Showing posts with label Our blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Our blog. Show all posts

Friday, 30 June 2017

NATC's blog post is featured in the Bush Chicken

Our blog post by Haresh Karamchandani was featured in The Bush Chicken!! Yoo hoo! 🙌🏾 

We shared the blog post on the Liberia Expats Google Group and it was picked up by The Bush Chicken

Bush Chicken is dedicating this week to electricity so it's nice to have our experience be part of the various stories on infrastructure.

This encourages us to keep writing! 

Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Pokemon Go articles flood the Internet



Yesterday, we’ve read and shared 9 articles on our Facebook page about Pokemon Go. As a science and technology page, we read and share dozens of interesting articles every day. However, since yesterday, the Newsfeed has been reporting non stop about this new gaming craze. See the list of articles and snippets below:

1) Nintendo shares soar on Pokemon GO craze, Richard Morgan,  July 11

Pokémon Go’s massive blastoff as a mobile game pushed Nintendo’s ADRs up 34 percent Monday — adding $9 billion to the video gamer’s valuation over the last few days.
The free game has dominated digital downloads since its US launch on July 6, with 7.5 million users signing up at Apple’s App Store and Google Play, according to SensorTower, an app-analytics company.
SimilarWeb, another app analyzer, reported the game has already eclipsed Tinder in installations on Android phones and is running neck and neck with Twitter in terms of daily active users.


"Pokémon Go is a (possibly overrated?) augmented-reality game that launched in the United States late last week. In a nutshell, the game lays a sort of semi-transparent Poké-world over your actual, geographical location, which you can explore by physically walking around while staring zombie-like at your screen."

3) Trading is coming soon to Pokemon GO, Sal Basile Jul. 11, GEEKhttp://www.geek.com/games/pokemon-go-ceo-teases-trading-in-future-update-1661289/:

"Pokemon GO is taking the world by storm but a major core element essential to the franchise is missing: trading. Even John Hanke CEO of Pokemon GO developer Niantic knows trading is what makes Pokemon go round. In an interview with Business Insider, Hanke said trading would tie in to Pokemon GO’s mantra of encouraging players to interact. He went on to say that a plan to implement some kind of trading aspect is very much on the horizon.”


First of all why does a Pokémon game need full access to your account? Second why aren’t users warned that this is the level they are granting and given a chance to reconsider? And third why didn’t Google say a thing when it happened "Notably, Niantic’s previous AR game, Ingress, only required partial access." like “are you sure you want to give a game about making made-up animals fight access to the confidential documents in your Gmail and Docs?”

5) Drivers are offering to chauffeur Pokémon Go players to hot spots, Why walk when you can ride?, Julia Alexander, Jul 11 2016, POLYGONhttp://www.polygon.com/2016/7/11/12152978/pokemon-go-hot-spots-gyms-drivers?utm_campaign=polygon.social&utm_medium=social&utm_content=polygon&utm_source=facebook

On marketplaces like Craigslist, people have begun to offer their services for a hefty fee. In Vancouver, (where the game hasn't even officially launched, but is available through side-loading APKs on Android devices) one driver says they'll pick up drivers at a requested location and drive them around the city. The poster says they've been playing Ingress for about two years, and as such, has an idea of where to go for popular PokéStops and gyms.  This particular driver is charging $30 for the first hour and $20 for every hour after that. They will not, however, do anything illegal like stop in the middle of the highway, users must wear seat belts, and they're not speeding.

6) Pokemon Go: Gotta catch all your personal data, If you signed into Pokemon Go with your Google account, you might have just handed your digital life over to the game's developers, Laura Hautala, CNET, JULY 11 2016, http://www.cnet.com/news/pokemon-go-gotta-catch-all-your-personal-data/?ftag=COS-05-10-aa0a&linkId=26452776

The developer of the wildly popular Pokemon Go, Niantic Labs, has full access to your Google account if you used it to log into the game from an iOS device. In response to reports of this all-you-can-eat data buffet, Niantic said in a statement it's drastically limiting the access it requests going forward and that it didn't access anything beyond user IDs and email addresses.  "We recently discovered that the Pokémon GO account creation process on iOS erroneously requests full access permission for the user's Google account," the company said in a statement. "Once we became aware of this error, we began working on a client-side fix to request permission for only basic Google profile information, in line with the data that we actually access."  But for the time being, the full account permission could give Niantic access to all of your information, as well as the ability to post, delete and send things from your account. In other words, logging in with your Google account is a super effective way to hand over your email, contacts, photos, documents...everything!

