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WHAT ARE THE
SERVICES?
Charles
James Kelly is voluntarily committed to skill development to
improve literacy and quality of lives in the rural
communities for the globalization world here in South Africa.
Our computer training is free of charge & a small
Administration fee.
Below
is one among the great mind of the world and the pride of
Nigerians and black Africans in General (Nigerian Scientist).
CNN Calls Emeagwali:
A
FATHER OF THE INTERNET
Asking: Who is the Father of the
Internet? is like asking:
Who invented
the supercomputer
that gave rise to the Internet.
In reality,
no one individual
invented the Internet alone.
It has many fathers,
as well as mothers,
uncles, and aunts.
It was not even born
at one place
or time.
Instead,
it grew organically and
incrementally,
following trails
that are non-intersecting.
Take the trail of
Philip Emeagwali,
whom CNN called
"A
Father of the Internet."
Emeagwali theorized
that 65,000 computers
around the Earth
could forecast the weather.
His theoretical supercomputer,
with 65,000 nodes,
is known today as the Internet.
Using 65,000 processors,
he invented a formula
that inspired
the reinvention of the supercomputer
as thousands of electronic brains
that occupies the space of
four tennis courts.
Bill Clinton explained,
in a televised speech
(as president)
that Emeagwali's formula
helped give rise
to the age of information.
Yet his invention is one that,
unfortunately,
few of us recognize.
Certainly,
inventions such as this
deserve better.
After all,
can you send your email
without computers and
the Internet?
Theorized
Internet-Supercomputer
invented by Emeagwali.
Emeagwali's Discoveries Helped
REINVENT THE SUPERCOMPUTER
The word "computer"
was coined 700 years ago.
If history repeats itself,
the supercomputer of today will become
the computer of tomorrow.
Emeagwali's discovery of a formula
that enables supercomputers
powered by 65,000 electronic brains
called "processors"
to perform
the world’s fastest calculations inspired the reinvention
of supercomputers -
from the size and shape of a love seat to a thousand-fold faster machine
that occupies
the space of four tennis courts,costs 400 million dollars a piece, powered by 65,000 processors and that can perform
a billion calculations
per second.
Emeagwali solved
the most difficult problem
in supercomputing
by reformulating
Newton’s Second Law of Motion
as 18 equations and algorithms;
then as 24 million algebraic equations;and finally
he programmed
65,000 processors
to solve
those 24 million equations
at a speed
of 3.1 billion calculations per second.
Emeagwali's 65,000 processors,
24 million equations
and 3.1 billion calculations
were three world records
that garnered international headlines,
made mathematicians rejoice,
and caused his fellow Africans
to beam with pride.
When Emeagwali won
the 1989 Gordon Bell prize,
the “Nobel Prize of Supercomputing,”
then-president Bill Clinton called him
“one of the great minds
of the Information Age.”
The New African magazine readers
ranked him as
history's greatest scientist
of African descent.
Emeagwali is the
Most Searched-For Scientist
Emeagwali is the
World's Top Scientist
Internet poll of 300 million daily searches proves it.
Clinton (Formal President of USA) calls
Emeagwali a "Great Mind"
Excerpt from his
White House
televised speech:
"One of the great minds
of the Information Age
is a Nigerian American
named Philip Emeagwali.
He had to leave school
because his parents
couldn't pay the fees.
He lived in a refugee camp
during your civil war.
He won a scholarship
to university and went on
to invent a formula
that lets computers make
3.1 billion calculations
per second. (Applause.)
Some people call him
the Bill Gates of Africa.
(Laughter and applause.)
But what I want to say
to you is there is
another Philip Emeagwali
-- or hundreds of them --
or thousands of them
-- growing up in Nigeria today.
I thought about it
when I was driving in
from the airport and
then driving around
to my appointments,
looking into the face
of children.
You never know
what potential
is in their mind and
in their heart;
what imagination they have;
what they have already
thought of and
dreamed of
that may be locked in
because they don't have
the means to take it out.
That's really what education is.
It's our responsibility
to make sure
all your children
have the chance
to live their dreams
so that
you don't miss
the benefit
of their contributions and
neither does the rest of the world." (go to
emeagwali.com to
read more of this great man of our time)
“Charles
comment” Sir we are pride of you, for bringing a light to
our generation, especially to the part of the part of the
world we come from Nigeria (Biafra)
which I believe that we shall achieve that name (Biafra) to
come into existence even though some people and our enemies
will always be laughing saying, we’re having an impossible
dreams. I address myself as a Biafran wherever I am even
though am still using that passport called Republic of
Nigeria.
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