Over the past two decades the internet has evolved to become not only the ultimate information highway but also an asset that has facilitated the development and growth of a myriad of innovations. From the dot com bubble of the early 90s, social media revolutions of the 21st century, cloud based solutions that today determine the way we use our devices and store information, to on demand services all owe their success and demise to the internet.A walk through any of the many innovation hunts that take place across the country, continent and world bears testament to the fact that the internet is a key asset in the innovator’s tools of success. Web-based applications, mobile applications on demand services are all solutions that are trending among young innovators, which owe their relevance to the internet.

The term innovator in today’s context is associated with the internet, and how its application is used to solve today and tomorrow’s problems. In as much as this association maybe controversial, one cannot help but notice the number of innovations commercialised and conceptual that have come up in the last 15 years that are internet based.

Social media being the most obvious would not have existed if it was not for the internet. This innovative concept owes its existence to the need of people to connect utilising an already existing technology, allowing seamless communication, sharing of moments and what we today know as social media marketing.

While sighting social media as the one of the greatest innovations whose best asset is the internet, solutions to everyday problems are constantly being developed and utilising the information superhighway to aid people and achieve great profit.

In Africa, education is a sphere in life we hold dear and dissemination of information is key and parcel to its effectiveness. Innovative e-learning solutions have been and are continuously being developed to complement the brick and mortar establishments to educate the masses.

An example of an innovation that uses the internet as an asset to deliver a product to the masses would be Zimbabwean Kudakwashe Gore’s Dariro website. The website allows you to showcase your talents and/or find the best experts for your project by looking at their work and profiles. Many businesses use dariro.com to find the best talent for their work.

Creating a website to showcase your skills is a cost that not many can afford. The dariro.com platform therefore allows people to add their information seamlessly. For free.

The platform is suitable for small to medium scale businesses, churches, schools, colleges, non-governmental organizations. Similar solutions will also be of benefit to the greater African community as majority of the population is located in remote areas where skilled individuals usually go unnoticed. By use of ZOL VSAT or Facebooks’s ambitious satellite/drone based internet provision solution, innovators can provide internet based work solutions to achieve 100% employment on the continent.

Internet innovation can’t be discussed without mention of the Internet of Things. The Internet of Things revolves around increased machine-to-machine communication; it’s built on cloud computing and networks of data-gathering sensors; it’s mobile, virtual, and instantaneous connection; and they say it’s going to make everything in our lives from street-lights to seaports to our own homes “smart”.

An example would be EconetConnectedHome, a product by Econet Wireless partnered by ZOL Zimbabwe that promises to put you in control of your home. The product uses an internet connection to offer home surveillance and security, automated services for some domestic features, and a rapid response signal in case of a burglary.

The internet has proved to be a vital asset in not only being a carrier of data and information between communicating individuals or groups, but also spawned cloud based solutions. It might not be as obvious to many, but at its core the internet was primarily a means to access remotely stored information, and today many innovative cloud solutions have been developed around this concept. A means which was once a reserve for the military is now accessible to the masses as long as an internet connection is available.

Today we store our music, movies, and other information on cloud solutions, saving storage space on our machines or allowing us to share information with others. Businesses have found this innovative solution most useful as information stored on individual machines maybe easily lost. One such innovative solution for businesses is CrashPlan solution. CrashPlan gives you back control of your enterprise data, data that is currently sitting on end-user devices.

CrashPlan continuously and automatically backs up every version of every file on every device forever. It compresses, encrypts and then backs up the data — either in our secure Pan-African cloud or at your site.

Every file

Every version

Every user

Every device

Backed up forever. Restored when you need it

All your users’ devices are added to the system. Remote workers, field workers, overseas workers — even workers who are travelling. The data is stored centrally regardless of where they are. And the data can be restored to wherever they are working.

ZOL Zimbabwe as an internet service provider is dedicated to providing all aspiring innovators access to a valuable asset that is the internet, so as to develop solutions that address the problems of Zimbabwe and Africa.

 

Contact us on 08677 111 111 visit our website www.zol.co.zw or download the myZOL App in the App Store or Google Play Storeto find out how ZOL can bring out the best innovator in you.

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