Unencrypted
By Unencrypted
UnencryptedFeb 25, 2021
#BizTrends2024: Yesh Surjoodeen, MD HP Southern Africa, explains how PCs can win in 2024
The PC market is going through a time. They're losing market share to the Mac. Losing mind share because of a technology gap that is growing because they are relying on 3rd party suppliers like Intel and AMD. Who better than Yesh Sujoodeen, MD for HP South Africa to explain what the future of the PC looks like.
“I think that during the pandemic era, we had a lot of demand for devices that allowed people to be online, to socialise, to communicate, and to be in touch. So I think it's the right time for people to relook at their options available and to understand that the refresh cycle that's coming may include, a very informed decision.”
“The fact that you're having a product means that you're gonna dive into a lot more of the digital environment. Firstly, you're gonna be using a lot more applications. You're gonna be communicating far more effectively in the digital world. It was inevitable that we needed to have that digitisation and that service level support. We accelerated having better options in terms of how you support it.”
“As an IT manager, you just don't wanna respond to the changes, you want to understand what is going on in your environment and be able to address problems before they happen.”
#BizTrends2024: Wayne Toms, GhostDraft CEO, talks about AI convergence in CCM
"CCM is essentially the software that automates the production and delivery of all types of written documents, but especially these complex legal or contractual agreements."
"It differs from the document automation of the past in several ways, but perhaps most especially in how it can apply quite sophisticated business logic to generate documents on the fly with the appropriate clauses, words, pictures, and so on, in line with the specific customer requirements. And, you know, you might say that in some ways, CCM is becoming the glue between the digital customer And the digital business for these complex financial transactions."
Christmas was cancelled in Bethlehem: a discussion with a religious leader
Host: Lindsey Schutters
Guest: Archdeacon Rodney Whiteman
ep.12 | Uber is going green for clout
In 2008 Travis Kalanick pitched the idea of Uber to possible investors as the convenience of a cab in New York City plus the experience of a being driven by a professional chauffer. The idea was to marry these things together into a luxury experience in San Francisco – where it’s near impossible to catch a cab.
I’m recording this audio in Cape Town, South Africa, though. A million miles away from the Bay Area and Silicon Valley. My last Uber was a Suzuki Espresso and the only Frisco that driver knows is the coffee that comes in the can.
That’s why I met up with Uber Southern Africa General Manager Kagiso Khaole at the Africa Green Economy Summit ahead of the Cape Town ePrix, to ask him how Uber is going to revolutionise the way South Africans travel, again.
Travis Kalanick sold a dream of convenience, not a product that would save the world.
Whichever way you slice it, Uber doesn’t solve traffic problems or reduce emissions.
But it could. Those 25,000 EVs currently in the global Uber fleet will be joined by 25,000 more that will flood the streets of India by 2026 allowing the ride hailing pioneers to easily reach its 50,000 goal by 2030.
Again, a convenient solution to a real problem.
Uber wants to be a technology platform, though. One that connects riders to an interconnected network of mobility solutions
But South Africa is still miles away from striking a manufacturing and EV adoption deal like the Indian one, or scaling the Gautrain to operate in other cities.
But EVs are beginning to trickle to our shores, and our production lines are slowly making room for more alternative energy transport options.
But that’s a story for another day.
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ep.11 | Green Hydrogen sounds like a scam.
Of course the bulk of that money will be spent on overhauling the electricity sector, but it is an ENERGY transition, which means changing how we do all fuels that power our economy.
One of those fuels is Hydrogen.
One out of every five rands spent on the Just Energy Transition will be put towards kickstarting the Green Hydrogen economy.
What is Green Hydrogen? Well, it’s hydrogen extracted using energy from renewable sources.
You know what has a lot of hydrogen in it? Water.
Yes, we’ll be zapping H2O with electricity from solar or wind to split it into hydrogen and oxygen.
Do you know which part of South Africa has a lot of sun, but is constantly plagued by water shortages? The Northern Cape.
Of course, that would be the logical place to establish a green hydrogen plant… RIGHT?
To be specific, the plant will be established just outside Vanrhynsdorp, a town you may have heard of in recent weeks because the residents were protesting after going six days without water.
