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Apple Unveils ‘Waterproof’ iPhone 7 With Dual Camera

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By Dipo Olowookere

The much-awaited iPhone 7 and 7Plus smartphones from Apple have finally been launched on Wednesday.

They are the company’s next generation smartphones with new improvements.

The iPhone 7, just like the 7Plus, is water resistant and also with two cameras.

It has a similar aluminium look, new pressure-sensitive home button and no headphone socket, a major feature some iPhones users doubted will accompany the new phone.

Instead, Apple replaced the 3.5mm headphone jack with a wireless headphone it called AirPods, which will cost $170 and be in the market in October 2016.

The phone comes with Apple’s latest iOS 10 software for iPhone and iPad with improved notifications and messaging features.

The new iPhone 7 and 7Plus have the Apple A10 Fusion, which gives faster and more powerful processors, replacing the A9 in iPhone 6S released in 2015.

On the battery lifespan, Apple hopes, on the average, that the iPhone 7 will deliver two more hours of battery life than the iPhone 6S.

One of the weak points of the iPhone, the home button, was improved on.

The company has now made the button tweaked to use a similar pressure-sensitive technology as Apple’s MacBook trackpads and the 3D touch screen of the iPhone 6S, which simulate movement using a small vibrating sensation when pressed without actually depressing.

The new button will allow further gesture control and could pave the way for the button to be removed entirely in subsequent versions of iPhones.

For Nigerians, they may have to wait a bit longer before the phones hit the country en masse. But for now, they may have to order online and wait for the iPhone 7 and 7Plus to be shipped to Nigeria. It is believed that the new phones will gulp about N300,000 to acquire.

The launch of iPhone 7 and 7Plus comes barely a week after Samsung made a global recall of its flagship Galaxy Note 7 due to faulty batteries.

Dipo Olowookere is a journalist based in Nigeria that has passion for reporting business news stories. At his leisure time, he watches football and supports 3SC of Ibadan. Mr Olowookere can be reached via [email protected]

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Google, UpSkill Universe Revamp Hustle Academy to Bring Free AI Skills to Africans

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Google Hustle Academy

By Adedapo Adesanya

Google and UpSkill Universe, Sub-Saharan Africa’s leading AI and business skills training partner, have announced a major redesign of the Google Hustle Academy programme. For the first time, the free training initiative is open to everyone, not just business owners.

The new curriculum is focused on equipping individuals and entrepreneurs with practical AI skills and comes at a time when small businesses have become the engine of Africa’s economy, creating over 80 per cent of jobs on the continent. To help them grow, the Hustle Academy was launched in 2022, providing bootcamp-style training on business strategy, digital skills, AI, and leadership. The program has since trained over 18,000 SMEs, with many reporting increased revenue and job creation.

Now, as AI reshapes the job market, the program is evolving. The 2026 edition is built for anyone in Sub-Saharan Africa, including employees, students, and job seekers, who want to use AI to advance their careers. To meet the needs of a diverse audience, the new format includes short, 60-minute webinars and more immersive, high-impact bootcamps. These sessions are laser-focused on putting AI to work immediately in areas like digital commerce, marketing, and growth strategy.

Speaking about the academy, Mr Gori Yahaya, Founder & CEO of UpSkill Universe, said, “The 2026 Hustle Academy is designed to close the AI Skills gap with hands-on training that is short, focused, and immediately useful. AI is reshaping how businesses win and how careers are built, right across this continent. We’re excited to renew our partnership, now in its fifth year with Google, combining their global AI leadership with our deep regional AI expertise. The next wave of AI leaders will come from this continent. We are making sure they are ready.”

The Hustle Academy initiative has strengthened digital competitiveness across emerging African economies by enabling SMEs to move beyond AI awareness to practical implementation, positioning them for sustained growth in an increasingly AI-driven business environment.