7) The top game in China right now is a Pokemon Go clone, Steven Millward, Jul 11, 2016, TECH IN ASIAhttps://www.techinasia.com/pokemon-go-clone-china

Everyone seems to be going nuts for Pokemon Go right now – but the game hasn’t rolled out to a number of countries, including China. That might explain why the top free game in China today on the Chinese iOS App Store is a Pokemon Go clone.  The knock-off game, City Spirit Go, features a creature in the app icon that looks like Pikachu crossed with a racoon.

8) Pokémon Go is doing what few apps can – driving real-world traffic, Darrell Etherington, JULY 11 2016, TECH CRUNCH,  https://techcrunch.com/2016/07/11/pokemon-go-is-doing-what-few-apps-can-driving-real-world-traffic/?sr_share=facebook

Already, people are using the tools made available by Niantic and Nintendo in Pokémon Go to capitalize on the potential for real-world traffic. Forbes contributor Jason Evangelho details how smart business owners are using “Lures,” an in-game item that turns any existing PokéStop into virtual feeding frenzy for players looking to catch Pokémon.  But this requires there to already be a PokéStop nearby – so naturally, businesses are already looking to get Niantic to add ones to their locations.  Not only Niantic, but Nintendo, too has a history of using the popularity of its products with consumers to drive foot traffic. The Nintendo Zone service offered special downloadable virtual items to players when they connected to specific locations, and Nintendo worked with McDonald’s in Japan and Boingo in the U.S. to provide access to Nintendo’s content free to users. 

9) From Pokéstops to Pikachu: everything you need to know about Pokémon Go, The game has been flooding the news and neighbourhoods but for many it seems as silly as it is impenetrable, Clem Bastow, 11 July 2016, THE GUARDIANhttps://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/jul/11/from-pokestops-to-pikachu-everything-you-need-to-know-about-pokemon-go?CMP=fb_a-technology_b-gdntech:

If you’ve been out and about over the past few days, chances are you’ve seen people frantically swiping their smartphones in front of places of interest, or listened with slight alarm as friends chattered excitedly about how they “caught a Sandshrew behind the supermarket”. You may have wondered: what the heck is happening?  The answer is Pokémon Go, the new smartphone game from Nintendo and Niantic Labs. According to data tabled by Digital Vision, two days after the app’s launch, Pokémon Go was installed on 5.16% of Android devices in the US and had roared to the top of the iTunes app store’s free app charts. Nintendo’s stocks are reported to have risen to their highest value since 1983 and demand for the game was so high, with servers crashing regularly, that Amazon’s chief technology officer, Werner Vogels, even offered to share the traffic load.

End Note

But what does it all mean for us reading this news in Liberia? A company's valuation increased by almost US $ 10 billion because of a computer game.  Apparently, everyone is walking around like a zombie trying to catch computer game characters on their screen that shows a virtual character embossed on a real view of the world through the device's camera. Urban spaces and other companies are riding the craze by offering cab services and hot spots in cafes. And, disturbingly, the game gets full access to one's e-mail account. 

It would be easiest to say news of this game bears no relevance for us in Liberia but not entirely correct because a significant portion of the population has a mobile connection and, even has a simple smart phone. Almost everyone is on Facebook and other social media platforms. I often see youngsters and even marketeers playing a video game on their phones.  Selfies and posing for group photographs are loved in Liberia. Addiction to mobile technology is common everywhere and, changing the way we interact with our world, our friends, and even how we communicate. Am I little glad, though, that no Pokemon Go craze will catch here soon? Yes. 

Living in Liberia, one sometimes envies the latest technological progress elsewhere: better public transportation, medical innovations that battle disease and treat illnesses better, greener urban spaces, newest gadget to convert garbage to energy, interactive museums, digital access to art and history, etc. 

