will see the developments of the infrastructure being installed for the MeerKAT, including the KAT-7 pathfinder telescope and the roads, specialised buildings and the sheds where the antennas for MeerKAT will be manufactured and integrated. He will also be able to observe the pouring of concrete for the foundations of the 64 MeerKAT antennas.



“We are pleased to have Minister Willetts in the country this week for the SA-UK Bilateral Forum. As Ministers responsible for the promotion of research and science in our respective countries we will use the opportunity to further reflect and explore areas of collaboration. The UK is indeed a key strategic partner of ours, with whom we have a number of successful human capital development programmes. While in the country, Minister Willetts will get to visit the SKA site and I am positive that he will be very impressed with progress made to date” says Derek Hanekom, South Africa’s Minister of Science and Technology.

New all-weather landing strip at SKA SA site

“We are delighted that Minister Willetts’ visit coincides with the maiden landing on our all-weather landing strip, providing the opportunity for us to demonstrate the delivery of infrastructure for MeerKAT and the SKA,” says Professor Justin Jonas, Associate Director for Science and Engineering at SKA South Africa.

“The new landing strip will make it easier, quicker and safer for our engineers and scientists who frequently visit the remote radio astronomy site in the Karoo,” Jonas adds. “The site is located about 700 km from Cape Town, where our science, engineering and commissioning teams are based, and about 1 000 km from Johannesburg, where our infrastructure engineering team is based.” The landing strip will also be required for the international SKA Organisation to deploy the SKA radio telescope, and its associated infrastructure.



Landing strip facts and figures

The new all-weather landing strip is 1 300 m long and 18 m wide. At present it can accommodate aircraft seating up to 13 passengers (e.g. Pilatus PC-12, Cessna and Beech King Air).
The strip includes an apron to accommodate up to two aircraft at any given time.
The position of the landing strip was carefully chosen to avoid interference with the configuration and operations of the MeerKAT, and in the future, the SKA, and to fit in with the local topography and wind conditions.
The landing strip will be used during the construction of MeerKAT (up to 2016), and for the SKA (from 2017 onwards). Once these telescopes are operational, the landing strip will be used for technical maintenance crews to get to the site.
The landing strip has been registered as a voluntary un-manned landing strip with the South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA). Should the need arise to land larger aircraft, the voluntary registration with the SACAA will be upgraded to a fully licensed landing strip.
Brink & Heath Civils (Pty) Ltd was awarded the contract for the construction of the roads, civil works, electrical and fibre ducting reticulation and the all-weather landing strip on site.

Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 3:06pm On Sep 22, 2013
SKA - The Square Kilometre Array (2016)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrhEiif_Das
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 3:14pm On Sep 22, 2013
South Africa's MeerKAT Telescope


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKe_IcXUzg4
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 3:30pm On Sep 22, 2013
New Alexander Forbes Building - Sandton


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVUqwRqrygM

Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 3:52pm On Sep 22, 2013
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 3:53pm On Sep 22, 2013
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 4:00pm On Sep 22, 2013
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 4:52pm On Sep 22, 2013
http://www.fiainstitute.com/news/Pages/article-9999999999999999994.aspx

29.08.2013 | South Africa Achieves Highest Training Standard

Motorsport South Africa achieves excellence standard and becomes latest Regional Training Provider.

