In a world that has gone Virtual, Africa and Africans albeit late to the
party are making sure they are not left out. Innovative Africans are
everyday developing applications that can help improve the life of the
increasing tech savvy Africans.
Some of the Apps that caught our fancy are,
1. Find-a-med
– Developed in Nigeria, Emeka Onyekwe’s Find-a-med allows its users
find the closest medical centres to them with complete turn by turn
directions. It also allows them store and track their basic health
information, search based on proximity and filter through specific
healthcare providers; pharmacies, eye care centres, dental clinics and
the like and, write reviews about any centre they have visited, helping
other users identify highly rated health centres in their areas. The app
is available on the IOS and Android plaforms at no cost.
2. M-farm – Founded in 2010 by a Kenyan Computer scientist,
Jamila Abass after she read up on the ways Kenyan farmers are being
cheated by middle men and buyers because of their ignorance on market
prices. M-farm is available as a mobile app for internet enabled phones
and via text, cutting away the cheating middlemen, and allowing buyers
purchase produce from farmers who are aware of the worth directly. Over
time because the company discovered that many small scale farmers don’t
make enough sales as most buyers purchase in large scale, they developed
a platform that allows farmers drop off the little produce when buyers
show up and are being paid in mfarm credits that can be cashed or
transferred to their bank accounts directly. Mfarm farmers have
testified to have doubled their sales with the help of the application
3. Kidsfirstaid – An idea that was born in Capetown, South-Africa
by Steve Morris and Paul le Roux. The application provides people and
parents with quality first aid tips anywhere and anytime they need it,
from step-by-step instructions on how to administer first aid, a voice
guided walk-through for CPR, provision of the nearest health care
centres with the help of the GPS and also the South-African emergency
numbers that can be called directly from the app, this is definitely a
life saver.
4. Okadabooks – with over 71,000 users signed up on this
platform, Founder Okechukwu Ofilli’s aim, to improve the writing and
reading culture of Nigerians, has sure been achieved to an extent. The
app provides solutions to the publishing problems faced by African
authors as well as piracy, authors can now publish their books on the
application and sell for a set price, guaranteeing them returns on each
purchase. It also provides readers with Over 10,000 African books and
classics.
https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=2678001719685774093#editor/target=post;5. Afrinolly – the innovation behind Afrinolly that earned it the
$25,000 cash prize for the Entertainment category of the 2011 Google
Android Developers Challenge – Sub-Saharan Africa has also earned it
over 4 million downloads in 2015. Founded in Nigeria by Fans Connect
Online, a digital marketing agency headed by Chike Maduegbuna, it
enables users watch African movie trailers, music videos, online comedy,
celebrity gist and gossip, the latest entertainment news and other
content. Afrinolly is available on virtually all internet connected
platforms.
6. M-Pedigree – Moving from Ghana to over 12 countries including
India and Bangladesh, Bright Simons’ M-pedigree was founded with the
sole purpose of fighting counterfeit drugs in the market. Manufacturers
can now label their products using m-pedigree software’s, which can be
verified by final consumers when they purchase by texting the random
code that appears under a scratch to a toll free number.
7. IrokoTv – Although Headquartered in London, what has been
dubbed The Netflix of Africa allows its users stream paid for Nigeria’s
Nollywood movies – the world’s third largest movie producing industry.
An idea that came when Founder Jason Njoku found it hard getting
Nollywood movies for his mother outside the Country, IrokoTv has so far
raised over $25million in investment.
8. Wumdrop – Founded in 2014 when founders, Simon Hartley and Roy
Mathieu Borole were looking for a reliable and affordable Courier
service for their diaper delivering company. The South-African Uber of
delivery uses freelance drivers, who take 70% of the delivery charge, to
deliver products to buyers in no time. It’s available on smartphones
for both drivers and buyers, allowing buyers pick up the closest drivers
to them for speed.
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