In the middle of October the world ground to a halt. No, not quite, but to millions of BlackBerry users it seemed like it. For several days an outage caused users throughout Africa, the Middle East, Europe and South America to lose access to email and web-browsing facilities. BlackBerry’s popular BBM service was also unavailable. Research in Motion (RIM), the makers of the phone, attributed the problem to core and back-up switch failures.
It was another very public stumble for the Canadian company, once the world leader in smartphones. RIM has gone out of its way to apologise and compensate BlackBerry owners (particularly with free apps), but the crash was something it could ill afford – its stock has been steadily declining since reaching a high of almost CAN$150 in 2008 to around CAN$20 now, reflecting the pressure it is under by Apple’s iPhone and the other mobile manufacturers using Google’s Android operating system.

The use of smartphones has exploded across Africa and along with it the mobile data market. Analysts are forecasting spectacular growth for mobile broadband over the next few years across the continent with some estimates predicting the numbers of subscribers could grow from 12 million in 2010 to 265 million by 2015. Regulatory changes and more competition are helping drive a drop in price too, giving African consumers the chance to enjoy enhanced services. Our report on page 30 details the good news.
Staying on the smart subject, the article on page 40 investigates how African governments are utilising smartcard technology in a host of applications. ‘Thanks to smartcard technology official documents such as e-passports, e-IDs, e-driver’s licences and e-healthcare cards reach a new level of security,’ is the way one expert puts it.
We have the internet (yet again) to thank for rapid developments in an area dear to any businessperson’s heart – billing. Electronic billing has been around for a while in developed countries, but a range of issues has prevented its widespread application on the continent. That’s changing and the feature on page 46 has all the particulars.
Clouds in Africa usually conjure up a thunderstorm but not the one looming now. Cloud computing is one of those terms that has been bandied about for some time. In theory it should be ideal for Africa, with its less-than-perfect infrastructure, lack of ICT skilled workforce and weak financial clout – all problems cloud computing negates. There are of course many issues still to solve, but read the story on page 60 for some interesting insights into the practical developments.
Other topics under examination in this issue include tower sharing among mobile service providers (page 66), the state of ICT in diamond-rich Botswana (page 56) and we pose the question: how much potential is there in the pay-TV industry (page 73)? Plenty, it seems.
Patrick Farrell
Gizmos & gadgets – The latest hot technology
Sound bytes – News and developments from the industry
Radar – Arthur Goldstuck on mobile money
Growing alliance – Subex Vice-President Ashwin Chalapathy
All access – The mobile broadband market
Bright idea – Smartcard technology
Virtually connected – The ins and outs of e-billing
Diamond in the rough – Botswana strengthens its ICT skills
The forecast is clear – Cloud computing’s potential
Mobile division – Tower sharing benefits
On air – Looking at pay-TV
What’s on – Conferences and exhibitions