Motorsport South Africa (MSA) has been presented with the FIA Institute's Officials' Award for the Achievement of Excellence after demonstrating the highest standards of motor sport marshalling and training.
MSA is the first National Sporting Authority (ASN) to achieve this in Africa and will now become an official FIA Institute Regional Training Provider (RTP). As an RTP it can help to train other ASNs, with financial support from the Motor Sport Safety Development Fund.
FIA President Jean Todt and FIA Institute President Gérard Saillant presented the Achievement of Excellence award to MSA CEO Adrian Scholtz at the FIA Institute’s African workshop in Botswana today.
President Todt said: “It is important to have a top training provider in Africa. Motorsport South Africa can now share its expertise with other ASNs and help raise the training and safety standards across the region.”
Professor Saillant said: “The RTP initiative is particularly important in regions where the motor sport infrastructure at grass roots level needs guidance and support. I would like to encourage ASNs across Africa to work with the MSA to further raise standards of marshalling and training.”
MSA President Steve Miller said: “It is a tribute to our hard-working staff and volunteer officials that we have reached this significant milestone in our development. The appointment as Africa's first Regional Training Provider affords us the opportunity to contribute to the development and promotion of safe motor sport on our continent.”
The MSA will present its RTP services to delegates at the Institute workshop today. The event, chaired by Kenya Motor Sports Foundation Secretary General Surinder Thatthi, also features a practical exercise on Environmental Sustainability as well as an update on the fund and presentation on the Young Driver Excellence Academy.
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 5:26pm On Sep 22, 2013
Kwela going global: “Spokes of Africa” keeps inspiring

This Spokes Mashiyane rarity goes out to Donpiper and the pennywhistle music-makers and keepers at the schiff and fipple forum, as well as Chris in the UK who runs a fantastic “kwela” blogsite project because:
“The pennywhistle is a fantastic instrument; expressive, cheap, portable, quick to get started. However its versatility is perceived to be limited due to its almost-exclusive association with celtic music. Kwela challenges this preconception and introduces those who haven’t heard it to a new way of hearing and playing the pennywhistle.”

This small group of good people from all around the world have got themselves together and are doing things like developing and sharing transcriptions and information on kwela and pennywhistle music so they too can keep performing and playing it. Now that is really keeping the music alive!

On this album Spokes introduces and then plays a velvety smooth rendition of Kwela Kong, and follows up with another called “Little Kwela Kong” which would also have fitted just as perfectly in that fine musical. He also teams up in a duet with Lemmy Mabaso to deliver Manyatela.

Thanks again to Siemon for sharing this rare album – there is one copy available on the net right now … the starting price is $300 U.S.. Enjoy.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4HJfcecgos


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eg9NUZ-G-sk

Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 6:36pm On Sep 22, 2013
http://variety.com/2013/film/international/south-africa-leads-continents-cartoon-boom-1200492645/


South Africa Leads Continent’s Cartoon Boom

Expansion in African animation serves up world-class toons to international audiences

Christopher Vourlias
RELATED STORIES





When the South African delegation arrives at the Annecy toon fest, members will be looking to cement their growing reputation for world-class animation.


“For South Africa, it’s a great year,” says Veronique Encrenaz, head of projects at Annecy’s film market, noting that the country has a feature in competition for the first time, a special territory focus, and a case study for the animated feature “Khumba” as part of the fest’s conference program.


The country’s emergence reflects a broader trend across the continent, as animators from Morocco to Madagascar are showing increasing sophistication in a range of animation, from traditional cel animation to CG, stop-motion and 3D.

“I’m surprised with the results I see every day,” says Mohamed Ghazala, head of the African chapter of the Intl. Animated Film Assn. Despite a lack of formal training, little government support and difficulty in getting private investors onboard, “Young people are using the digital tools they have on the computer and they (are starting) to make their own animation,” he says.

There have been successes both big and small. “Tinga Tinga Tales,” which was produced by the U.K.’s Tiger Aspect Prods. and the Nairobi-based “Homeboyz Animation,” aired on the BBC’s children’s web, CBeebies. Nigeria’s “Bino and Fino,” by the design studio EVCL, has shown in the U.S., U.K. and South Africa.

“The Adventures of Zambezia,” from South Africa’s Triggerfish Studios, was submitted for Oscar consideration and has so far grossed $23 million in more than 70 countries; the studio is following up with “Khumba,” in competition at Annecy this year.

Another South African hit, Sunrise Prods.’ TV series “Jungle Beat,” is being distributed in more than 170 countries.

Still, few countries have managed to build viable industries. Egypt is a regional powerhouse in the Arab world, exporting content across North Africa and the Middle East. South Africa is finally beginning to tap into the international co-production market, and could soon secure a competitive niche alongside more established industries in Canada, New Zealand and Australia.

