news september 17, 2016 software city - pe...

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Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Cyan Page 6 Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Magenta Page 6 Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Yellow Page 6 Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Black Page 6 6 Weekend Post SATURDAY: SEPTEMBER 17, 2016 NEWS R1 per SMS. Errors billed Text your opinion to 32391 NEWS IN BRIEF P ORT Elizabeth is rapidly rising as a software develop- ment city. Compa- nies with headquar- ters in other South African and international cities are opening offices or expanding their base here for a number of reasons, including the lower cost of property and rentals; the qual- ity of life and the pipeline of graduates who are skilled in software development – a mas- sive global market. “We develop software for our international partners in the auto- motive industry, mainly in Ger- many and Belgium, and there is a massive and growing demand,” said Nico Claassen, the software development manager for S4, a Port Elizabeth-based industrial au- tomation company whose clients include Volkswagen, Porsche and Bentley, as well as electric vehicle manufacturers such as Faraday Future and Karma. The company employs 40 soft- ware developers, almost all of them from Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU), Johannesburg-based company called Yellow Professional Serv- ices (YPS) – the technology arm of the international Business Doctor Investments (BDI). It is negotiating an on-campus joint venture company called UniYellow that will offer students the opportunity to earn money while working on applied knowl- edge software development, and an opportunity to join the company. “Software development is a glo- bal language that is not confined to a geographical space, and with the scarcity of skilled graduates in this sector, companies are actively engaging with us,” said Professor Jean Greyling from NMMU’s com- puting sciences department. “Our department promotes computer science in schools throughout the province and in George where NMMU has a cam- pus,” Prof Greyling added. This month, one of NMMU’s in- formation and communications technology (ICT) graduates, Justin Drennan, was selected as one of the top 31 entrepreneurs under 40 making waves in South Africa with multimedia digital publisher Burn Media’s ventureburn.com. His startup, ParcelNinja, is an e-commerce warehouse whereby companies drop off their stock at smart-warehouse locations, and customers then order via Parcel- Ninja’s admin systems and deliv- ery network. To build and support innovative new businesses, NMMU estab- lished a city-based business incu- bator called Propella. The university offers Propella’s expertise and research, as well as innovative projects, and its part- nership with the Telkom Future Makers programme supports the development of software develop- ment and ICT entrepreneurs. “A big advantage of being part of Propella is that start-ups are groomed and linked with industry partners,” Propella’s business sup- port manager Ellen Fischat said. The Seda Mandela Bay ICT Incu- bator (SNII) is also addressing the growing need for software devel- opment in our city, including 24 ICT startups. According to SNII’s executive manager Phumza Mfenyana, they have identified role players in the local economy who can benefit from innovative ICT solutions. “The software development landscape in PE has really started to change into a product develop- ment hub,” NMMU masters grad- uate Direshin Pather said. Pather is the CEO of AppN Tech, a Port Elizabeth-based software development company that spe- cialises in native mobile app devel- opment for a range of clients. Third-year NMMU computer sci- ence student Cornelius Greyling opened a software house in Port Elizabeth called Avocado Choco- late in January this year, together with three NMMU graduates and a colleague from Cape Town. AvoChoc clients include Copa America (the world’s oldest and one of the largest international football tournaments) and Project Isizwe, the largest government funded public space free Wi-Fi provider in Africa. Another PE startup is Hello World Code, founded and run by computer science and electrical engineering students turned entrepreneurs. NMMU graduate Chris Went- worth established his own compa- ny in Port Elizabeth this year called W2IT Solutions. Wentworth said that up until re- cently, computer science gradu- ates from NMMU tended to rush off to Johannesburg, Cape Town or head overseas because Port Eliz- abeth didn’t offer sufficient soft- ware development opportunities. “This is changing and it’s excit- ing. It will make a huge difference to the economy and intellectual capital of Nelson Mandela Bay Metro and the Eastern Cape.” Software City - PE rising Port Elizabeth is rapidly turning into a software development hub, writes Heather Dugmore FORWARD-THINKING: One of Korbitec’s software development teams in action predominantly computer science and electrical engineering gradu- ates. Claassen himself is an electrical engineering graduate from NMMU. Cape town-based Korbitec, a member of the LexisNexis Group, is one of the international compa- nies that opened a software devel- opment office in Port Elizabeth this year. “Port Elizabeth is a really good prospect for us because we are in the business of product develop- ment, not outsourcing. NMMU and Rhodes University are our main re- cruitment areas and have been for the past 11 years,” Korbitec’s soft- ware development and operations general manager Peter Raine said. Also engaging with NMMU, is a “It will make a huge difference to the economy and intellectual capital of Nelson Mandela Bay Metro and the Eastern Cape” CHRIS WENTWORTH GLOBAL APPEAL: The CEO of Port Elizabeth-based software development company a AppN Tech, Direshin Pather New police response system tested in Bay pilot project Gareth Wilson [email protected] PORT Elizabeth is the testing ground for a new policing model to ensure speedy response times and better control over the emer- gency control room and officials. The pilot-project system could be rolled out countrywide should teething problems be resolved. This comes in the wake of re- cent crime figures showing a rise in violent crimes like murder, car and truck hijackings, and home and business robberies. Earlier this week, police sta- tions were ordered to send police members, in some cases 10 from a station, to the operational com- mand centre. The new system will be rolled out in phases and will allow se- nior police officials to test reac- tion times and