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TechCabal Crossover: Building African AI From the Ground Up


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Episode Description

An Embedded x TechCabal crossover. Our host, Zain spoke to two African entrepreneurs whose startups are doing incredible things with AI on the continent. Megan Yates from Zindi and Clinton Oduor from Amini share their insights into how AI is solving local problems, from supporting smallholder farmers to building data ecosystems that support innovation and learning. Building AI in Africa won't be easy, and in this episode we discuss what needs to be done around data protection, AI regulation, and skilling up.


Key Highlights

  • 🌍 Data nationalism and its importance for Africa's future

  • 💡 Building small, focused AI models vs. large language models

  • 🌱 Using AI to support smallholder farmers and environmental monitoring

  • 📊 Creating data science opportunities for 60,000+ African practitioners

  • 🔄 The importance of local context in AI development

    Episode Timestamps

    • Introduction and welcome

    • Understanding data nationalism

    • Data collection challenges and solutions

    • Skills needed for the AI era

    • Building local AI solutions

    • The case for small language models

    • Innovation and opportunities in African AI

    • Making AI accessible across Africa

    • Ethical frameworks for data collection


    • Key Quotes

      "Data is the new currency. Data is the new gold, data is the new cobalt. Data is so important that whoever owns data will command and control the highest and the best terms and they will dictate the direction of the world." - Zain Verjee

      "We don't want a situation where people are coming to the continent and solving problems that we have... they don't understand the local context at all." - Megan Yates

      "Sometimes we just don't need a general purpose model. Sometimes we just need some sort of a translation model for just one language to solve one problem." - Clinton Oduor

      "The problem is like, where do we get this data to feed these algorithms that already exist, that people have already proved that they work really well." - Clinton Oduor

      "African tech people want to be working on the continent... there's so many entrepreneurs. What I love from Zindi is that people have actually often used prize money that they've won through challenges to start their own businesses." - Megan Yates


      Featured Insights

      • The importance of building Africa-centric AI solutions

      • Why small language models might be better suited for African contexts

      • The role of data sovereignty in technological independence

      • How AI can support agricultural development

      • Building local talent through competitions and challenges


      • About Our Guests

        Megan Yates, Co-Founder of Zindi Africa

        Co-founder of Zindi Africa. Zindi is one of the top data science and artificial intelligence competition platforms on the continent. They host the continent's largest community of over 60,000 data and AI practitioners and are solving some of the world's toughest challenges using data and machine learning. They also help companies attract and hire top talent, upskill their own teams, and crowd-source fast tailored AI solutions to their problems. Since its founding, Zindi has hosted more than 300 data science challenges across various industries and technical areas. These challenges have a dual purpose: they provide data scientists with practical experience and exposure to real-world problems, while also delivering innovative solutions to businesses and organisations. and they’ve partnered with some big names like microsoft, google deepmind, and nvidia and have distributed over $500,000 in prizes to winning data scientists.


        Clinton Oduor, Head of Data Science at Amini

        Clinton Oduor, a machine learning engineer and head of data science at Amini, and based in Nairobi. The company’s mission is to build the single source of trusted environmental data in Africa and “to enable the resilience of one billion people by 2030”. Amini mainly pulls data from satellites and integrates it with other datasets, including sensor, research and ground data to offer insights on biodiversity, soil or crop health, or to track farming progress and practices (regenerative) like water or fertiliser use.


        Resources Mentioned

        • Zindi Africa Platform

        • Amini's Environmental Data Platform

        • African Data Protection Regulations

        • Small Language Models Development

        • Local AI Infrastructure Projects


        • Connect With Our Guests

          • Zindi Africa: https://zindi.africa/

          • Amini: https://www.amini.ai/


          • Connect With Embedded

            • Website: www.therundown.studio

            • Twitter: @Rundown_Studio_

            • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/100120001/

            • Host: @Zain_Verjee (Twitter)

            • Subscribe to The Rundown Studio's Substack: https://rundownstudio.substack.com/











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