Poor maintenance and loadshedding knocked out the main pump that sends water up from Vredendal.
This green hydrogen commercial manufacturing plant will have electricity supplied by Keren Energy, and use electrolysis tech developed at the South African Institute for Advanced Materials Chemistry which is based at the University of the Western Cape
Doctor Stanford Chidziva is the acting director for the green hydrogen programme at the institute and he is understandably excited. Bottom line is that the real winners in the green hydrogen economy are the big industries that can use it to decarbonise operations, and not necessarily the residents of Vanrhynsdorp who now need share water rations with a hydrogen plant.
Oh, and there’s another El Nino coming that will drive droughts in the region too.
_
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ep. 10 | Microsoft has been doing AI for years
But this isn’t Microsoft’s first rodeo or even its first billion dollar investment into OpenAI.
First, the company was founded by a consortium that included Elon Musk and Amazon Web Services. Then it built out those awesome game bots that owned Dota champs, and took a little bit of tech from Google’s machine learning operations and built out a language transformer model.
The GPT stands for generative pre-trained transformer, and the Transformer part was developed by Google Labs. On a basic level a language transformer predicts the next word in a sentence after training itself on a data set.
GPT-3 is trained on 175 billion parameters and uses its transformer machine learning abilities to take that next word guessing and apply it to other things, like generating code from a natural language text query.
Microsoft invested its first billion into OpenAI in 2020, it exclusively licensed the GPT model and set about deploying AI at scale on Azure. And then it baked it into its client-facing products as an easy way for non-coder employees to begin creating automations and little apps to make their work easier.
Microsoft calls this platform Power, erm, Platform. And Azure customers using this AI infused cloud power are generating an average of 4.5 billion words a day for hundreds of apps in production use across multiple sectors.
When Microsoft South Africa gave me the opportunity to sit in on a roundtable discussion with Vahé Torossian, Corporate Vice President for Business Applications, at the end of last year, I jumped at the chance, but sat on this audio until there was a major shift in the AI landscape.
Vahé has since announced that he’ll be leaving Microsoft this year, but I’m am very happy that I got to nerd out with him about the transformative moment we’re in right now with AI, before it was cool.
There’s a symbiosis that can exist between people and automation, but the path towards human and AI cooperation is unclear right now.
Full disclosure: I love Microsoft services and my Microsoft 365 account is something I cherish that has helped me a ton in work and in my personal life.
I’m happy that the company is taking the lead in the next technology arms race and will be watching closely as more startups take advantage of these new abilities.
But that’s a story for another day.
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ep.9 | Mobile gamers are getting their chance.
If you believe the marketing and the popular youtubers, you’d think that high refresh rate displays on mobile devices are a transformative technology.
High framerates make the game play more fluidly and you see every movement. Details like this are important especially in a game where you need to time headshots.
But your data connection is equally important to ensure that your controller inputs are relayed in real time. External controllers are banned in international competitions, by the way.
Carry1st just did South African players a major solid and invested in local servers in Johannesburg which has more than halved the latency. I managed to get a server response time of 42 milliseconds on WiFi6 from a 100mbps Rain 5G connection.
Now Mzansi’s elite COD mobile players aren’t crippled by data connection to the game and that framerate advantage really comes into play.
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ep.8 | Portchie NFTs spread joy to digital lives
But artists like Jan Hendrik Viljoen, better known as Portchie, are bringing beauty to our second lives and making a little bank with Non-Fungible Tokens.
Artist Kevin McCoy claims that he was the first person to mint an artwork NFT. The pixelated, colour changing octagon called Quantum was minted on the Namecoin blockchain in May 2014.
Anil Dash developed the technical specification and the pair demonstrated the practical application at a Seven on Seven hackathon that connected technologists to artists.
The name this pioneering duo chose for their new creation was Monetised Graphics. It obviously didn’t stick, and they didn’t patent their idea. And then, like all things that started with the best intentions, the internet got hold of it.
Dash would later right an ode to his bastardised idea in the Atlantic.
“If you liked an artwork, would you pay more for it just because someone included its name in a spreadsheet? I probably wouldn’t. But once you leave aside the technical details of NFTs, putting artworks on the blockchain is like listing them in an auction catalog. It adds a measure of certainty about the work being considered.”
