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MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light - Science/Technology - Nairaland

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MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light by sestob(m): 3:51pm On Apr 26, 2013
Power to the people: From afar, MIT grad student Chidube Ezeozue devotes energy to his fellow Nigerians.
Like many Nigerians, MIT graduate student Chidube Ezeozue grew up frustrated by his nation’s erratic electrical grid.
“Electrical outages are a huge problem in Nigeria,” says Ezeozue, who is pursuing dual master’s degrees in MIT’s Technology and Policy Program and in electrical engineering and computer science. “The outages really interrupt everyday life.”
Nigeria’s supply of electricity is severely limited, resulting in rolling outages: Power is cut off every few hours and redirected to neighborhoods that were previously in the dark. While Nigerians know to expect these power cuts, they rarely know when the outages will happen, or how long they will last.

Since coming to MIT in 2011, Ezeozue — who received his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering from the University of Nigeria in 2008, followed by three years of work at a software startup — has created an app, with his brother, that crowdsources information about Nigerian power outages. With the app, called NepaSituation, people living in Nigeria can report outages. This data, when merged into an algorithm developed by Ezeozue, can help Nigerians predict when power outages may strike their neighborhoods, and how long those outages might last.

“With over 100 million cell phones in Nigeria, we knew it was an important resource we could tap into,” Ezeozue says. “It took a while to come up with this algorithm, because the outages are pretty randomized, and the app is only as good as the number of people who enter outage data.”

But Ezeozue has delved into more than just tracking the problem: He is also working to address Nigeria’s chronic energy shortage.

“I started a company that is working to provide solar electricity to businesses and families at zero upfront cost,” Ezeozue says. The company, SolarKobo, was recently funded by a seed grant from MIT’s Legatum Center for Development and Entrepreneurship, where Ezeozue is a fellow.

“Nigeria has plenty of solar energy available … for as low as $25 a month, we can make this resource available to those who are interested,” Ezeozue adds.

When he is not working toward the betterment of his homeland, Ezeozue researches machine learning and prediction algorithms in the research group of Una-May O’Reilly, a principal research scientist in MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

“We are trying to use medical data, such as blood-pressure levels, to improve patient care,” Ezeozue says. “We observe states that patients’ [blood] pressure goes through and eventually we can predict what state they will go to. These predictions help doctors determine what to expect next.”

Ezeozue is also passionate about education. Along with other Nigerian students at MIT, Ezeozue has started two initiatives to encourage students in Nigeria to pursue higher education outside the country.

In one of these initiatives, which is aimed at high school students, Ezeozue and Chika Ugboh, an MIT chemical engineering student, bought preparatory materials and paid for a few students in one Nigerian school to take the SAT. While this pilot, which was launched in 2011, was not an unequivocal success, Ezeozue says, “We learned that simply providing the materials isn’t enough — it has to be accompanied by mentoring and training.” He and Ugboh are now working to assess how these Nigerian students learn best.

The second of these initiatives is aimed at Nigerian undergraduates: Working through their own networks in Nigeria, Ezeozue and other MIT graduate students are encouraging Nigerian undergraduates who might be interested in postgraduate study abroad.

“The goal is to build a generation of highly educated Nigerians who will hopefully go back to build a better Nigeria,” Ezeozue says. “I plan to eventually go back to Nigeria.”

For now, after graduating from MIT in June, Ezeozue will remain in Cambridge, working as a software engineer for Google.
Source: http://www.surestinfo.com/2013/04/mit-student-designed-apps-that-enable-people-to-know-when-nepa-will-take-light.html
Re: MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light by hishandmaid(f): 4:44pm On Apr 26, 2013
Who said all Nigerians know about is corruption. What a laudable project at least phcn will stop taking us unawares pending when we get a lasting solution. Kudos to you Chidube Ezeozue for this project & shame to power holders & their oga's @ the top for taking Nigerians for a ride while outsourcing power to the likes of Niger, Chad etc
Re: MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light by hishandmaid(f): 4:47pm On Apr 26, 2013
Please mods front page plssss. It is a noble project that all NL's should contribute to. Thank you
Re: MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light by Akanniade(m): 5:45pm On May 03, 2013
The guy is completely clueless about how electricity situation works in naija.
NEPA does not 'take light'. They operate switch gears to connect one area and disconnect others, they remove fuses at xformers to 'rotate light' within sub areas, xformers blowup randomly,fuses burn at xformers, nepa man may arrive too early or too late at the xformer to give you area light,etc.
Tell me how 'MIT algorithm' will work thru all these uncertainties.
Re: MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light by kevoh(m): 8:25am On May 08, 2013
Akanniade: The guy is completely clueless about how electricity situation works in naija.
NEPA does not 'take light'. They operate switch gears to connect one area and disconnect others, they remove fuses at xformers to 'rotate light' within sub areas, xformers blowup randomly,fuses burn at xformers, nepa man may arrive too early or too late at the xformer to give you area light,etc.
Tell me how 'MIT algorithm' will work thru all these uncertainties.
I'm not bothered about his being clueless of the Nigerian PHCN situation. I'm happier at the fact we still have young and intelligent Nigerians who can implement ideas like this not the ones who waste their time on facebook, 2go,BBM e.t.c
Re: MIT Student Designed Apps That Enable People To Know When NEPA Will Take Light by Akanniade(m): 7:53pm On May 09, 2013
kevoh:
I'm not bothered about his being clueless of the Nigerian PHCN situation. I'm happier at the fact we still have young and intelligent Nigerians who can implement ideas like this not the ones who waste their time on facebook, 2go,BBM e.t.c
Nigerian problems can only be solved with nigerian solutions. The young nigerians you so easily deride are products of a faulty system. We should thank God face book, 2go etc is keeping them occupied, else there will be a greater increase in crime. Give them same opportunities as your MIT boy, they would perform just as good.

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