BLACK #INVENTS:::: Saheed Awopeju, Inventor of the INYE-1, & 2, tablet computers designed for the African market.
I’m
a Nigerian, I invented the INYE series tablet. This machine’s key selling point
is its price-$350 opposed to around $700 for an iPad.
Nigeria’s Saheed Adepoju is a young man with big
dreams. He is the inventor of the Inye, a tablet computer designed for the
African market.
According
to the 29-year-old entrepreneur, his machine’s key selling point is its price –
$350 (£225) opposed to around $700 for an iPad.
He believes that, because of this, there is a big market
for it in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa, particularly amongst students.
He
is also hoping to sell his tablet – which runs on the Google Android operating
system – to the Nigerian government and plans to have at least one computer in
each local government area.
“The Inye is a mobile internet device. It gives you
access to the internet; it allows you to play media files and watch movies.
What we have is an 8-inch device, a device that is half-way between a laptop
and a mobile phone,” he told the BBC’s series African Dream.
“You have the standard software applications that
come pre-installed and then you have the ones that we are working with various
local developers to bundle on,” he added.
Among those local apps there is one designed to
raise awareness about HIV and others related to water and sanitation.
“We work with local developers that have expertise
in particular areas so that we don’t end up doing so much work and we just have
a collaborative way of doing things together,” he said.
‘Word
of mouth’
Mr Adepoju has a background in software development
and is a Sun-certified Java programmer.
After doing a first degree in maths and computer
science in Nigeria, he completed another one in advanced computing by research
at Bournemouth University, in the United Kingdom.
Upon graduation in 2009, he returned to his home
country and started working for a consulting firm.
“Within eight months I got fired, primarily because
of differences in approach to doing business. In the middle of all this, the
Apple iPad launched, back in January of 2010, which inspired us to actually
look to build such [a] product within the African marketplace,” the
entrepreneur told the BBC Africa’s Chris Ewokor.
He said that, with that goal in mind, he borrowed
money from friends and family, raising a total of about $60,000.
According to him, all of that went on the devices
and the logistics – there was no budget for marketing, so early advertising was
“word of mouth” on social media.
The first 100 units of the Inye, which means One in
Nigeria’s Igala language, were built in China and, after receiving feedback
from its users, a second version was launched in May 2011.
Encipher Group, the company he cofounded with web
developer Anibe Agamah, also offers customised IT services and products,
including cloud computing, which are mostly based on open technology to keep
costs down.
Raising
capital
According to Mr Adepoju, the company and the apps it
develops are focused on preserving local culture through technology and making
products which are specific to the local market.
Another product that the firm has been working on is
Encipher TV, a box where people can watch African television, plays and films.
However, he says that it has not been easy to raise
capital in order to develop the business faster.
“Here
venture capital (VC) is still in its infancy and most VC firms wound want to
invest in tried and trusted companies that have gained some form of traction,”
he said.
“We face the challenge of getting people to listen
to the various propositions. We’ve been to a number of private investors and
also to the government,” he explained.
Not surprisingly, his immediate plan is to “try and
raise capital from whatever sources we can get – locally, internationally or
privately – and to try and still to push the brand forward as much as we can”.
Will his tablet computer succeed in such a
competitive environment? Only time will tell but Mr Adepoju and his colleagues
are adamant that it will, not only in Nigeria but also in other African markets.
BBC NEWS




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