Let me start by asking you a question, just with a show of hands: Who has an iPhone?Who has an Android phone?Who has a Blackberry?Who will admit in public to having a Blackberry?(Laughter)
And let me guess, how many of you,when you arrived here, like me, went and bought a pay-as-you-go SIM card? Yeah? I'll bet you didn't even know you're using African technology.
Pay-as-you-go was a technology, or an idea, pioneered in Africa by a company called Vodacom a good 15 years ago, and now, like franchising, pay-as-you-go is one of the most dominant forces.
So I'm going to talk about innovation in Africa, which I think is the purest form, innovation out of necessity. But first, I'm going to ask you some other questions. You don't have to put your hands up.
These are rhetorical.Why did Nikola Tesla have to invent the alternating current that powers the lights in this building or the city that we're in? Why did Henry Ford have to invent the production line to produce these Fords that came in anything as long as they were black?
And why did Eric Merrifield have to invent the dolos? Blank stares. That is what a dolos looks like,and in the background, you can see Robben and in the background, you can see Robben Island. This is a small dolos, and Eric Merrifield is the most famous inventor you've never heard of.
In 1963, a storm ripped up the harbor in a small South African town called East London,and while he was watching his kids playing with toys made from oxen bones called dolosse, he had the idea for this.
It's a bit like a huge jumping jack, and they have used this in every harbor in the world as a breakwater. The global shipping economy would not be possible without African technology like this.
So whenever you talk about Africa,you have to put up this picture of the world from space ,and people go, "Look, it's the Dark Continent."Actually, it isn't.What it is is a map of innovation.And it's really easy to see where innovation's going on.All the places with lots of electricity, it isn't.(Laughter)(Applause)
And the reason it isn't is because everybody's watching television or playing Angry Birds. (Laughter) (Applause) So where it's happening is in Africa. Now, this is real innovation, not the way people have expropriated the word to talk about launching new products. This is real innovation, and I define it as problem-solving.
People are solving real problems in Africa.Why? Because we have to. Because we have real problems. And when we solve real problems for people, we solve them for the rest of the world at the same time.
So in California, everybody's really excited about a little square of plastic that you plug into a phone and you can swipe your credit card, and people say, "We've liberated the credit card from the point of sale terminal." Fantastic. Why do you even need a credit card? In Africa, we've been doing that for years, and we've been doing it on phones like this.
This is a picture I took at a place called Kitengela, about an hour south of Nairobi, and the thing that's so remarkable about the payment system that's been pioneered in Africa called M-Pesa is that it works on phones like this. It works on every single phone possible, because it uses SMS.
You can pay bills with it, you can buy your groceries, you can pay your kids' school fees,and I'm told you can even bribe customs officials.(Laughter)
Something like 25 million dollars a day is transacted through M-Pesa.Forty percent of Kenya's GDP moves through M-Pesa using phones like this.
And let me guess, how many of you,when you arrived here, like me, went and bought a pay-as-you-go SIM card? Yeah? I'll bet you didn't even know you're using African technology.
Pay-as-you-go was a technology, or an idea, pioneered in Africa by a company called Vodacom a good 15 years ago, and now, like franchising, pay-as-you-go is one of the most dominant forces.
So I'm going to talk about innovation in Africa, which I think is the purest form, innovation out of necessity. But first, I'm going to ask you some other questions. You don't have to put your hands up.
These are rhetorical.Why did Nikola Tesla have to invent the alternating current that powers the lights in this building or the city that we're in? Why did Henry Ford have to invent the production line to produce these Fords that came in anything as long as they were black?
And why did Eric Merrifield have to invent the dolos? Blank stares. That is what a dolos looks like,and in the background, you can see Robben and in the background, you can see Robben Island. This is a small dolos, and Eric Merrifield is the most famous inventor you've never heard of.
In 1963, a storm ripped up the harbor in a small South African town called East London,and while he was watching his kids playing with toys made from oxen bones called dolosse, he had the idea for this.
It's a bit like a huge jumping jack, and they have used this in every harbor in the world as a breakwater. The global shipping economy would not be possible without African technology like this.
So whenever you talk about Africa,you have to put up this picture of the world from space ,and people go, "Look, it's the Dark Continent."Actually, it isn't.What it is is a map of innovation.And it's really easy to see where innovation's going on.All the places with lots of electricity, it isn't.(Laughter)(Applause)
And the reason it isn't is because everybody's watching television or playing Angry Birds. (Laughter) (Applause) So where it's happening is in Africa. Now, this is real innovation, not the way people have expropriated the word to talk about launching new products. This is real innovation, and I define it as problem-solving.
People are solving real problems in Africa.Why? Because we have to. Because we have real problems. And when we solve real problems for people, we solve them for the rest of the world at the same time.
So in California, everybody's really excited about a little square of plastic that you plug into a phone and you can swipe your credit card, and people say, "We've liberated the credit card from the point of sale terminal." Fantastic. Why do you even need a credit card? In Africa, we've been doing that for years, and we've been doing it on phones like this.
This is a picture I took at a place called Kitengela, about an hour south of Nairobi, and the thing that's so remarkable about the payment system that's been pioneered in Africa called M-Pesa is that it works on phones like this. It works on every single phone possible, because it uses SMS.
You can pay bills with it, you can buy your groceries, you can pay your kids' school fees,and I'm told you can even bribe customs officials.(Laughter)
Something like 25 million dollars a day is transacted through M-Pesa.Forty percent of Kenya's GDP moves through M-Pesa using phones like this.