“By default, copies of a digital image or video are perfect replicas—indistinguishable from the original down to its bits and bytes. Being able to separate an artist’s initial creation from mere copies confers power, and in 2014 it was genuinely new.”
Cycling by the Riverside is built on Ethereum, a blockchain that allows artwork creation and ownership to be authenticated and transferred. The NFTs are represented by unique tokens stored on the network and act as a permanent, tamper-proof record of provenance and ownership.
Start your NFT journey today!
Visit OpenSea
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ep.7 | Quality is the casualty of the music streaming wars.
The 2019 version of this report put that weekly average at 18 hours.
Over that time period music streaming listenership increased by 51 percent and now constitutes 23 percent of all music consumed by humans.
Radio takes a mere 16 percent of the listening pie, but interestingly only 9 percent of music that people listen to is owned or, in other words, bought.
We are buying personal listening devices, though. This year headphone revenue in the US in up to 16.86 billion dollars. With an almost 3 percent annual growth predicted for the next five years.
There are many headphone and speaker brands that will sell their quality as being “the way the artist intended” but are absent when you go into the production studio. That’s why I spoke toke Alvin Le Roux, or LAYROO as he is known by his legion of fans, because he is an artist and producer.
The whirlwind of tech advancement from transistor radios – first on shelves in 1954 – audio cassettes – an engineering triumph from Philips in 1958, and immortalized by Nina Simone in 1966 – and the CD player released by Sony in 1982 will make your head spin. No wonder the boomers are so eager to jump on the next tech trend.
When Steve Jobs first held up the iPod in 2007 he saved the music industry. In one technology generation we went from a reality of physical ownership of actual discs or files to an idea that music can exist seamlessly across devices.
We gave up ownership for convenience, just like we offered up the headphone jack for the freedom of living untethered.
This isn’t the artist’s intention, but a by-product of a corporate machine. Artists like Lay Roo, thankfully, are still compelled to create.
Bits - Crypto stability could be disrupted | Microsoft Surface event
ep.6 | How tech is changing photography
Ian is one of the most accomplished photographers I know and not only because of his masters in photography that he achieved abroad, but rather the fact that he has been a photographer in an active war zone. Scratch that, you can’t officially call Ukraine a war zone yet.
We’re talking on the morning of the Made By Google event where the big G took the wraps off of the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro. The headline photography feature is this thing called Face Unblur where the AI engine inside the new Tensor 2 processor and Google’s own machine learning smarts will try its best to make any blurry picture in your Google Photos library sharper.
The camera system – including the Image Signal Processing pipeline – will also go in at the pixel level and upscale individual bits of image file to make zoomed photos clearer.
Apple does something similar with the iPhone semantic rendering and Deep Fusion, which used to only kick in during medium to low lighting conditions. As of the iPhone 14 Deep Fusion enters the fray far earlier in the pipeline to enhance textures and details.
They call this new pipeline the Photonic Engine
While we may seem a long way away from pinhole camera obscura type setups where there’s an artist tracing over the scene projected in a dark room, we kind of aren’t.
The artist is just Artificial Intelligence and these systems are being recomposed in near real time on the pixel level. What you see and what your smartphone captures are wildly different ideas of reality and our memories are now truly at the mercy of what the technology manufacturers decide is their particular style.
To truly understand photography you need to look at the word “photograph” or, literally, light – photo. drawing – graph.
It gets even trippier when you consider photographic terms like exposure also refers to the amount of time you expose the sensor or image to light.
Aperture is the literal lens opening.
Of course Leonardo Da Vinci was involved with some sketches of camera obscura with glass lenses integrated into the pinhole design, but astronomer Johannes Kepler claims the credit for inventing the word photograph in 1604.
Fast forward to 1827 and a chemical experiment results in View from a Window at Le Gras. That process took eight hours to create, which is still shorter than the time it took my parents to have some of my baby pictures developed at a chemist.
Crazy, right? Our species used to hand creative control over our memories to complete strangers.
Cameras have gotten really good and it seems like we’re on the cusp of a major technology leap. But for now the magic is happening in the processing and companies like Vivo and Oppo are building extra bits of silicon to do the photographic heavy lifting. But that’s a story for another day.
