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14 Jul 02:59

Nigerian kidnappers free abducted emir

by Abdulwasiu Mujeeb

According to his son, an emir kidnapped in northern Nigeria’s Kaduna state has been released, while 13 other family members remain in custody. 

The attackers, known as bandits in the area, invaded the palace of Alhassan Adamu, the emir of Kajuru, who is 83 years old, outside the state capital of Kaduna, early on Sunday and grabbed victims, including women and children.

Emirs are respected in mostly Muslim northern Nigeria as keepers of Islam and culture. They have no constitutional position, but hold influence and act as a conduit between the people and government.

“His Highness was released yesterday and he is now in the palace,” said Musa Alassan Adamu, the emir’s eldest son.

“He was dropped by his captors outside the town from where he walked to the palace,” Adamu told AFP.

He stated that the king was taken to a hospital for medical examinations, and that he was found to be in good health.

The bandits are still holding 13 members of the family,” the son said.

Initially, twelve members of the emir’s family were assumed to have been kidnapped along with him. 

The emir addresses his admirers in a video tape viewed by AFP, who have come to sympathize with him since his release. 

As soon as he started speaking, he burst into tears. 

The kidnappers had contacted the palace demanding ransom in exchange for the release of the other hostages, according to a royal source. 

Kaduna police have yet to remark on the event. 

Kidnapping-for-ransom gangs have recently targeted Kaduna, taking students and travelers on roads, but the emir’s kidnapping was the first time such a high-profile victim had been abducted.

In recent years, gangs of cattle thieves and kidnappers have terrorized northwest and central Nigeria, killing and abducting villagers and taking livestock after plundering and burning homes. 

Recently, criminals have been assaulting schools and kidnapping pupils in order to extract a ransom from parents. 

Since December, over 1,000 pupils have been kidnapped. 

In the latest mass abduction targeting schools, more than 100 kids were abducted from a boarding school in Kaduna state on July 5.

The post Nigerian kidnappers free abducted emir appeared first on Bunnaj.

16 Sep 10:43

One, remember to look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Two, never give up work. Work gives...

One, remember to look up at the stars and not down at your feet. Two, never give up work. Work gives you meaning and purpose and life is empty without it. Three, if you are lucky enough to find love, remember it is there and don’t throw it away.

Stephen Hawking 
Jan 8 1942 - Mar 13 2018

18 Jul 02:21

Africa Needs An African Cloud

by Contributors

by Mohamed Abdelrehim

For organisations in Africa to truly reap the benefits of cloud and shared data centre services, local data centres need to be developed and deployed.

This will not only address the issue around data sovereignty, but also stimulate local economic development and improve the lives of citizens using by widely adopting this technology.

The whole purpose of building data centres is to create capacity where it does not exist.

At a macro level, the government and large institutions of a specific country might not have enough budget/ key resources to implement a local data centre, in which case they will then look at other countries and the global level for international ICT service providers to lease capacity from.

Start-ups and SMEs also cannot each invest in their own IT infrastructure.

They would then look at a major ICT company or ISP which offers data centre services in the form of “hosting for a monthly fee.

International players such as Amazon, Alibaba and Google already operate implement such data centres across the world. These physical data centres across the world are smaller units representing an overall logical global data centre providing continuous reliable service.

The way in which a data centre is built and powered will depend on where it is located geographically. “In areas of a high level of highly developed infrastructure availability, the energy/cooling/ accessibility required to power host and operate a data centre is relatively easily accessible. In more remote locations, however, renewable energy or batteries could be required to meet energy requirements.

Data centres have to be world class, active all of the time because we are talking about critical ICT services that are required to be always available. Therefore, you would require redundant power sources and here renewable energy could play a role.

Modern grey computer mouse connected to the blue word Cloud - letter O is replaced by a globe. 3d illustrati

Modern grey computer mouse connected to the blue word Cloud – letter O is replaced by a globe. 3d illustration (Photo Credit: www.shutterstock.com)

As an example, when large volume of batteries required, there should be some form of governance around the sustainability of the batteries used.