resources through live monitoring. The need comes as the 2014-15 annual police report revealed av- erage response time for police to an emergency situation in the Eastern Cape was 18 minutes – one of the longest in the country. The new project aims to con- solidate existing hi-tech resour- ces, such as car-tracking devices and control room computer sys- tems, to ensure a more efficient response – particularly to crimes still in progress. The project is the brainchild of national Management Interven- tion Unit head and deputy natio- nal commissioner Lieutenant- General Gary Kruser – who is also spearheading the anti-gang initia- tive, Operation Lock Down. Similar concepts are already operational in several first-world countries. The pilot project involves the Mount Road cluster, which in- cludes the Mount Road, Hume- wood, Walmer, Gelvandale, Bethelsdorp, Kabega Park and Al- goa Park police station areas. Should the pilot project work, it would see police resources com- bined, leading to intelligence- driven operations and quicker re- sponse times. The project – which launched on Thursday – will see the Bay’s multimillion-rand 10111 control centre in Korsten monitored by the operational command centre. Police spokeswoman Colonel Priscilla Naidu said the centre aimed to integrate and coordi- nate efforts to prevent and com- bat crime within the cluster. Officials involved with the pro- ject – who declined to be named as they are not allowed to speak to the media – said the new op- eration placed pressure on crime intelligence operatives – who work undercover – to provide in- formation about crime havens and hotspots. “This would effectively en- hance command and control of operational officials on the ground. “It allows management to iden- tify hotspot areas through crime analysis and then do a mass de- ployment in that area, while the vehicles and officials can be mon- itored by the centre.” The operational command cen- tre is the heart of the operation and will be manned by staff and senior officers who can oversee all response (and crime preven- tion) vehicles 24 hours a day and also assess 10111 to make sure it operates effectively. One of the officials said the sys- tem would ensure a quicker re- sponse but also allow for better oversight and control over police on the road. “For example, if there is a high- speed car chase and shootout, this system would allow the con- trol room to deploy vehicles to in- tercept the criminals as well as provide backup to any member in need without them even request- ing it,” the official said. “The pilot project aims to iden- tify teething problems so manage- ment can assess if it should be rolled out.” PE court delays hacker’s sentence THE mastermind behind a R19.7-million hacking scam will hear his fate in less than a month, after yesterday’s sentencing was postponed in the Port Elizabeth Magistrate’s Court. Former KwaZulu-Natal Education Department official Mduduzi Mkhize, 42, appeared briefly in court, where his case was postponed to October 6, due to a Zulu interpreter being sick. On September 6, Mkhize was convicted on charges which included fraud. He is accused with former NMMU student Lungisa Kosi, Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality former acting head of staff Kholeka Ngqondi, her husband Khayalethu, Nonhlanhla Mazibuko, Mandisi Busakwe and Phumla Ntonzi, of hacking into the Bay municipality’s database in August 2009 to steal close to R20-million. They are being tried separately from Mkhize and will be back in court on November 25. The syndicate installed a software programme onto the municipality’s database, which then automatically e-mailed the keystrokes to a member of the syndicate. This information was then used to transfer money from the municipality’s account. – Tremaine van Aardt Fund to appeal Joost payout THE Attorneys Fidelity Fund’s board of control says its legal representatives have read the judgment ordering it to pay former Springbok player Joost van der Westhuizen R385 000 and have advised there are sound grounds for an appeal. The Pretoria High Court on Wednesday ordered the fidelity fund to pay the money to the ailing former rugby player‚ who said he urgently needed the money to be paid out from the trust fund of his former attorney, Robert Klinkenberg. The attorney died in December last year. The fidelity fund is a statutory body whose objective is to protect the public against loss as a result of the theft of trust funds by legal practitioners. Van der Westhuizen‚ who is seriously ill with motor neuron disease‚ took the fund to court after his claim for the allegedly misappropriated money was turned down. The fund said yesterday it appreciated the circumstances pertaining to Van der Westhuizen, but that it had a duty to apply the provisions of the Attorneys Act. “Accordingly‚ our legal team has been instructed to prepare an application for leave to appeal the aforesaid judgment.” The filing of the notice of appeal will result in the suspension of the judgment. – TMG Digital SUBSCRIBERS PLEASE NOTE: FOR SUBSCRIPTION QUERIES OR ANY RELATED INFORMATION PHONE (041) 504-7130 Or alternatively you can e-mail: [email protected] OM\04\01000257 Black + + Grey Blue FREE FREE It’s a Bodyshaper! It’s a Jean! It’s a Legging! Instantly Slimmer Legs, Thighs and Bum! NEW ORDER ONLINE NOW AT TM9008 086 027 2234 or Call BUY 1, GET 2 FREE! ONLY R699 90 FREE DELIVERY & RETURNS ‘‘ ‘‘ I am dressed in one minute, and all my buldges are hidden away! Slim Jeggings are super comfy! I love them! No other pants have ever made me feel as sexy or stylish before.They are so amazing and all my friends want them too! A. Lourens – Sandton BEFORE AFTER LIFT, TONE & FIR M Y O U R C U R V E S BESTSELLER I N T E R N A T I O N A L Lifts and shapes your bum Hides love handles Muffin top disappears Cellulite is smoothed away Slim Jeggings are made with a revolutionary triple-layered fabric called Redutech that works together to give you: A 3D Denim Slim-fit look The super-soft comfort of leggings! And the body shaping control of spandex Whether you gain or lose weight, sit or bend, this light-weight fabric with its invisible body shaping core will conform to your body to keep you looking well-toned, in shape and cellulite-free. 3 Sizes available: S/M (8-12) L/XL (14-16) XXL/XXXL (18-22) Choosing your size is easy. Simply order the size closest to your regular clothing size. If you are not completely satisfied with the fit you can exchange or return your set for a full refund. No questions asked! MILLIONS SOLD WORLDWIDE - NOT AVAILABLE IN STORES! 90 DAY www.takealot.com www.slimjeggings.co.za V05

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Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Cyan Page 6 Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Magenta Page 6 Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Yellow Page 6 Weekend Post, 17-Sep-2016 Black Page 6

6 Weekend Post SATURDAY : SEPTEMBER 17, 2016NEWS

R1 per SMS. Errors billedText your opinion to 32391

NEWS IN BRIEF

PORT Elizabeth israpidly rising as asoftware develop-ment city. Compa-nies with headquar-

ters in other South African andinternational cities are openingoffices or expanding their basehere for a number of reasons,including the lower cost ofproperty and rentals; the qual-ity of life and the pipeline ofgraduates who are skilled insoftware development – a mas-sive global market.

“We develop software for ourinternational partners in the auto-motive industry, mainly in Ger-many and Belgium, and there is amassive and growing demand,”said Nico Claassen, the softwaredevelopment manager for S4, aPort Elizabeth-based industrial au-tomation company whose clientsinclude Volkswagen, Porsche andBentley, as well as electric vehiclemanufacturers such as FaradayFuture and Karma.

The company employs 40 soft-ware developers, almost all ofthem from Nelson MandelaMetropolitan University (NMMU),

Johannesburg-based companycalled Yellow Professional Serv-ices (YPS) – the technology arm ofthe international Business DoctorInvestments (BDI).

It is negotiating an on-campusjoint venture company calledUniYellow that will offer studentsthe opportunity to earn moneywhile working on applied knowl-edge software development, and anopportunity to join the company.

“Software development is a glo-bal language that is not confinedto a geographical space, and withthe scarcity of skilled graduates inthis sector, companies are activelyengaging with us,” said ProfessorJean Greyling from NMMU’s com-puting sciences department.

“Our department promotescomputer science in schoolsthroughout the province and inGeorge where NMMU has a cam-pus,” Prof Greyling added.

This month, one of NMMU’s in-formation and communicationstechnology (ICT) graduates, JustinDrennan, was selected as one ofthe top 31 entrepreneurs under 40making waves in South Africa withmultimedia digital publisher BurnMedia’s ventureburn.com.

His startup, ParcelNinja, is ane-commerce warehouse wherebycompanies drop off their stock atsmart-warehouse locations, andcustomers then order via Parcel-Ninja’s admin systems and deliv-ery network.

To build and support innovativenew businesses, NMMU estab-lished a city-based business incu-bator called Propella.

The university offers Propella’s

expertise and research, as well asinnovative projects, and its par t-nership with the Telkom FutureMakers programme supports thedevelopment of software develop-ment and ICT entrepreneurs.

“A big advantage of being part ofPropella is that start-ups aregroomed and linked with industrypar tners,” P ro p e l l a ’s business sup-port manager Ellen Fischat said.

The Seda Mandela Bay ICT Incu-bator (SNII) is also addressing thegrowing need for software devel-opment in our city, including 24ICT startups.

According to SNII’s executivemanager Phumza Mfenyana, theyhave identified role players in thelocal economy who can benefitfrom innovative ICT solutions.

“The software developmentlandscape in PE has really started

to change into a product develop-ment hub,” NMMU masters grad-uate Direshin Pather said.

Pather is the CEO of AppN Tech,a Port Elizabeth-based softwaredevelopment company that spe-cialises in native mobile app devel-opment for a range of clients.

Third-year NMMU computer sci-ence student Cornelius Greylingopened a software house in PortElizabeth called Avocado Choco-late in January this year, togetherwith three NMMU graduates and acolleague from Cape Town.

AvoChoc clients include CopaAmerica (the world’s oldest andone of the largest internationalfootball tournaments) and ProjectIsizwe, the largest governmentfunded public space free Wi-Fiprovider in Africa.

Another PE startup is Hello

World Code, founded and run bycomputer science and electricalengineering students turnede n t re p re n e u r s .

NMMU graduate Chris Went-wor th established his own compa-ny in Port Elizabeth this yearcalled W2IT Solutions.

Wentworth said that up until re-cently, computer science gradu-ates from NMMU tended to rushoff to Johannesburg, Cape Town orhead overseas because Port Eliz-abeth didn’t offer sufficient soft-ware development opportunities.

“This is changing and it’s excit-ing. It will make a huge differenceto the economy and intellectualcapital of Nelson Mandela BayMetro and the Eastern Cape.”

Software City - PE risingPort Elizabeth is rapidly turning into a software development hub, writes Heather Dugmore

FORWARD-THINKING: One of Korbitec’s software development teams in action

predominantly computer scienceand electrical engineering gradu-ates.

Claassen himself is an electricalengineering graduate from NMMU.

Cape town-based Korbitec, amember of the LexisNexis Group,is one of the international compa-nies that opened a software devel-opment office in Port Elizabeththis year.

“Port Elizabeth is a really goodprospect for us because we are inthe business of product develop-ment, not outsourcing. NMMU andRhodes University are our main re-cruitment areas and have been forthe past 11 years,” Korbitec’s soft-ware development and operationsgeneral manager Peter Raine said.

Also engaging with NMMU, is a

“It will make a hugedifference to the economyand intellectual capital ofNelson Mandela Bay Metroand the Eastern Cape”CHRIS WENTWORTH

GLOBAL APPEAL: The CEO of Port Elizabeth-based softwaredevelopment company a AppN Tech, Direshin Pather

New police response system tested in Bay pilot projectGareth [email protected]

PORT Elizabeth is the testingground for a new policing modelto ensure speedy response timesand better control over the emer-gency control room and officials.

The pilot-project system couldbe rolled out countrywide shouldteething problems be resolved.

This comes in the wake of re -cent crime figures showing a risein violent crimes like murder, carand truck hijackings, and homeand business robberies.

Earlier this week, police sta-tions were ordered to send policemembers, in some cases 10 from a

station, to the operational com-mand centre.

The new system will be rolledout in phases and will allow se-nior police officials to test reac-tion times and resources throughlive monitoring.

The need comes as the 2014-15annual police report revealed av-erage response time for police toan emergency situation in theEastern Cape was 18 minutes –one of the longest in the country.

The new project aims to con-solidate existing hi-tech resour-ces, such as car-tracking devicesand control room computer sys-tems, to ensure a more efficientresponse – particularly to crimes

still in progress.The project is the brainchild of

national Management Interven-tion Unit head and deputy natio-nal commissioner Lieutenant-General Gary Kruser – who is alsospearheading the anti-gang initia-tive, Operation Lock Down.

Similar concepts are alreadyoperational in several first-worldcountries.

The pilot project involves theMount Road cluster, which in-cludes the Mount Road, Hume-wood, Walmer, Gelvandale,Bethelsdorp, Kabega Park and Al-goa Park police station areas.

Should the pilot project work, itwould see police resources com-

bined, leading to intelligence-driven operations and quicker re-sponse times.

The project – which launchedon Thursday – will see the Bay’smultimillion-rand 10111 controlcentre in Korsten monitored bythe operational command centre.

Police spokeswoman ColonelPriscilla Naidu said the centreaimed to integrate and coordi-nate efforts to prevent and com-bat crime within the cluster.

Officials involved with the pro-ject – who declined to be namedas they are not allowed to speakto the media – said the new op-eration placed pressure on crimeintelligence operatives – who

work undercover – to provide in-formation about crime havensand hotspots.

“This would effectively en-hance command and control ofoperational officials on theg ro u n d .

“It allows management to iden-tify hotspot areas through crimeanalysis and then do a mass de-ployment in that area, while thevehicles and officials can be mon-itored by the centre.”

The operational command cen-tre is the heart of the operationand will be manned by staff andsenior officers who can overseeall response (and crime preven-tion) vehicles 24 hours a day and

also assess 10111 to make sure itoperates ef fectively.

One of the officials said the sys-tem would ensure a quicker re-sponse but also allow for betteroversight and control over policeon the road.

“For example, if there is a high-speed car chase and shootout,this system would allow the con-trol room to deploy vehicles to in-tercept the criminals as well asprovide backup to any member inneed without them even request-ing it,” the official said.

“The pilot project aims to iden-tify teething problems so manage-ment can assess if it should berolled out.”

PE court delayshacker’s sentenceTHE mastermind behind a R19.7-millionhacking scam will hear his fate in less than amonth, after yesterday’s sentencing waspostponed in the Port ElizabethMagistrate’s Court.

Former KwaZulu-Natal EducationDepartment official Mduduzi Mkhize, 42,appeared briefly in court, where his casewas postponed to October 6, due to a Zuluinterpreter being sick.

On September 6, Mkhize was convictedon c h a rg e s which included fraud.

He is accused with former NMMU studentLungisa Kosi, Nelson Mandela BayMunicipality former acting head of staffKholeka Ngqondi, her husband Khayalethu,Nonhlanhla Mazibuko, Mandisi Busakweand Phumla Ntonzi, of hacking into the Baymunicipality’s database in August 2009 tosteal close to R20-million.

They are being tried separately fromMkhize and will be back in court onNovember 25.

The syndicate installed a softwareprogramme onto the municipality’sdatabase, which then automaticallye-mailed the keystrokes to a member of thesyndicate.

This information was then used totransfer money from the municipality’saccount. – Tremaine van Aardt

Fund to appealJoost payoutTHE Attorneys Fidelity Fund’s board ofcontrol says its legal representatives haveread the judgment ordering it to pay formerSpringbok player Joost van der WesthuizenR385 000 and have advised there aresound grounds for an appeal.

The Pretoria High Court on Wednesdayordered the fidelity fund to pay the moneyto the ailing former rugby player‚ who saidhe urgently needed the money to be paidout from the trust fund of his formerattorney, Robert Klinkenberg.

The attorney died in December last year.The fidelity fund is a statutory body

whose objective is to protect the publicagainst loss as a result of the theft of trustfunds by legal practitioners.

Van der Westhuizen‚ who is seriously illwith motor neuron disease‚ took the fund tocourt after his claim for the allegedlymisappropriated money was turned down.

The fund said yesterday it appreciatedthe circumstances pertaining to Van derWesthuizen, but that it had a duty to applythe provisions of the Attorneys Act.

“A c c o rd i n g l y ‚ our legal team has beeninstructed to prepare an application forleave to appeal the aforesaid judgment.”

The filing of the notice of appeal willresult in the suspension of the judgment. –TMG Digital

SUBSCRIBERS

PLEASE NOTE:

FOR SUBSCRIPTION QUERIES OR

ANY RELATED INFORMATION PHONE

(041) 504-7130Or alternatively you can

e-mail:

[email protected]

OM\04\01000257

Black

+ +

GreyBlue

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It’s a Jean!

It’s a Legging!

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I am dressed in one minute, and all my buldges are hidden away! Slim Jeggings are super comfy! I love them! No other pants have ever made me feel as sexy or stylish before.They are so amazing and all my friends want them too! A. Lourens – Sandton

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Whether you gain or lose weight, sit or bend, this light-weight fabric with its invisible body shaping core will conform to your body to keep you looking well-toned, in shape and cellulite-free.

3 Sizes available:

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Choosing your size is easy. Simply order the size closest to your regular clothing size.

If you are not completely satisfied with the fit you can exchange or return your set for a full refund. No questions asked!

MILLIONS SOLD

WORLDWIDE -

NOT AVAILABLE

IN STORES!

90DAY

www.takealot.com

www.slimjeggings.co.za

V05