Powerful Black Minds - Beyond Entertainment

EdJo

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Meet Lawrence Okettayot:

taltt4.jpg


The student trying to solve the food waste crisis

Lawrence Okettayot is on a road trip across Uganda.

He's spreading the word about a device he's created which could be a solution to Africa's food waste crisis.

Food wasted every year in the continent could feed up to 300 million people, according to the United Nations. In just Uganda alone, up to 40% of fruit and vegetables end up being discarded.

But Lawrence, a 23-year old engineering student, hopes that his invention, the Sparky Dryer, will change everything.

The device is a dehydrator running on garden waste that dries fruit and vegetables quickly, making them last for months instead of days.

It looks like a small fridge and uses organic waste instead of electricity - to which few farmers in Uganda and elsewhere in Africa have regular access.

Rotting food
"Much of what's sold in markets is wasted because farmers cannot store the food. So they have to return home and pick fresh fruit and vegetables to sell the next day.

"During the dry season very little grows here so people go hungry," says Lawrence, while walking in the buzzing market in the northern regional capital of Kitgum, past small stalls and piles of rotting food.

The starting price is $80 (£60). And each unit can dehydrate 10kg of mangoes in just two hours.

It has a small chamber where a gas fire is fixed, heating up a separate drying chamber above where the sliced produce is stacked in shelves.

It also has a catalytic converter which prevents harmful gases from being released during the drying process.

The alternatives to the Sparky Dryer are electric-powered dehydrators but they are too expensive, while traditional drying methods - solar dryers or open sun drying - do not work well during the rainy season and are much slower.

Yet despite its potential, Lawrence has sold very few units - seven in all. So does his invention actually work?

Three hours away by road from Kitgum, lives Joe Okettayot, Lawrence's uncle, one of the few farmers who has brought a dryer.

Lawrence was inspired to come up with his idea after his uncle told him he was considering leaving farming.

"We used to throw away most of what we grew," says Joe.

"Now we can dry mangoes and other fruit even when it rains, so we don't waste anything anymore.

"We sell dehydrated products during the dry season for four times more money than the fresh produce," Joe adds while pointing to a brick building sitting in the middle of the farm which he built thanks to this extra income.

Uganda's government admits it has a massive food waste problem, but has not yet found solutions.

"We only have two processing facilities in Uganda," says James Tumwine from the Ministry of Agriculture.

"The government doesn't do business and private investors just aren't aware of the huge market potential here," he says.

Uganda plans to create food processing hubs for specific products in different regions, but progress is too slow.

Back in Kitgum, Lawrence is optimistic about the future and he wants to scale up his invention to reach parts of the world.


This BBC series was produced with funding from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The student trying to solve the food waste crisis


 

Claudex

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Meet Lawrence Okettayot:

taltt4.jpg


The student trying to solve the food waste crisis

Lawrence Okettayot is on a road trip across Uganda.

He's spreading the word about a device he's created which could be a solution to Africa's food waste crisis.

Food wasted every year in the continent could feed up to 300 million people, according to the United Nations. In just Uganda alone, up to 40% of fruit and vegetables end up being discarded.

But Lawrence, a 23-year old engineering student, hopes that his invention, the Sparky Dryer, will change everything.

The device is a dehydrator running on garden waste that dries fruit and vegetables quickly, making them last for months instead of days.

It looks like a small fridge and uses organic waste instead of electricity - to which few farmers in Uganda and elsewhere in Africa have regular access.

Rotting food
"Much of what's sold in markets is wasted because farmers cannot store the food. So they have to return home and pick fresh fruit and vegetables to sell the next day.

"During the dry season very little grows here so people go hungry," says Lawrence, while walking in the buzzing market in the northern regional capital of Kitgum, past small stalls and piles of rotting food.

The starting price is $80 (£60). And each unit can dehydrate 10kg of mangoes in just two hours.

It has a small chamber where a gas fire is fixed, heating up a separate drying chamber above where the sliced produce is stacked in shelves.

It also has a catalytic converter which prevents harmful gases from being released during the drying process.

The alternatives to the Sparky Dryer are electric-powered dehydrators but they are too expensive, while traditional drying methods - solar dryers or open sun drying - do not work well during the rainy season and are much slower.

Yet despite its potential, Lawrence has sold very few units - seven in all. So does his invention actually work?

Three hours away by road from Kitgum, lives Joe Okettayot, Lawrence's uncle, one of the few farmers who has brought a dryer.

Lawrence was inspired to come up with his idea after his uncle told him he was considering leaving farming.

"We used to throw away most of what we grew," says Joe.

"Now we can dry mangoes and other fruit even when it rains, so we don't waste anything anymore.

"We sell dehydrated products during the dry season for four times more money than the fresh produce," Joe adds while pointing to a brick building sitting in the middle of the farm which he built thanks to this extra income.

Uganda's government admits it has a massive food waste problem, but has not yet found solutions.

"We only have two processing facilities in Uganda," says James Tumwine from the Ministry of Agriculture.

"The government doesn't do business and private investors just aren't aware of the huge market potential here," he says.

Uganda plans to create food processing hubs for specific products in different regions, but progress is too slow.

Back in Kitgum, Lawrence is optimistic about the future and he wants to scale up his invention to reach parts of the world.


This BBC series was produced with funding from Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The student trying to solve the food waste crisis



Breh, I sent it to one of the current economic big heads in our country I know, in the agricultural sect. Let's hope it means something. :manny:
 

EdJo

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Breh, I sent it to one of the current economic big heads in our country I know, in the agricultural sect. Let's hope it means something. :manny:

:russ: :russ:You still have faith in those old dudes? Come on Claud!!!! We are the future, while they corrupted the future of our nation.
 

Claudex

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:russ: :russ:You still have faith in those old dudes? Come on Claud!!!! We are the future, while they corrupted the future of our nation.
I don't but I still got ways to go before I can call the shots. :snoop: Or maybe Zenu going to temp. prison got me a bit on the emotional side. :francis:

Either way I feel you, these old dudes are all corrupt.
 

EdJo

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Once Homeless, This Black Entrepreneur Now Owns a $20 Million Trucking Company

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34-year old Amari Ruff had a rough start growing up. As a teenager, he had to balance studies and work to help his mother make ends meet while moving between homeless shelters. But now, he owns a multi-million dollar trucking company called Sudu that connects underserved entrepreneurs to giant companies such as Walmart and UPS.

Humble beginnings

At the age of 16, his military father left his mother to raise him and his two siblings. They lived in homeless shelters, and Amari at one point, had to commute over four hours a day to continue attending high school while also working.

He eventually landed a job with a company where he negotiated significant enterprise contracts. He helped the business grow to annual revenues of $4.5 million, but was let go from a higher rank that he was promised. He said he didn't expect it and it was really a low time in his life, but this inspired him to become a successful entrepreneur.

Starting at the bottom

Amari decided to started a telecommunications company in 2010 with just $300 and a 1990 Ford Ranger. However, before long, he managed to grow it to almost 200 trucks and to 5 U.S. locations. While at it, he also realized that there were bigger opportunities to create a tech company to connect underserved entrepreneurs (minorities, women, and veterans) with larger corporations. He then built his own business to fill the void.

In 2015, he launched Sudu, an online marketplace that leverages technology to connect small and medium-sized trucking companies (which make up 90% or the trucking market) to major corporations that ship goods. He chose the name Sudu, which is a Chinese word that means speed and tempo, because he says he believes it speaks well to the speed and efficiency they provide the industry through their technology which is considered as the "Uber" for truckers.

The recognition finally came

Because of his genius, Amari became in demand to speak at international tech and entrepreneurial conferences. He was invited to address the Nelson Mandela Fellows Panel and the Build Your Own Brand conference and retreat.

He also started winning major awards such as the 2016 NMTA Minority Business of the Year, the 2017 Georgia Trend Magazine Trendsetter, and the 2018 Atlanta Business Chronicle InnoVenture Award. He has even been included in the Venture Atlanta Top 10 Startups to Watch list.

Within just three years, his company, Sudu, which is based in Atlanta, Georgia, grew to having more than 300,000 trucking companies within its network, especially minority, women, and veteran-owned trucking companies. He has also been able to cut deals with large corporations such as Walmart, P&G, Delta Airlines, Anheuser-Busch, Georgia Pacific, and UPS.

For more information about Amari Ruff and his company, Sudu, visit www.sudu.io or follow the company on Twitter at @TeamSudu

Once Homeless, This Black Entrepreneur Now Owns a $20 Million Trucking Company
 

EdJo

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At just 21, Iddris Sandu is the tech genius behind Uber, Instagram and Snapchat

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When Iddris Sandu was in high school, he developed a mobile software that would later gain the attention of former U.S. president Barack Obama and land him at the White House, where he received the honorary presidential scholar award.

He was only 16 years old. Now 21, the Los Angeles-based young man is the unconventional tech guru who has accomplished many incredible feats, including being responsible for algorithms that have made Uber, Instagram and Snapchat what they are today.

The software engineer considers himself a “cultural architect” and said he aims to “level the playing field” between Silicon Valley and young communities of colour.

Born and raised in Harbor City, California with parents from Ghana, Sandu would never forget a harrowing experience he had when he was eight – his father had wanted to take him on a trip to Ghana.

“But on the fourth day of the trip, he abandoned me in this village, took my passport and came back to the States,” Sandu told Oxford University’s Music and Style Magzine, adding that he was abandoned for almost nine months before getting into contact with an NGO which helped him travel back home.

He got back to the U.S. when the first-ever iPhone was unveiled, and this started his journey into the tech world.

“I just got super inspired. I thought – this device is going to change the world. The reason why the iPhone was so important was because it was the first time when regular consumers could develop for other regular consumers. Before, you really had to work at a tech company for multiple years to be able to offer any sort of input or to create an app. But Apple made it so mainstream. I knew it was the future,” he said.

Just 10 years old then, Sandu started learning programming on his own for the next two years at a public library and this was where he got spotted by a designer from Google, who offered him an internship opportunity at the company’s headquarters.

At age 13, he got his first experience with programming and worked on many projects such as the initial Google blogger, Google Plus, among others.

Yet, Sandu was determined to affect change, hence, at the age of 15, he designed an app for his high school that gave students turn by turn directions to navigate their classrooms.

Being the only school in California that had an app made by a student, Sandu received wide acclaim that would later afford him a meeting with former President Obama.

During that same period, Sandu wrote an algorithm that he would go on to sell to Instagram and by the age of 18, he was already consulting for Snapchat before landing at Uber, where he created a software (Autonomous Collision Detection Interface) for its self-driving cars.

With the passion to bridge the gap between the informed and uninformed, and to inculcate into young people like him the need for invention and creativity, he left major tech companies to bring that change.

“Information is one of the highest forms of class. And that is what keeps people divided. You should be able to think on a higher level, instead of being strictly consumers. And people of colour in particular are more likely to be consumers than creators. It’s really hard to get out of poverty or to change the structure of economic power if you’re always going to be a consumer rather than creating. Shifting that narrative is what I’ve been trying to do. And thus far, it’s worked, it’s successful.”

From encouraging the study of STEM subjects in schools and at higher levels, Sandu, in 2017, met rapper Nipsey Hussle at local Starbucks, and in three weeks, they had transformed an abandoned storefront in Los Angeles into the Marathon Clothing Store.

The smart store offers exclusive music and other content to customers who have downloaded an app, said The New York Times.

The store leveraged Iddris’ tech and design background and Nipsey’s cultural influences, sparking the interests of many journalists as well as hip hop and cultural icons like Russell Westbrook, Vegas Jones of Roc Nation, among others.

In an interview with the CNBC, Sandu said the store has helped him bridge the gap between culture and technology, and would love others to do same.

“We are living in the digital revolution,” he said. Although “we are all constantly exposing ourselves to content in real-time.”

“We need to address the largest issues affecting communities and build infrastructure on that,” Sandu said.

The tech wizard has since partnered with Kanye West and Jaden Smith on some future businesses, clothing lines and disaster relief projects that are set to launch in 2019, according to CNBC.

Having created his own music, putting together the sonics and instrumentals in just 3 days to form a full album, the creative technologist is working on a book about recent initiators, including Kanye West; Robi Reed, a casting director; and Edward Enninful, the editor of British Vogue.

With the drive to use all his networks to empower young people in America to make a positive impact in their communities, the unconventional tech genius is already on his way to become a leader for the next generation of influencers and entrepreneurs.



At just 21, Iddris Sandu is the tech genius behind Uber, Instagram and Snapchat - Face2Face Africa

Bonus: Iddris Sandu: Meet the 21-year-old tech whiz who's coded for Instagram and Snapchat - CNN
 

EdJo

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Thumbi Ndung'u

"Thumbi Ndung'u is a Kenyan-born HIV/AIDS researcher. He heads the HIV Pathogenesis Programme at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, a province of South Africa. In 2012 Ndung'u was awarded the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's International Early Career Scientist award. Ndung'u is the first scientist to clone HIV subtype C. Ndung'u holds a Ph.D. from the Harvard School of Public Health. As a graduate student at Harvard, Ndung'u worked with Max Essex at Harvard's AIDS Initiative. Ndung'u is Professor and Victor Daitz Chair in HIV/TB Research at the University of KwaZulu-Natal[1] and is a Max Planck Investigator at the KwaZulu-Natal Research Institute for Tuberculosis and HIV."

Thumbi Ndung'u - Wikipedia


Looking into the vortex

Top scientist trains sights on getting HIV vaccine, cure
 

EdJo

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