dragonc | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 20 2006 | kenya, airlines, business
This article will tell you a LOT about the current airlines and air transport markets in Africa. Really useful political, cultural, and economical information.
Quoted: By Günter Endres in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam Photography by Kevin Phillips Titus Naikuni has turned around the fortunes of Kenya Airways in the short time he has been running the East African carrier
dragonc | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 20 2006 | business, airlines, kenya, people, executives
This guy is one highly accomplished dude. Freakin overachievers.
Quoted: Group Managing Director & CEO Titus Naikuni graduated from the University of Nairobi in 1979 with a BSc (Honours) degree in Mechanical Engineering. He immediately joined the Magadi Soda Company, a soda-ash manufacturing organization in Kenya, as a trainee engineer. After successfully completing his training within the organization in Kenya, and also in the UK with Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), the parent company of Magadi Soda, he got appointed into a managerial role.
dragonc | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 25 2005 | india, tokyo, technology for the people, LA, kenya, tsunami
From Choi - for me to check out later. "see how technology is being used in very different ways for very different communities."
Télécoms sans Frontieres
David Reid talks to a charity that sprang up to help victims of the Tsunami disaster stay in touch.Kenya's Computers
Dan Simmons travels to Kenya to track donated computers to their destinations.Girl Gamers
Ian Hardy reports from LA on girls who game, the games they dig, and the future outlook for gamers without a Y-Chromosome.Virtual Wallets
Richard Taylor travels to Tokyo to find out why the wallet may soon be a thing of the past.Rural Connectivity in India
Spencer Kelly investigates the ways the Indian government is trying to bring technology to rural areas, but there are many challenges involved.
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