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Additional music by DSTechnician
Bits - Digital Gold is back! | Xiaomi 12T family | iPhone 14 Plus reviews
ep.5 | How big tech is trying to fix recycling
You see, plastic manufacturing is actually a bit of a scam.
On 18 July 2017 the sovereign nation of the People’s Republic of China filed a notification of technical barriers to trade with the World Trade Organisation.
This is a routine process and the WTO gets dozens of these a week.
No stress, right?
Wrong.
Because the items listed under the standardized codes were all targeted at things that have polymer in its name. Namely, plastics.
Pretty much all plastics cannot be sent to china for recycling.
And ever since then the world has been in an arms race to make plastic recycling profitable.
The uncomfortable truth of plastic recycling is that new plastic products cannot be made only out recycled plastic.
The other truth is that most plastic is not easily recyclable.
You know that triangle arrows with a number inside? That’s not a recycling sign, it’s a polymer ID code.
South Africa only has the technical capacity to recycle three of the seven polymers within our borders.
Well, to be fair we can process the others, but it gets tricky.
The codes you should look out for as perfect recycling targets are one, two and four.
One (PET) is pretty much all detergent bottles, juice bottles and those blue plastic water bottles.
Two (PE-HD) covers milk and shampoo bottles, almost all plastic bottle tops, and all your household container – off brand Tupperware stuff. And plastic crates.
Four (PE-LD) is all your packaging bags like milk sachets, bread packets, the plastic covering the 18 pack of toilet paper and the frozen vegetable bags – this is the main stock that our bin bags get made out of.
The tech industry, however, is targeting something called ocean bound plastics.
Samsung gets even more specific and uses fishing nets, for instance.
HP sources its recycled plastic stock from an organization called The Plastic Bank. They’re based in Port Au Prince in Haiti, a nation that didn’t have a functional waste disposal system until a couple of years ago and the waste was just dumped wherever.
These guys are fighting crushing poverty and this crazy rubbish problem at the same time.
A wrinkle in the grand plan of plastic recycling is that in Haiti the cost of recycled plastic goes down in lock step with the cost of natural gas.
In other countries there’s a similar problem where its just easier and cheaper to keep making virgin plastic from oil – it’s a biproduct of fuel refining after all.
Samsung partners with a number of smaller organisations across the Indian ocean.
But back to China.
The about turn in its recycling stance is all about the drag processing the world’s plastic waste was having on the healthcare system.
Even when countries sort the waste and then ship it, the energy intensive recycling process is also terrible for the environment and overall human safety.
So as it stands only about 10 percent of our plastic that we use actually gets recycled. It’s a bummer and a major economic waste, but it is better than nothing. So kudos to Samsung and HP for leading in respective industries.
You know what would be great, though? If these technology giants started making fewer products more thoughtfully. Devices crafted out of more premium materials that are easily recycled numerous times – think metal and glass – and last a really long time.
But that’s a story for another day
Bits - BTC can’t hold $20k | Amazon product announcements
ep.4 | What's a Binance?
We didn't expect him to have an answer on the second question, but he did. And it's going to blow the roof off of crypto use on the continent.
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Unencrypted Bits - Interest rates affecting crypto market | Logitech takes on gaming phones
ep.3 | How Huawei is making its comeback
We will never see the HarmonyOS brand in South Africa, but that doesn’t mean we won’t benefit from the interconnected ecosystem advantages that it brings. And this is how Huawei is mounting its comeback.
Unencrypted is brought to you by www.addvirtt.com
Akhram Mohamed’s quotes come courtesy of the Reframed podcast, you can listen to me ranting about supply chains over there open.spotify.com/episode/03dKzZXkS8qPqHKcCaP0l0?si=D5jA_2EARUyfyoyvv559wA
Unencrypted Bits - Ethereum Merge | Binance dominance | GoPro Hero 11 Black
Unencrypted Bits- This week in crypto | iPhone 14 announcement
ep.2 | How Samsung is jumping the Bluetooth competition
This week Gavin Dudley, editor of TECH magazine, joins Unencrypted to unpack and demystify Bluetooth audio.