Do I wish I had Netflix? More apps to automate my life or useless devices? Selfie sticks? A Kindle? Another tablet besides my laptop and smart phone (already too many devices)? No. 

Social media, apps and hyper connectivity has not really made our lives more enriched. In fact, even grown up adults have sacrificed etiquette, art of conversation, and the virtue of patience because of their addiction to their phones. It seems society has not paused to reflect on how much has changed and, what we are losing at lightening speeds. Unless there is a technology out there that will actually improve the lives of Liberians, I am not envious at all. 

Tuesday, 20 October 2015

Maintaining NATC's Facebook page

Updating NATC's Facebook page is challenging and fun. 

I always knew I wanted NATC to have a Facebook page and, have been maintaining a page since 2010. 

What to post every day? Do we have daily news to share? Are we taking enough photographs to be able to post something new regularly? 

NATC is not a retail company so we do not have new products on our shelf to talk about. We provide services and products to offices. The nature of our work entails work on site and also trouble shooting at our lab. The photo opportunities are then on site and sometimes at our lab. For this, I often have to ask my staff to take photos on site which they remember to do most of the time. At the lab at the office, I myself try to take photos of staff in action.









We have also had several company shoots taken by a professional photographer which have been featured on our Facebook page.



Besides that, I regularly scour the Internet for news under various headings: IT, Science and Technology News, Africa, Asia, Infrastructure, Energy, etc. By doing so, I have started to stay on top of the latest news and, hopefully folks on our page also enjoy reading some interesting articles.

The Technology pages I frequently source news from are:

BBC Technology 
Guardian Technology 
Tech Crunch 
Scroll Science and Technology 
New Yorker Science and Technology 
NDTV Gadgets 360
BiztechAfrica The voice of Africa's ICT sector
Technology News The Guardian Nigeria
CNET News

I try to also look for interesting images on the Internet to share on our page depending on day of the week



time of the day


share IT cartoons




share IT Memes



post Comic Strips

I even found a comic strip - "Titi Co"- on BiztechAfrica The voice of Africa's ICT sector that is funny and relevant and I often post the cartoons on our page


find amusing office humour


and even look for art and technology



I even made some Memes of our own







To date, we have almost 600 Likes on our page. If the objective of our social media is to build an online community of our clients, potential customers, folks interested in IT and Liberia and wider Africa, we need to do better.

The next challenge is to figure out how we can get existing clients to be part of our online community and to use social media to reach the market.

Friday, 29 August 2014

Our most popular posts

Contributed by Farzana Rasheed

We have strived to maintain a blog since we started the company. The objective of the blog is to present a commentary and online-diary of our company. We want to chart our progress, our successes and day-to-day challenges of an IT company in Liberia. We want to come across as a group that is very passionate about delivering quality IT services in a challenging environment in Liberia. We are not afraid to talk about challenges and difficulties, either. 

It is difficult to post regularly since we are a small business and, not everyone has time to write about what they are doing. Our technical staff, brilliant and hardworking as they are, have been shy to express themselves and also have very little writing experience. Although they are the ones on ground and would be able to write highly interesting posts about what it is like to deliver IT service in Liberia, they struggle to find the time or confidence to write. 

But I do push my staff to write! Last year, writing an end-of-the year post was mandatory for all my staff before we closed shop for Christmas. 

I also try to enoucourage my business partner and Head of Operations to frequently put pen to paper. 

We have also had part time and temporary positions filled in our company. For instance, we had a Marketing Officer who used to come and work for us for three times a week. He often contributed with a post. That post was filled after his departure too but only briefly.  I've also had some English teachers who provided English writing lessons to our staff. One of them contributed a post.  

Once we have a new blog entry, we also post a link on our Facebook page.

As far as feedback is concerned, very few comments are posted on our blog. But  I notice that people do read our blog. I often get comments first hand from individuals. 

So, we need to keep writing. 

Here are some of our popular posts:


2) Xerox 7125 Work Centre Printer Error 010-333. It received 1,028 hits. 

3) Shipping News. It received 100 hits. 

4) Is XP extinct? It received 53 hits. 