“We believe that the future of Africa’s digital economy lies in the hands of individuals and entrepreneurs alike. Our new strategy focuses on scaling reach by training individuals in the latest AI-centred tools and techniques,” said a Google representative.

Applications for the 2026 cohort are now open. Interested participants can apply at: https://rsvp.withgoogle.com/events/hustle-academy

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LINX Launches 12-month No-Charge Promo in Ghana

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By Modupe Gbadeyanka

To develop the country’s internet ecosystem and build a dedicated connectivity community, the London Internet Exchange (LINX) has launched a 12-month no-charge promotion for all services at its new Ghana Internet Exchange Point, LINX Accra.

LINX Accra went live at the end of 2025, providing a regional interconnection point and a platform for networks to meet and exchange traffic, available from PAIX, Onix and the new Digital Realty data centre launched at the end of last year.

As part of its growth drive, LINX Accra aims to attract major global internet carriers and content delivery networks to keep more traffic local to Ghana, building relationships between local networks and encouraging early adoptions through promotion.

A key aspect is growing the local networking and peering community to reduce Ghana’s reliance on international routing, improve latency, and cut costs for networks and end users across the country.

“Ghana’s connectivity ecosystem is growing fast, and our goal, through the promotion, is to remove early barriers and encourage local ISPs to join and exchange traffic from the start.

“We’ve seen in other African markets that once the local community grows, global networks follow, so this is an important step for building community engagement and driving the localisation of internet traffic in Ghana and West Africa,” the Head of Existing Business for LINX, Inga Turner, said.

Ghana is one of West Africa’s fastest-growing digital markets, with over 70 per cent of the country’s 25 million people accessing the internet, and Accra is connected to six submarine cables to provide international connectivity to the country.

The market is also attracting significant data centre investment with new facilities opening every few months.

LINX has had a successful growth in Kenya, building on a similar promotion for LINX Mombasa and LINX Nairobi, which helped establish and expand the connectivity ecosystem, attracting major global networks and content providers to keep traffic local.

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FG to Establish National Cybersecurity Council to Tackle Digital Threats

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By Adedapo Adesanya

The federal government has announced plans to establish a national cybersecurity coordination council to strengthen Nigeria’s response to rising digital threats.

In a statement, the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy said the council will serve as a multi-stakeholder platform to improve coordination, intelligence sharing, and collaboration between public and private institutions.

The initiative, championed by the Minister of Communications, Mr Bosun Tijani, aims to enhance Nigeria’s ability to respond to increasingly sophisticated cyber incidents affecting both private companies and public systems.

“The proposed council is envisioned as a non-statutory, multi-stakeholder coordination platform, designed to convene key actors and strengthen partnerships that support efficient coordination, trusted information sharing, and sustained cooperation among institutions responsible for advancing Nigeria’s cybersecurity posture,” the ministry said.

The council will bring together chief information security officers, cybersecurity experts, technology firms, law enforcement agencies, and relevant government institutions.

It will also provide advisory support to the federal government on strategies and frameworks needed to improve national cyber resilience.

“The approach reflects the government’s recognition that modern cyber threats demand collective defence models, trusted threat intelligence sharing, and multi-stakeholder coordination,” the ministry added.

The move follows recent cyber incidents that disrupted operations and highlighted the “increasingly coordinated and sophisticated nature of cyber threats,” signalling the urgent need for stronger national cybersecurity frameworks.

This development comes amid the rising frequency and complexity of cybercrimes, which have made cybersecurity a vital tool that countries must focus on.

Special policies around data breaches, ransomware attacks, and third-party liabilities have come to the fore. While cybersecurity has been historically underutilised in Nigeria, its critical role in mitigating the financial fallout of cybercrimes and threats has taken a new dimension with the adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Countries are leveraging AI tools to enhance threat detection, automate incident response, and analyse patterns to identify risks early. These AI-driven solutions enable quick and effective responses, improving resilience by detecting anomalies, predicting potential attacks, and mitigating threats before they escalate.

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