It can be a very tricky area because if you put the legislation around this in the hands of people who are not driving technology innovation, you could restrict progress. Instead, legislators should focus on the type and specifications of the components, the source, recycling, lifecycle, maintenance and who the key suppliers are.

The energy sources used, form a big part of the total cost of ownership of a Data center site or group of Data center sites forming a network, therefore it should be managed and sourced responsibly.

In an ideal world people in Africa would move beyond being consumers of international technology provided reliable & cost-effective Data center services are available locally & in region.

We’ve seen this happen in Europe, so why not on this continent? We need to determine how we can use local data centres to promote new economic development and improve lives, have a general “Broad Cloud” for Africa and how to utilise them to attract technology or new investments to the continent.

From a private sector perspective, this usually requires a solid business case, but when organisations such as the African Union and Smart Africa become involved, the whole dynamics and conversation is completely different. Then multinational companies, such as Nokia, can tap into different global/ regional funds e.g. EU fund, with the objective of accelerating technology adoption and improving the lives of the people in the geography where they serve.

A top-down approach is required to make African data centres and ultimately an African cloud a reality.

The strategic direction needs to come from the top, which will then be cascaded into different workstreams and smaller projects. This needs to be supported by a roadmap and timeframe showing the key countries that would adopt it first.

I envision countries like South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda, Egypt and Morocco becoming the initial hubs for a local cloud, and then gradually expanding that to second and third tier countries. This will not only create economic opportunity on the continent but will eventually improve the quality of life of people, generate jobs create employment, transform society in a constantly changing environment.

  • Mohamed Abdelrehim is head of solutions and business development for Nokia in the Middle East and Africa
26 Dec 02:58

The best of WebOps Weekly in 2017

Issue 147 — December 20, 2017
Welcome

2017 is almost over and it's been a year packed with interesting ops stories, new tools, and advancements. In this issue, we're looking back at the most popular items of the year, in case you missed any issues.

We're taking a break for Christmas, and will be back on January 10. We hope you have a great holiday season!

- The WebOps Weekly team (Peter, Chris, and Za'e)

The Most Popular Links of 2017
Hagay Lupesko reviews key security-related HTTP headers and demonstrates their use in mitigating security vulnerabilities and cyber-attacks.
Smashing Magazine
And along very similar lines..
Appcanary
Simple event data infrastructure diagrams from several fast-scaling companies.
Michelle Wetzler
When Peter Klimek’s app suffered poor loading times, he came up with a solution to reduce latency.
Imperva Incapsula   sponsored 
Are REST-ish APIs ‘good enough’ for now? This provoked some Hacker News discussion and is a topic that we suspect will become more significant in 2018.
Brandur Leach
Daniel Ellis, an engineer at Reddit, shares a lot of details about how Reddit’s caching infrastructure works. It’s great to see real world details of this nature.
Reddit
The challenges Twitter has had to overcome in order to scale some of their key services and network.
Mazdak Hashemi
Outsourcing infrastructure is so easy and instant now, it’s easy to run up huge monthly bills when scaling. Here’s how one startup scaled its AWS costs down $1M per year.
Segment
Read the guide or try 3.6 right away.
mongodb   sponsored 
Amazon Web Services is seeing five predominant usage patterns for its Lambda serverless service, according to a recent presentation.
The New Stack
Chopping a monolith up into microservices is increasingly common, but this article explores an alternative which promises less operational complexity: modular app development.
Sander Mak
An NGINX Config for 2017   tutorial 
With HTTP/2 in every browser, load balancing with automatic failover, IPv6, a sorry page, separate blog server (using proxying), HTML5 SSE and an A+ SSL Labs rating.
Mike MacCana
Linux cloud hosting starting at 1GB of RAM for $5/mo. Get $20 credit on a new account.
Linode Cloud Hosting   sponsored 
Flashback is designed to mock HTTP and HTTPS resources, like web services and REST APIs, for testing purposes.
LinkedIn Engineering
Jobs
Try Underdog.io, where the best SF & NYC companies go to meet tech talent. Start your job search today & companies will email you next week.
Underdog.​io
16 Jun 18:42

