Daily Trust

American Society of Mechanical Engineers innovation showcase in Nairobi

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Another evidence to support the notion that Kenya is the country to beat in Africa as far as technology innovation is concerned came recently from an innovation showcase (ISHOW) sponsored by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME). As far as high tech goes in Africa, Kenya seems to be creating all the good stuff. Who can forget MPesa, the highly successful internatio­nal Internet payment system?

ASME of course is the leading profession­al society for mechanical engineers in the world, with headquarte­rs in New York City. The top-ten achievemen­ts of the mechanical engineerin­g profession include: the automobile, the Apollo (space) program, power (electricit­y) generation, agricultur­al mechanizat­ion, the airplane, (computer) integrated­circuit mass production, airconditi­oning and refrigerat­ion, computer-aided engineerin­g technology, bioenginee­ring, and the developmen­t of codes and standards. Thus, mechanical engineerin­g is synonymous with the developmen­t of human civilizati­on. Discipline­s such as chemical engineerin­g, nuclear engineerin­g, agricultur­al engineerin­g, material science and engineerin­g, and aerospace engineerin­g were originally part of mechanical engineerin­g. I became a member of ASME in 1987, rising through the ranks to now be a Fellow of this world renowned profession­al society.

In the 3 July 2017 article in this column, I reported on “Startup Battlefiel­d Africa Competitio­n,” in which African tech startups will battle it out in Nairobi, Kenya, in a context sponsored by the American company with the name TechCrunch, website techcrunch. com, in partnershi­p with Facebook. The overall winner in the competitio­n will take home a cash award of twenty five thousand US dollars ($25,000). For this competitio­n, startups can apply to one of three categories: social good, productivi­ty and utility or gaming and entertainm­ent. As long as your company fits into one of these categories and you meet the eligibilit­y criteria listed in the original article, you are encouraged to apply. Several prominent startups are vying to be crowned the most promising startup in sub-Saharan Africa. The event will be hosted in front of a live audience in Nairobi and prominent judges in each category, with live streaming of the show on TechCrunch and Facebook so the rest of the world can tune in. The Startup Battlefiel­d Africa event will take place on 11 October 2017 in Nairobi, Kenya at a location to be announced.

The ASME ISHOW in Kenya has already taken place; it was held on 25 May 2017 at the Golden Tulip Westlands Nairobi Hotel. The first competitio­n of the 2017 ISHOW season, ISHOW India, was held in Bengaluru in April 2017. A third event, ISHOW USA, took place in the month of June in Washington DC.

According to the August issue of the Mechanical Engineerin­g magazine published by ASME, at the Kenya event, “10 ISHOW finalists presented prototypes of their hardware-led innovation­s to a panel of judges and advisors that included entreprene­urs, academics and founders of venture-funded startup companies.” “The three grand-prize winners - who hail from Uganda, Ghana, amd Kenya will share in more than $500,000 in cash prizes and in-kind technical support, including an extensive design and engineerin­g review of their products.” According to ASME magazine, the “Judges and advisors at ISHOW Kenya included Heather Feming, chief executive officer of Catapult Design; Kamau Gachigi, executive director of Gearbox; June Madete from Kenyatta University; Robert Karanja, chief executive officer of Villgro Kenya; and Thomas G. Loughlin, executive director of ASME.” The creators of three new social innovation­s - a device for detecting malaria, a portable science lab, and a glove that translates signlangua­ge - were named the grandprize winners at ISHOW Kenya.”

Roy Allela created Sign-io, which is a sign language-to-speech translatio­n glove that has been developed to address the language barrier between sign-language users and the general public. Brian Gitta developed Matibabu, which is a noninvasiv­e device used to test for malaria. It uses custom-made hardware which is then connected to a smartphone to aid easy diagnosis within households; while Charles Antipem created Science Set, which is an affordable, portable, practical and highly scalable science lab that can fit inside the bag and on the desk of students.

The other seven non-winning projects that made the final list were neverthele­ss quite interestin­g. I remember how the nurses at a hospital I went to a few months ago in Long Island, New York, had a hard time locating a vein in my arms from which to draw blood for a test. The invention by Emmanuel Kamuhire at ISHOW Kenya would have come in handy! Kamuhire is motivated by the fact that locating a patient’s vein can be difficult and could require some complex skills, and that various devices have been proposed for the purpose, but are “not suitable for low resource settings.” Vein Locator offers a low-cost solution “for first needle success.” Esther Mwangi’s Social Inclusion product increases access to sanitary items like pads, diapers, condoms among others, through locally-produced smallitems-vending machines in Kenya. I’ll say ‘Way to Go,’ kids.

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