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Friday, September 2, 2016

Mark Zuckerberg meets Buhari, Osinbajo in Abuja.


Once more, the founder of FACEBOOK pulls another unannounced visit to the capital of Nigeria, Abuja to meet the leadership of the country to participate in the Demo Day. He had this to share with us on his page.


"Last stop of my trip: I'm in Abuja to meet Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice PresidentYemi Osinbajo.

We all met with entrepreneurs as part of Demo Day, an initiative for the Nigerian government to fund entrepreneurs with ideas for improving the country. We heard from engineers who are finding ways to reward people for recycling, designing ways to pick up trash easier, and using shuttles to improve commutes in Lagos. 

This has been an inspiring trip. The energy and entrepreneurship in Nigeria and Kenya is amazing. I can't wait to come back again soon!''

#zuckinabuja may not be trending that much like #zuckinlagos, its a plus that such an investor intends to make a MARK in a country like Nigeria and Kenya. This two country is doing a lot with the available ministries and ministers to push Africa into the global race for technological sustenance of the economy via the DNS-industry.

Kudos to Mark and like-minds. 

A new way to watch Facebook videos on your TV

Facebook now allows you stream videos from your mobile devices or PC to your TV through Apple TV from an iOS devise and Google Chromecast through a web browser. The social media giant is also working to enable people cast from their Android devices to Chromecast soon.

Facebook is focused on creating video experiences that people want, and have also heard that people want different options for how and where they watch videos that they discover on the platform.

  1. To watch a video from Facebook on your TV:
  2. ·         Find a video you want to watch on your phone or desktop and press the TV symbol in the top right corner.
  3. ·         Select the device you want the video to stream to.
  4. ·         Enjoy the video right from your TV.

While you’re watching a Facebook video on your TV, you can go back and scroll through News Feed on the device you’re streaming from, so you can catch up on other stories while your video keeps playing on the TV. Or you can find more videos to watch by choosing a new one from places like News Feed or your Saved tab. And if you’re streaming a Facebook Live video to your TV, you can see real-time reactions and comments on the screen, and you can join in the conversation yourself by reacting or commenting.

Chromecast is a digital media player developed by Google. The device is a 2.83-inch (72 mm) HDMI wireless adapter that plays audio/video content on a high-definition television or display by directly streaming it via Wi-Fi from the Internet or a local network. The Google Chromecast HDMI streaming media player displays content from phones, tablets, or laptops on your TV screen. Chromecast works with a number of apps including Netflix and YouTube.

Apple TV is a digital media player and a microconsole developed and sold by Apple Inc. It is a small network appliance and entertainment device that can receive digital data from a number of sources and stream it to a capable television.
Whether you’re hanging out with friends or just relaxing on the couch by yourself, Facebook hopes you enjoy this new way to watch videos.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

PRESS RELEASE: Facebook CEO goes to Nigeria to witness Africa's tech revolution


Facebook


Zuckerberg is in Nigeria to listen and learn and take ideas back to California on how Facebook can better support tech development and entrepreneurship across Africa
LONDON, United Kingdom, August 30, 2016/ -- Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) (http://www.Facebook.com) CEO Mark Zuckerberg is visiting Nigeria this week on his first trip to Africa, using his time in the country to visit the Yaba technology hub in Lagos, meet with developers and partners, and explore Nollywood.
Zuckerberg is in Nigeria to listen and learn and take ideas back to California on how Facebook can better support tech development and entrepreneurship across Africa.

One of his first stops on the trip was to visit a 'Summer of Code Camp' at the Co-Creation Hub (CcHub) in Yaba, known as the Silicon Valley of Nigeria.

CcHub opened in 2011 and at the time didn't even have an office. Five years later they fill three floors and the roof of a building. At CcHub people can learn how to code, developers can get help launching their first products, and find mentors and funding.

At CcHub Zuckerberg met with developers like Temi Giwa, who runs a platform called Life Bank (http://www.LifeBank.ng) that makes blood available when and where it is needed in Nigeria. Life Bank saves lives by mobilizing blood donations, taking inventory of all blood available in the country, and delivering blood in the right condition to where it is needed.

After visiting CcHub Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, said:

“This is my first trip to sub-Saharan Africa. I'll be meeting with developers and entrepreneurs, and learning about the startup ecosystem in Nigeria. The energy here is amazing and I'm excited to learn as much as I can.

“The first place I got to visit was the Co-creation Hub Nigeria (CcHUB) in Yaba. I got to talk to kids at a summer coding camp and entrepreneurs who come to CcHub to build and launch their apps. I'm looking forward to meeting more people in Nigeria.”

Meeting developers at Andela

Mark then went to Andela, an engineering organization that is building the next generation of technical leaders in Africa.

Andela is a business that recruits the most talented technologists in Africa and shapes them into world-class developers through a four-year technical leadership program. In the two years since it was founded, Andela has accepted just over 200 engineers from a pool of more than 40,000 applicants. Andela developers spend six months mastering a technical stack and contributing to open source projects before being placed with global technology companies as full-time, distributed teammates, working out of Andela headquarters in Lagos and Nairobi.

Earlier this year, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative invested in Andela after being impressed by the company's innovative model of learning and its drive to connect the global technology ecosystem with the most talented developers in Africa.

Seni Sulyman, Director, Andela Lagos, said: “We are excited and honored to welcome Mark Zuckerberg to Lagos. His visit reinforces not only his support of Andela’s mission, but his belief that indeed the next generation of great technology leaders will come out of Lagos, Nigeria and cities across Africa. Andela has created a platform for passionate, driven software developers and engineers to break into the global tech ecosystem, but the barriers to entry are still very high. Mark’s visit demonstrates to all Nigerian developers and entrepreneurs that they’ve caught the attention of the tech world, and they are capable of succeeding on a truly global level."

At the end of the day Zuckerberg stopped by an Express WiFi stand in Lagos owned by Rosemary Njoku. Facebook's Express WiFi lets entrepreneurs like Rosemary set up a hot spot to help their community access apps and services built by local developers.

(Link to Mark's post: http://APO.af/eTWrly)
 
Distributed by APO on behalf of Facebook.
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