Top stories from the VSTS community – 2017.06.16

by Willy-P. Schaub

Greg Duncan, Martin Woodward and I (Willy) were chatting recently about all the great news posts that Greg pulls together for the Radio TFS podcast and what a shame it was that so many of them ended up on the cutting room floor. So instead we thought that instead it would be good to do a round-up on our blog from time to time – hope you find them useful.

So here are top stories we found in our streams this week related to DevOps, VSTS, TFS and other interesting topics.

image TOP STORIES

  • CI to CD with VSTS course now live! – Tarun Arora
    Delighted to announce that my free training course on DevOps: Continuous Integration to Continuous Deployment with Visual Studio Team Services & Azure has just released on the Microsoft Open edX platform.
  • Walkthrough: Publish to Private NuGet Server from TFS2017 Build – Ben Day
    With TFS2017, you can install an extension that allows your TFS machine to host private NuGet packages.  It’s about 10 clicks to get that installed and then you can start publishing and hosting NuGet packages that you can use internal to your company.
  • Options migrating TFS to VSTS – Richard Fennel
    I did an event yesterday on using the TFS Database Import Service to do migrations from on premises TFS to VSTS. During the presentation I discussed some of the other migration options available. Not everyone needs a high fidelity migration, bring everything over. Some teams may want to just bring over their current source or just a subset of their source. Maybe they are making a major change in work practices and want to start anew on VSTS. To try to give an idea of the options I have produced this flow chart to help with the choices.
  • All my VSTS extension resources – Mikael Krief
    In this post I reference all my resources for create and publish  Visual studio Team Services and TFS Extensions.
  • Running PowerShell before Get Sources in VSTS / TFS Build – Ricci Gian Maria
    I have a VSTS build where I need to run a PowerShell scripts at the very beginning of the build, before the agent starts downloading the sources… Luckily enough there is a way to solve this problem, because each task can define a specific script that should be run when the build starts and before each task runs, here is how.
  • What is in the latest releases of the team services extension generator? – ALM Rangers
    We’re pleased to announce another update for the yeoman generator-team-services-extension, delivering new features, template improvements, and improvements to your CI/CD pipelines. Here’s a summary of what’s changed after v1.0.33.
  • Parallel Testing in a Selenium Grid with VSTS – Colin’s ALM Corner
    My intention with this post isn’t to show how you can create Selenium tests. Rather, I’ll show you some ins and outs of running Selenium tests in parallel in a Grid in a VSTS build/release pipeline.
  • Where are My Test Results? – Donovan Brown
    Today I decided to start upgrading yo team to the .csproj project format for .NET Core.
  • A Smart Way to Host Your Training Labs – Wesam Darwish
    In this post, Application Development Manager, Wesam Darwish walks us through how to leverage Azure DevTest – a cost effective, consistent, and streamlined way for quickly deploying a virtual training lab in your environment. In the recent years, there have been many strategies aiming to scale Agile for larger enterprises. Whichever methodology you chose, keep in mind the original goal and the primary measure: Better Ways of Writing Software measured by working software. Let us choose SAFe as an example, and let us choose Visual Studio Team Services (VSTS) as a tool to implement it.
  • Scrum Tapas: The Importance of Professionalism – Martin Hinshelwood
    I believe that to create great software you need to have Professional Teams and not just amateur Teams.

Special thanks to Greg Duncan for pulling these links together. If you want to get your VSTS news in audio form then be sure to subscribe to RadioTFS .

image FEEDBACK

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