6) There is a baby in the office! It received 73 hits. 

9)  Back to Liberia  It received 65 hits.

10) Sad Day It received 65 hits.
 

Tuesday, 12 November 2013

Feedback on our blog

NATC started a blog back in 2010.

The objective of the "Notes on an IT Company" blog is to be a commentary and online-diary of our company. We want to chart our progress, our successes and day-to-day challenges of an IT company in Liberia. The tone of the posts should be nerdy as possible. We want to come across as a group that is very passionate about delivering quality IT services in a challenging environment in Liberia. We are not afraid to talk about challenges and difficulties, either.

We have published 101 posts until now. 

My question to our readers is this: do you think our blog is fulfilling its objective as stated above? Do you have comments and suggestions? We would love to hear them.  

Friday, 17 August 2012

Photo Shoot at NATC

Contributed by Farzana Rasheed

NATC commissioned a photo shoot of its good looking and hardworking team against the backdrop of our modern and stylish office. The photos were taken on Wednesday, 15 August by Cachelle Ink. 

We are quite pleased with the quality of the photos and how they show case our team and office. We are planning on using the photographs for marketing purposes i.e. Facebook, company profile, flyers, and proposals.

Top Row ( Left to Right): Farzana Rasheed, Emmanuel Jacobs, Cecelia Cooper, Jonathan Barwon and Haresh Karamchandani
Bottom Row (Left to Right): Daniel Collins, Patience Nyepanh, Jerome Teah, and Guillaume Foutry

To see the rest of the photos, you can see them on Facebook page here

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

New Facebook 'Like Box' On Our Blog







We have installed a Like Box on our blog so that we can link our Facebook Fan Page to our company blog. Let's hope this gets us more fans. 

We found the tip on 50 Ways to Get More People to Like Your Facebook Page. It's a great site and this is only one of the few tricks they advise. We like! 

Saturday, 16 July 2011

We have 1,478 hits on our blog!

Contributed by Farzana Rasheed



Today we decided to take out our calculator and see what the stats look like. And behold, ladies and gentlemen, we have 1,478 hits on our company blog. Yay!

And, we have 5 followers, two of which are ourselves. 

So how did we get 1,478 hits? All of the staff have the company blog in our our digital signatures at the end of our e-mails. For instance, mine is like this:


Farzana Rasheed

CEO
New Africa Technology Company (NATC)
1st Floor, Above Master Trading, Randall Street
Monrovia
Tel: + 231 6 531 458
E-mail: farzana.rasheed@newafritech.com
www.newafritech.com
Company Blog: http://newafritech.blogspot.com/
Skype: fazrasheed-london


I'm sure some of the recipients of my e-mails have clicked on our company blog to check it out. Half of the hits must be through the e-mail. 

We also have a Facebook page through which we promote the company blog. Every blog entry is posted on the New Africa Technology Company Facebook page

We have put a great effort into using these tools to promote ourselves and try to keep us in the public eye. And it looks like we will have to keep up the aggressive promotion by posting all our blog entries, small blurbs and technology news from BBC or Al Jazeera on Facebook as we really want more hits and many more followers.

We think we should also start using more of LinkedIn and try to raise our company's profile using that medium. 

I'm also thinking about inviting an outsider to write as a guest writer and contribute an entry, perhaps something like A Day at NATC

Lastly, the staff need to write more about themselves and what they are doing! We are getting increasingly busy but don't talk nearly enough about it!

The blog

So, we started blogging about our company back in October 2010 when we had set up the business. We have blogged about whatever we thought was interesting and relevant to blog about. 

In the beginning we posted three entries on the new website and logo we had commissioned and set up around the same time: New Company WebsiteDesigning the Company Website, Which L-O-G-O? and A Digital Green Africa

We have blogged about major projects that we have undertaken like setting up of a wireless network across a mining camp using Meraki technology (New Product: the Meraki MR58), installation and set up of the latest Windows 2008 server (Windows Server 2008 Standard Edition R2 x 64-bit), and launch of an SMS Broadcast Service

Two of our staff members (one is not working with any longer, incidentally) have also blogged about themselves: My name is Onesimus Borkuah and I work at NATC and My name is Cecelia Cooper and I work at NATC

There are also rather random entries such as the Spanner No. 9 and and a rusty NUT. Read it - it's quite amusing.