Unencrypted is brought to you by www.addvirtt.com
And recorded at www.atkarena.com
Unencrypted ep. 1 | HP and the supply chain crisis
Lindsey Schutters, thedecryptr.com editor reporting from the HP Amplify Executive Conference 2022, Dubai.
How is the second biggest PC manufacturer in the world navigating the supply chain crisis? Listen to Chief Supply Chain Officer Ernest Nicholas chart the company's course forward.
This episode is brought to you by Virtual | sports | addvirtt
OVRCLKD Grand Finale.
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OVRCLKD Interview: TCL TVs come to SA
OVRCKLD 151: Android 12 arrives in SA (for S21 users | Engen 1App | Huawei licenses hardware
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OVRCLKD 150: How to survive loadshedding | 5G remains a myth
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OVRCLKD 149: TCL TVs come to SA! | Down with the metaverse | Showmax rules streaming
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OVRCLKD 148: Unpacking the Takealot monopoly | Facebook renames | Love for De Ruyter is down
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OVRCLKD 147: What makes the new MacBooks Pro special? | Rain is anti competition
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OVRCLKD Interview: Windows 11
OVRCLKD 146: Honor gets Google services | Garmin Venu 2 | Poco comes to SA!
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OVRCLKD 145' Windows 11 | Fitbit Charge 5 | the best Internet service providers!
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OVRCLKD 144: Telkom data leak | How to build your home network | More De Ruyter love
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OVRCLKD Interview: Akhram Mohamed CTO - Huawei South Africa
OVRCLKD 143: MultiChoice has a new DStv pricing model | Eskom | Huawei
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OVRCLKD 142: iPhone 13 | Sonos Beam (Gen 2) | Who won in the Apple v Epic trial | On air fight!
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OVRCLKD 141: How to buy a laptop | Huawei Nova 8 impressions | Mediatek gets good!
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OVRCLKD 140: Icasa is killing us | MultiChoice in Nigerian trouble | How to buy a tablet
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OVRCLKD 139: Fitbit Charge 5 | How to buy a smartphone
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OVRCLKD 138: Honor is back! | Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 and Z Flip 3 | You should listen to Joox
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OVRCLKD 137: Medupi and Eskom | Samsung losing ground in Africa | Troll goes to jail
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OVRCLKD Interview: Nicola Nell, Xiaomi South Africa
OVRCLKD 136: Lucas Films listened! | Apple earnings | Cloud computing | Huawei P50
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OVRCLKD 135: Pegasus! | Nokia G10 | Xiaomi comes to SA! | South Africa's biggest Internet users!
OVRCLKD 134: You need to know about Astrofica | Joker malware | Samsung and LG respond to KZN riots
OVRCLKD 133: South Africa's best ISPs | Google Workspace woes | What's up with Multichoice
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OVRCLKD 132: Live on Greenroom! | Microsoft wants you to buy a new PC | Samsung x Google smartwatch
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OVRCLKD 131: China vs Bitcoin | Dstv survives | 5G gets real | Spotify Greenroom
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OVRCLKD 130: Dolby Atmos on Android | Hands-on with Sony WF-1000XM4 | Leica Leitz
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Recorded at Café Nouveau, Pinelands
Produced by Lindsey Schutters
Music by Lindsey Schutters
OVRCLKD 129: WWDC wrap | Sony WF-1000XM4 | Huawei falls out of global top 5!
Gavin's main hustle is here:
techmagazine.co.za/
And you can also find us here:
thatopinionguy.co.za
global.techradar.com/en-za
Follow Gavin at facebook.com/TechMagazineZA/
Find Lindsey at twitter.com/SharpSchutters.
Email us at overclocked@gmail.com
Recorded at Café Nouveau, Pinelands
Produced by Lindsey Schutters
Music by Lindsey Schutters
OVRCLKD 128: HarmonyOS | Akhram Mohamed CTO Huawei South Africa | AMD x Samsung | Clubhouse invites!
Gavin's main hustle is here:
techmagazine.co.za/
And you can also find us here:
thatopinionguy.co.za
global.techradar.com/en-za
Follow Gavin at facebook.com/TechMagazineZA/
Find Lindsey at twitter.com/SharpSchutters.
Email us at overclocked@gmail.com
Recorded via Microsoft Teams
Produced by Lindsey Schutters
Music by Lindsey Schutters