Maker Faire Africa

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Maker Faire Africa, Cairo, October 2011

Presently curated and organized by Emeka Okafor, Henry Barnor and Jennifer Wolfe, Maker Faire Africa is an international organization co-founded by Mark Grimes (Felonious Nun) Emeka Okafor (TED Africa), Lars Hasselblad Torres (IDEAS Global Challenge), Erik Hersman (Afrigadget) and Nii Simmonds (Nubian Cheetah). Maker Faire Africa aims to engage with on-the-ground breakthrough organizations and individual makers to sharpen focus on locally generated, bottom-up prototypes of technologies that solve immediate challenges to development.[1][2]

Overview

The aim of a Maker Faire Africa is to create a space on the African continent where Afrigadget-type innovations, inventions and initiatives can be sought, identified, brought to life, supported, amplified and propagated. At the same time, Maker Faire Africa would seek to imbue creative types in science and technology with an appreciation of fabrication and by default manufacturing. The first Maker Faire Africa was in Ghana in 2009.[3] The second phase was held in Nairobi, Kenya in 2010, the third in Cairo in 2011,[4] the fourth in Lagos, the fifth abroad (Istanbul, Milan, New York City) and the sixth in Johannesburg.[5]

References

  1. ^ "The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind: Creating Currents of Electricity and Hope by [[William Kamkwamba]] & Bryan Mealer". Archived from the original on 2012-10-21. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
  2. ^ Makers by Cory Doctorow
  3. ^ Steve Daniels. Making Do: Innovation in Kenya's Informal Economy. Analogue Digital, 2010
  4. ^ Ali Abdel Mohsen. "Maker Faire Africa 2011 to be held in Cairo on 6 October." Al-Masry Al-Youm, 04/10/2011
  5. ^ "mfa 2014 : Johannesburg, ZA : Maker Faire Africa". makerfaireafrica.com. Retrieved 2017-04-10.

Images

  • Innovative traffic-light, Nairobi, 2010
    Innovative traffic-light, Nairobi, 2010
  • Maker Faire Africa, Nairobi, 2010
    Maker Faire Africa, Nairobi, 2010
  • Sisal Twinner Machine, Nairobi, August 2010
    Sisal Twinner Machine, Nairobi, August 2010
  • Cairo, October 2011
    Cairo, October 2011
  • Cairo, 2011
    Cairo, 2011

Further reading

External links

See also