The blog is truly a useful tool and forum. It helps us to promote ourselves as a young, vibrant and excited IT company that uses blogging and Facebook. It allows us to project an image of a company that has its people at its centre. We encourage our staff to write about ordinary call outs to customer sites so they can start communicating what they do on an every day basis. It will also help them to improve their language skills and find creative ways to express themselves. And lastly, it'll be a good forum to discuss IT issues. 

We look forward to also having a historical online record years from now. 

We are pretty sure we are one of the few businesses in Liberia that has a blog if not the only one!

So please keep reading and following our blog! A deep thanks to all our existing 5 followers. 

Saturday, 20 November 2010

A Digital Green Africa

We have finally selected a logo design for NATC. 


It is a digital green Africa with NATC spelled across it in our four website colours (Purple, Green, Orange and Yellow):

If a perfect logo conveys a clear vision, ours is a digital green Africa. 

Let us imagine a technologically advanced and green Africa. 

We are already on our way! 

Monday, 15 November 2010

Designing the company website

Commissioning of the company website was an interesting project. We decided to work with a family member in Karachi, Pakistan with whom we are interested in forging a long-term business relationship. It really is nice to be able to work with people you want and choose your partners. 

We really wanted a very fresh-looking and funky website. The colours are vibrant or as a friend said, "It looks like candy!". The images are of our staff with big welcoming smiles. A professional photographer was hired for a day to take pictures of our young and energetic staff. We were very happy with the results. Our office is painted in yellow and that on the day of the shoot, it was particularly sunny giving the photographs a warm glow. 



As for the design of the website, the basic layout was decided upon early on. It was the little details that took a long time to finalise given the 5-hour time difference between Liberia and Pakistan. Scores of e-mails were sent back and forth and, a few telephone calls had to be made as well. I also sent the various drafts to friends for instant feedback and my friends were extremely helpful. 

I was not very happy with boring fonts like New Times Roman or Arial for the basic text. But if you notice, almost all websites use this basic font. I guess I wanted to be different and edgy. My graphic designer friend recommended looking up fonts on dafont.com. It is an amazing resource. After experimenting with a lot of fonts, we decided to do was to put in a very retro-looking font for the main text. It basically looks like a type-writer font. 



We also used a graphic font that is entitled 'Africain' to give an African-looking aesthetic sense. It needs a bit of tweaking but so far it looks good. 




I really wanted something like the one below but the geek font does not seem to upload on our website so we just have to stick with the one above. 



I think the website is more or less final. We have achieved our goal which was to have an online presence and project a certain image. 

What was the feedback like? 

We received a great response and people like our funky website. The response to the type-writer font is mixed, though. Some people love it, others hate it. Here is my favourite response to the typewriter font. 

"Yes, it is true that the font is different, but I think it still works. If it was more extreme, then it could affect the perception of seriousness of the company, but I think this one is within the limits, and it shows freshness and a young spirit. I guess it is subjective and when you try to be different there is always risk. It worked for me!"

The best part is that we have two websites already in the pipeline for our clients. I can safely say the website was a success! 

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Which L-O-G-O?

Now that we have a new website, a change in name and a clearer overall business direction, we need a new logo. 


A logo is as important as a website for our company's image, perhaps even more so. A customer will not visit our website every day but will certainly be seeing our logo much more frequently. A logo appears on paper work such as invoices and proposals, on ID cards and business cards as well. Given its close association in all our communication to our customers and even the wider public, I need to have a sharp, funky and highly 'talkative' logo.


If you look at well-known logos, you realise they are instantly recognisable and effective because they are quite simple. Hence, we need a 'talkative' logo that can convey a lot about the company it represents. In the words of my friend who also has her own business, the logo needs to work across our "marketing collateral."  


We were fortunate enough to get help on logos from a friend who is a graphic designer and has generously given a lot of her energy and time. We also commissioned some logo ideas from a graphic designer in India. 

Here is their hard work and creativity: