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continuing emphasis in Nigeria on local manufacture
of computers (whatever that means) almost blinds us
to the contemporary reality that the significant component
of the total cost of ownership of an IT solution lies
in the software not the hardware. Perhaps as a consequence,
we have taken so long to bring to bear the force of
our industry's lobby behind the articulation of an IT
policy.
This is the Communication Age, not the Industrial Age,
or even the Information Age. The country that controls
communication and information and is able to gather
it better and faster will become the super power of
the 21st century. We must adopt the paradigm that to
be educated is to be able to read, write, and use a
computer. We need to instill in the students that a
Bachelors degree is no longer enough. A Master's degree
is not enough either.
We must teach them that their future will be based on
a lifelong learning experience.
We must recognize that the control over the means of
production is no longer exclusively in the hands of
a few and motivate our students to believe that they
can compete internationally. Software development offers
the fastest stairway to actualization in this brave
new world and we must equip as many as we can to become
true knowledge workers with skills capable of attracting
globally benchmarked compensation plans.
In less than ten years, the local software industry
can grow from a two million-dollar industry today to
potentially a US $10 billion industry. Indeed, the software
sub-sector offers a chance for a quantum leap by achieving
the following five significant applications to national
growth and development:
-As an instrument for transforming existing data and
information structures into standardized databases for
efficient productivity, transparency and accountability.
-As a solid foundation and engine of economic activity
and revenue generation on its own.
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Our national
leaders, key policy advisers, and educators must understand
clearly that the new economic order will be driven primarily
by information technology. To participate fully in this
economy, we need first to understand its dynamics and
then to consciously plan and implement policies that
create the capacity to compete.
Undoubtedly, for establishing and sustaining software
exports to the emerging African markets, a vibrant domestic
market is required. Market forces alone is incapable
of accelerating the development of informatics knowledge
technology due to its fast pace government must therefore,
bring forth the political will to shore-up IT development.
Government is the catalyst. It is time to look at the
overwhelming benefits of: e-business, e-education, e-governance
and the Internet. Computers and Internet connectivity
in every school and colleges throughout the country
within the next five years is feasible and should be
implemented.
We must prepare now to begin the shift from mass consumption
to mass creativity and production - applying and using
information knowledge technology.
To do this, we must re-engineer the entire educational
system and empower the youths with IT Tools and facilities.
We must also start now to consciously prepare for the
production of a minimum of 300,000 IT-related Engineering
students annually from our universities. The core attention
should be placed in Mathematics, English and Statistics.
Needless to state that R&D is a must-have.
All the above will amount to a pipe dream, if the accelerated
establishment of IT Knowledge and Software Parks with
testing facilities is not established as a matter of
top urgency. A Digital Research Village is urgently
needed. Special grants should be given to IT Companies
to re-locate their operational sites or create new branches
within the vicinity of our universities this is absolutely
necessary, if we must bridge the gap of theory-only
student material.
Establishment of IT Software parks and production centers
nationwide should be encouraged as a matter of policy.
And indeed, it is imperative that a National Centre
for the study of Digital Sciences and future Societies
be put in place if we must master the 21st century knowledge
society dynamics and earn from its benefits embedded
in the global revenue basket.
To succeed, we must act as of yesterday…today
may be too late! Who will act? First is the number one
citizen of the Federal republic, who delivers the political
will to master the emerging storm. Others are core professionals
in organizations- big or small. They include, but not
limited to:
Chief Information Officer (CIO),Chief Compliance Officer
(CCO),Chief Security Officer (CSO),VP Strategy and Architecture,
Director e-Commerce, Database Administrator, Data Security,
Administrator , Manager Data Security, Manager Database,
Manager Disaster Recovery, Manager Disaster Recovery
and Business Continuity, Manager Facilities and Equipment
, Manager Media Library Support.
Others are Manager Network and Computing Services, Manager
Network Services, Manager Site Management, Manager Training
and Documentation, Manager Voice and Data Communication,
Manager Wireless Systems, Capacity Planning Supervisor;
Disaster Recovery Coordinator, Disaster Recovery - Special
Projects Supervisor, Network Security Analyst, System
Administrator Unix, System Administrator Windows.
Future assignments will include, finding out the scope
of works and job responsibilities of all the above players
to understand the enormity of the challenges before
a nation which aspires to survive in the knowledge society.
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