The waters are murkier between Cairo and Cape Town, however. In recent years, Annecy has highlighted features and shorts from Madagascar, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and other nations — but “nothing is organized yet in (most) countries,” says Annecy market’s Encrenaz.

Still, there are signs that governments are slowly coming around. In Kenya, a tech-friendly administration introduced a $4 million grant to support the development of local digital content. Across the continent, governments are increasingly incorporating animation software into their school and university curricula, addressing the lack of formal training institutes, according to Harry Ravelo of Toon Boom Animation.

The bigger challenge now is securing the type of investment that would allow the pockets of activity to coalesce into sustainable industries. Risk-averse investors, who across Africa have traditionally shied away from more proven cultural properties such as live-action film, are unlikely to put their money into animation until it can offer returns.

As animators begin to develop their own intellectual properties, they’ll look to tap into the growing demand for homegrown content across Africa, where new television stations are constantly appearing and pay-TV subscriber bases continue to grow.

“Our primary market is Africa, because we think it’s a viable market,” says Kenya’s Kwame Nyong’o, who will be pitching a TV series, “Meet the Jembes” (pictured).

At the same time, the large number of Africans in the diaspora — and the fact that “humor is universal,” as Nyong’o puts it — means that African animators can have a global outlook as well.

“If Africans can watch ‘The Simpsons,’ why can’t Americans watch our shows?” he asks.
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:19pm On Sep 22, 2013
This week on Captains of Industry we speak to the man at the helm of South Africa's largest black owned auditing firm. Victor Sekese was appointed as the CEO of Sizwe Ntsaluba Gobodo back in April of this year. A former President of The Association for the Advancement of Black Accountants, Sekese is now responsible for growing Sizwe Ntsaluba Gobodo footprint in Africa.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9p3CNM1seo
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:22pm On Sep 22, 2013
On Captains of Industry ABN's Bronwyn Nielsen speaks to Sizwe Nxasana is the Chief Executive Officer of FirstRand Limited. Sizwe served as Chief Executive Officer of Telkom SA Limited from 1998 to 2005. He served as National President of Absa Group Limited from 1991 to 1994. He holds a Bachelor of Accounting Science and is a Chartered Accountant.



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVdBFQEHTw4
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:23pm On Sep 22, 2013
This week on Captains of Industry we speak to the man at the helm of one of South Africa's Big 4 auditing companies. Moses Kgosana was appointed as the CEO of KPMG South Africa back in 2007. With 28 years of accounting, audit and advisory experience, Kgosana also holds the position of Chairman of KPMG Africa.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3J6f7ffX5LI
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:25pm On Sep 22, 2013
This week on Captains of Industry we speak to the woman at the helm of one of South Africa's leading African black owned and managed investment holding companies. Phuti Malabie was appointed as the CEO of the Shanduka Group back in 2010. Listed as one of the Top 50 women in the world to watch by the Wall Street Journal, Malabie previously held the position of MD at Shanduka Energy.

1. Forbes Young Leaders list - powerful women

2. Young global leaders - world economic forum


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DuT69rV-ZO8
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 10:30pm On Sep 22, 2013
South Africa this South Africa that, as if I give a f**k about its achievements. You are only wasting your precious time posting those information which almost every country in Africa has one or more to write about, yet none is doing that than South African braggarts.

You are posting information that is opposite of the title of this particular thread. You would have to answer the question or else you are feeling insecure about your people. Where would South Africa be without white people?
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:32pm On Sep 22, 2013
On Captains of Industry we speak to the man at the helm of the mining subsidiary of one of South Africa's leading building material companies. Funani Mojono was appointed the CEO of Lafarge Aggregates South Africa back in September of this year. An Engineering graduate from the University of Pretoria, Mojono previously held the position of General Manager at Arcelormittal Coke & Chemicals.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dL0T_JnuSQ
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:33pm On Sep 22, 2013
Nku Nyembezi-Heita, CEO ArcelorMittal South Africa and member of ArcelorMittal's management committee, has never been your average company executive. She is also one of the most powerful women in the world, according to Forbes magazine.
In this video, Nku shares her thoughts on how women's career aspirations have evolved over the past decades, and discusses many more topics including access to equal opportunities, work / life balance, obstacles and role models and what it feels like to sometimes be "the only woman in the room".


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hs68OY_POaA
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit: 10:35pm On Sep 22, 2013
Popularly known as "The Commander" in the maritime industry, he has set himself the task of rebuilding South Africa's shipping industry into a world class sector. Despite South Africa exporting 98% of its goods by volume, the country has not a single ship that flies its flag, when it has almost international 1900 ships, many carrying 30% of the world's supply of crude, splashing across its waters on any given day. He is Tsietsi Mokhele, CEO of the South African Maritime Safety Authority.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HYNb8prHIt4
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 10:40pm On Sep 22, 2013
CEOs of companies in SA could be compared to CEOs of companies in Somalia. Please, whether the company is in SA or Somalia it doesn't make any different who the CEO is. That to me is not a big achievement. I want to see your black billionaires, internationally competitive companies own by Black South Africans, black inventors, scientists, reputable black South African in the political arena of the world(excepting for Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu), etc. Despite the good quality of universities in SA there is hardly blacks to be seen in those walks of life?

Please, stop fooling yourself by posting petty information as though it will make any difference. Bwahaha... grin grin grin
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit1: 10:44pm On Sep 22, 2013
This week on Captains of Industry - we speak to the man at the helm of South Africas national lottery operator.
Bongani Khumalo was appointed as Chief Executive of Gidani back in 2006.
Founder of the South African Mens Forum, Khumalo is a passionate advocate for the campaign against HIV and Aids.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_QxUZj46o8
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit1: 10:46pm On Sep 22, 2013
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka to head the U.N. Woman



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFE3Atwt2vk
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 10:47pm On Sep 22, 2013
Die*Vluit:
SKA a game changer for African science and technology revolution
Author: SKA Project | Monday, 16 September 2013


The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) project is more than a major feather in SA’s scientific cap – it could also catalyse significant science, technology and engineering business opportunities, jobs and innovation. It also has the potential to put Africa firmly on the map as a world Big Data and analytics hub. This is according to Simon Ratcliffe, technical lead for scientific computing at the SKA office in Cape Town.

The multi-billion rand SKA, to be hosted in South Africa and Australia, will extend into eight African countries and will be the world's biggest telescope. It is also one of the biggest-ever scientific projects and multinational collaborations in the name of science. The project has already entered its first phase, with radio astronomy scientists and engineers finalising its design, with construction to start in 2016. The radio telescope should be operationally mature by 2020.

With thousands of linked radio wave receptors in Australia and in Southern Africa, the SKA radio telescope will constantly scan space and feed the data to astronomers around the world. The amounts of data being collected and transmitted will be staggering – the SKA says the data collected by the SKA array in a single day would take nearly two million years to play back on an iPod.

This means the project requires supercomputing power and Big Data management and analytics capabilities on an unprecedented scale. SKA is working with the world’s most significant ICT powerhouses – such as IBM – on the project. One aspect of the project will see ASTRON, the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy and IBM collaborating to research extremely fast, but low-power exascale computer systems, data transport and storage processes, and streaming analytics that will be required to read, store and analyse all the raw data that will be collected daily. The SKA project will also have unprecedented data connectivity needs.

Meeting the advanced technological and engineering needs of this massive project will result in significant local skills development, revolutionise science and technology research and enable innovative new businesses and employment in the science, technology and engineering fields, Ratcliffe says.

“Aside from the benefits to African science, Big Data capabilities could be our biggest spin-off from the SKA project,” says Ratcliffe. “The innovations, skills development and commercial potential emerging as a result of the project are huge. The potential is not just academic – we develop the taxpayer-funded intellectual property to a point where it’s ready to become commercialised and benefit the economy. We will increasingly be an incubator of science and technology innovation.”

Ratcliffe says the human capital development is already taking place as a result of the SKA project, with bursaries and scholarships already being granted to allow students to learn the necessary cutting edge science, technology, maths and engineering skills to support the project. “We have a business development unit looking at making the innovations already developed for the SKA viable as commercial public space entities. Because the SKA is a long term project over decades, its impact will increase,” says Ratcliffe.

"Going forward, there will be a strong drive to leverage the SKA as a spearhead for other programmes – including next generation high performance computing challenges and Big Data challenges. Throughout Africa, we now have an extraordinary opportunity to become an important global player in Big Data processing innovation,” he says.

"The SKA project is much more than a exercise in academia," says Sean McLean , Sub-Saharan Africa, University Relations Leader for IBM. He says that leaders in education, government and business need to be prompted to not only support this but take action now to foster a new generation of talent with the technical expertise and disruptive ideas needed to make the most of this Big Data opportunity. " If they do , they can not only kick-start the next wave of innovation and growth in Africa’s business ecosystem, but establish the continent as the world’s go-to source of skills and counsel for Big Data.

And says McLean by establishing itself as a go-to source of Big Data skills and expertise is only the first step for Africa’s business and technology industries. By fostering creativity around the potential of Big Data – both through start-up communities and scientific research – Africa’s policymakers and industry leaders can influence the course of technological development on a global scale, generating results that enrich not only their but other nations’ economies and quality of life. Developing a generation of Big Data professionals, with the technical skills necessary to manage data and its analysis, is fundamental to all these outcomes: addressing it should be considered a matter of urgency.

“There are only a handful of Big Data drivers around the world,” he says. “The kind of data rates and processing challenges the SKA project will present put it right up there with only a handful of projects around the world.”

SKA says that since 2005, the African SKA Human Capital Development Programme has awarded close to 400 grants for studies in astronomy and engineering from undergraduate to post-doctoral level, while also investing in training programmes for technicians. Astronomy courses are being rolled out in other African countries, including Kenya, Mozambique, Madagascar and Mauritius. Career opportunities will increase substantially and new business opportunities will emerge.

Ratcliffe says the project has already changed the world’s view of SA’s scientific capability. Now it also presents the potential to spark virtually overnight growth in SA’s science, research, technology, ICT and engineering industries.

“This project is a once in a lifetime combination of science and engineering in SA – we won’t see the likes of it ever again. It’s tremendously exciting and an opportunity to change the narrative for SA,” says Ratcliffe.


I like this project though. I can guarantee black South Africans will not be in helm of affairs of it. There is hardly going to be blacks working there as scientists than janitors, drivers and messengers. Jeez! That hurts to hear about! It is sad.
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit1: 10:48pm On Sep 22, 2013
Empowering Women around the World - Part 2

South Africa's Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka has been appointed the new head of UN Women, the United Nations body tasked with promoting women's rights and their full participation in global affairs.

Newly appointed head of UN Women and former South African Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka sat down with ABN's Karima Brown and expressed her wish to engage the world's multilateral organisations to help advance the goals of women empowerment and economic liberation.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ylz64zhLzq0
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by Nobody: 10:52pm On Sep 22, 2013
Die**Vluit:
Empowering Women around the World - Part 2

South Africa's Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka has been appointed the new head of UN Women, the United Nations body tasked with promoting women's rights and their full participation in global affairs.

Newly appointed head of UN Women and former South African Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka sat down with ABN's Karima Brown and expressed her wish to engage the world's multilateral organisations to help advance the goals of women empowerment and economic liberation.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ylz64zhLzq0


I would be very glad to see her put an end to the molestation of young women in your society or else she is not qualified to be in that position.
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit1: 10:54pm On Sep 22, 2013
More and more South African small businesses are waking up to the growth potential of the continent's emerging economies.
The Department of trade and industry is leading a large business delegation to Zimbabwe to encourage outward investment in that country


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clGxSfyQeAM
Re: Where Would South Africa Be Without White People? by DieVluit1: 10:56pm On Sep 22, 2013
Former deputy President Phumzile Mlambo Ngcuka has been sworn in as Executive Director of the
UN's Entity for Gender and Women's Empowerment.
It places her in the senior structures of the global organization at the rank of under Secretary General


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-KgcI0WGLhc

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