By Mark Walker
In Summary
- The upshot has been the proliferation of Internet exchange points and rural connectivity projects during the intervening years, while numerous major undersea cables have also entered into operation.
On April 7, 1964, while the Beatles were telling
the world that “money can’t buy me love,” IBM was trying to convince
the business community that it could at least buy you a decent
mainframe.
The IBM System/360 — touted as the Big Blue’s most
innovative iteration to date — had just been announced, and since then
the technology industry has changed in extraordinary ways, shaping the
way we live, work and play. The impact on Africa has been profound, with
the continent and its people now connected with each other and the rest
of the world in ways that could not have been imagined only a decade or
so ago.
But how did the connectivity we now all take for granted first come about?
For 17 years after the System/360 launch, the
world of technology was living its First Platform. In this world,
mainframes reigned supreme, and just a few million enterprise users on
the planet had access to them via terminals.
Throughout this era and way into the subsequent
one, all computer-related activity was restricted to the interaction
between a person and a computer. However, such interaction was never of a
personal nature. This would only change after the end of the First
Platform, although the event that made this transformation possible
happened during that era —in 1973, to be precise, the year Bob Metcalfe
broke new tech ground by inventing Ethernet at Xerox’s Palo Alto
Research Centre.
Fast forward to 1981 and the tech world was taking
its first tentative steps onto the Second Platform. This was the age of
the server-client model and the personal computer — the device that,
together with the Ethernet and the local and wide area networks it made
possible, brought about the personalisation of information technology.
And when PCs started becoming more interconnected
around 1983, we quickly moved into a world where one of the most
incredible creations ever imagined — e-mail — started being used to
share company information online from different places on earth.
From this point, we move 10 years into the future.
CERN (the European Organisation for Nuclear Research) is set to
redefine the whole world as we know it by creating a global hypertext
system and making it available to the public as the World Wide Web.
This spurred one of the most amazing leaps in
technology: We went beyond sharing company documents with specific
people to sharing personal data with complete strangers. Blogging was
born, and was soon to be followed by a personal data-generation and
sharing revolution.
The 25 years of the Second Platform era were
characterised by an exponential increase in the number of users and
applications. Users went from millions to hundreds of millions and
applications went from thousands to tens of thousands. Still, the
computing industry was focused on the enterprise, and personal usage of
computers was secondary. Its progress would come as a result of advances
in enterprise systems and applications.
In 2007, the iPhone and Google Apps were launched
and Amazon and Salesforce.com began offering their cloud services. At
this time, both Hadoop and Twitter were only around a year old, while
Facebook had just become available to the public several months earlier.
These were the seeds of what we now recognise as the main trends in
technology adoption today: Mobility, cloud computing, big data analytics
and social media. In other words, the Third Platform.
The year 2007 also signalled an exciting new era
of connectivity across Africa. In October that year, Rwanda hosted the
Connect Africa summit with the aim of expanding the continent’s
broadband backbone infrastructure and access networks. Pledges totalling
$55 billion were announced during the conference, with national and
regional interconnectivity initiatives taking centre stage in a bid to
ensure that Africa capitalised on the broadband and ICT opportunities
already being taken for granted elsewhere in the world.
The upshot has been the proliferation of Internet
exchange points and rural connectivity projects during the intervening
years, while numerous major undersea cables have also entered into
operation.
Spearheaded by the Kenyan government, TEAMs (The
East African Marine System) cable began service in 2009, connecting the
country to the rest of the world via the UAE, and the following year
EASSy (Eastern African Submarine Cable System) brought widespread
connectivity to the wider East Africa region, with landing points in
nine countries along the coast and connections to at least 10 landlocked
nations.
Three years later, West Africa got into the act
with the WACS cable connecting South Africa to the UK via 12 landing
points along the western coast.
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