Praekelt
Foundation in partnership with Omidyar Network, Google and ISlabs has created Johannesburg’s
first tech incubator, JoziHub, which will foster entrepreneurship and
innovation.
Jozihub aim to transform the
technology industry by connecting potential entrepreneurs and developers with
the critical resources they need. It
intends to be the facilitator for interactions and collaborations among various
stakeholders such as research, private sector and public institutions,
providing a dynamic and far-reaching eco-system for entrepreneurs to drive
their initiatives.
Emphasis
is placed on the development of Internet, social media and mobile technologies
that address the country’s most pressing social challenges.
There
will be various content streams that will focus on particular market segments;
Entrepreneurship; Developers; Health; Arts; Education; Environment &
Sustainability; Women in Tech; and Government and Transparency.
“Technology hubs can play a pivotal role in
fostering the emergence of a new generation of African tech entrepreneurs,”
says Gustav Praekelt, founder of the Praekelt Foundation.
“By
providing the training, support, facilities and networks required to enable
entrepreneurs to turn their ideas into sustainable businesses, incubators such
as JoziHub can make an immediate and lasting impact on local innovation and
development.”
Praekelt
says Johannesburg has a vibrant
community of innovators and world class thinkers whose ideas can transform the
country, and indeed the African continent.
“At JoziHub, we are seeking to harness this
energy and allow its vast potential to be realised,” he said.
Jozihub has joined the clique of
those rocking African innovation space such as Kenya’s iHub, Nigeria’s ccHub and
Uganda’s Hive Colab. The hub plans to apply to join AfriLabs, a
networking organisation that supports the growth of communities around African
technology hubs.
Omidyar
Network Partner Stephen King posits that the hub will give the city’s entrepreneurs a
quicker path to innovation.
“For
Johannesburg tech entrepreneurs, today the world just became smaller and the path
to innovation shorter,” he said.
King
added that Omidyar’s experience in Silicon Valley, as well as its support of
technology hubs in Nairobi and Lagos, demonstrates the vital role JoziHub will
play as an open, living lab where collaboration among social entrepreneurs and
technologists will spark new ideas, nurture innovation and create socially
minded ventures.
Google,
one of JoziHub’s core funding partners, is committed to helping the tech
start-up ecosystem grow across Africa, as part of their efforts to create an
accessible, relevant and sustainable internet ecosystem across the continent.
Google's goal is to enable tech hubs like
JoziHub by providing them with funding, technical content, business tools, and
infrastructure upgrades so that the hubs can support developers and start-ups.
During
JoziHub’s 3 month launch period, it will be free for entrepreneurs to join and
utilise the JoziHub. As demand grows, certain services such as the shared
space, hotdesks, access to mentors and events will be charged for accordingly,Gadget reported.
Meanwhile,
JoziHub will regularly host events that bring together the continent’s leading
thinkers and agents of change within each of these sectors.
The
first event will be the TED2013 Live Stream on February 27th, 2012.
Its happening.... this is in addition to mLab in Pretoria and Umbono in Cape Town. With Wiki Start up in Tunisia and FLat6Labs in Egypt to Bongo Hive in Zambia, and IceAddis in Ethiopia and HiveColab in Uganda to CCHub in Nigeria and JokkoLabs in Senegal, there are now over 30 tech & innovation Hubs on the continent since the first tech and innovation hub, iHub, opened in Nairobi, Kenya.
ReplyDeleteThese are not just tech Hubs, it is a tech movement. They are not just innovation and incubation centers, it is digital development.
To speed up this tech race and lay foundation for the coming ICT revolution , governments across the region have to invest and encourage investments in broadband infrastructures. Internet penetration is still very low in the region, in Ethiopia, it is about 1%.