• Knowcap.ai links every generated document to its exact video extract to ensure full traceability.

  • The platform structures meetings and screen activity into decisions, action plans and project documents.

  • Knowcap.ai centralizes project knowledge and acts as an active memory for teams.

Hassan Arslan, an Egyptian-born entrepreneur and business consultant, serves as the founder and CEO of Knowcap.ai, an AI-powered governance platform that converts meetings and on-screen work into verified project documentation.

Knowcap.ai, launched in January 2025, analyzes meetings and observes screen interactions to produce structured summaries, formalized decisions, action plans and project documents. The platform links each generated document to a corresponding video extract. This feature enables users to verify who said what, in which context, and to access the source with a single click.

The platform acts as an active memory for projects. Instead of allowing essential information to disperse into personal notes or fragmented exchanges, Knowcap.ai consolidates all elements into shared, easy-to-consult documents. This centralized structure improves progress tracking, supports the understanding of past decisions and speeds up the onboarding of new team members.

Knowcap.ai reinforces transparency by linking every document to its video proof. Users can independently verify information, which reduces ambiguity and disputes over decisions or statements made during meetings. This mechanism strengthens trust and collective accountability.

Arslan also serves as founder and CEO of SMETools, a solution he launched in 2023 to support the digitalization of small and medium-sized enterprises through collaborative projects. He additionally works as Chief Technology Officer of ariika, a direct-to-consumer furniture and homeware brand he co-founded in 2011.

Arslan holds a bachelor’s degree in commerce from the American University in Cairo, earned in 2013.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 13:19 Written by
  • The Health Ministry will deploy a national digital platform to coordinate patient transfers between hospitals.

  • The system will impose a maximum 48-hour response time for urgent transfer requests.

  • The platform integrates with ground and air medical transport services, including the Civil Protection and Air Algérie.

Algeria’s government continues to expand its national digitalization agenda, which now extends to the health sector where needs remain critical. Authorities aim to modernize essential services and improve continuity of care across the country.

The Health Ministry plans to launch a digital platform to organize patient transfers between hospitals. Health Minister Mohamed Seddik Aït Messaoudene announced the initiative on Thursday, 11 December, during a presentation before the Council of the Nation. The platform seeks to streamline a process that remains complex, especially in southern and High Plateaus provinces where access to specialized care remains limited.

The system will establish a fully digital workflow for filing, tracking and validating transfer requests, which are currently processed through multiple uncoordinated channels. The minister said these operations follow a strict regulatory framework requiring each request to be reviewed within reasonable timelines. He added that urgent cases must receive “a maximum response time of 48 hours.”

This project forms part of Algeria’s 2030 national digital transformation strategy, which prioritizes the modernization of public services. It comes as authorities seek to improve continuity of care across a vast territory with significant geographic disparities. Southern provinces, which represent more than 80% of Algeria’s land area, continue to face limited access to several medical specialties, making transfers essential for cases requiring advanced expertise.

The platform will automate several key steps, from registering requests to verifying medical criteria and transmitting files to the teams responsible for evaluation. It will also track compliance with response deadlines and facilitate the activation of emergency protocols when needed.

The system will connect to all medical transport services, including ground ambulances and air evacuation units operated by the Civil Protection, Air Algérie, and, in the most critical situations, the Algerian Air Force.

The transfer-management platform aligns with Algeria’s broader effort to digitize its health system. The government is deploying the Electronic Medical Record (EMR), establishing the National Agency for Health Digitalization (ANNS), expanding telemedicine, and adopting new national cloud solutions for hosting health data.

This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 13:16 Written by
  • Positeams, founded in 2020, enables companies to track employee experience, motivation and needs through regular and customizable surveys.

  • The platform provides data-driven insights, including trend analyses, word clouds and anonymous chat feedback, to guide HR and leadership decisions.

  • Positeams also recommends action plans and training content to help managers implement organisational change.

Companies face a growing need to understand the real experience of their teams. Samir Tamri uses technology to provide a precise and practical response to this challenge.

Samir Tamri, a Moroccan computer scientist and tech entrepreneur, is the founder of Positeams, an online platform that helps companies understand their employees and strengthen daily engagement through a simple and accessible tool.

Tamri launched Positeams in 2020. The platform allows companies to deploy regular or customized surveys to track employee experience, motivation and needs over time. Its purpose is to offer management and HR departments a clear and continuous view of workforce sentiment without complex procedures.

Positeams relies on a rigorously developed set of questions designed to deliver reliable feedback across multiple aspects of professional life. The platform analyzes responses to identify significant trends and provide companies with actionable interpretation.

The company also offers feedback analyses that highlight recurring themes, including through word clouds that display the most frequently cited topics. An anonymous chat tool enables employees to express themselves freely, ensuring continuous and authentic internal listening.

Beyond collecting feedback, Positeams recommends concrete actions to address identified needs. The platform allows companies to structure action plans, monitor progress and access online training resources designed to support managers in driving organizational change.

Alongside Positeams, Samir Tamri serves as founder and CEO of North African Game Distributors (NAGD). Launched in 2008, the company operates in the distribution, development and publishing of video games and is considered a leading player in Morocco’s touchscreen gaming market.

Tamri created his first company, Arabium.com, in 2001 as a community portal for Arab singles living in the United States.

He holds a bachelor’s degree in computer science from Drexel University, obtained in 1999. He began his career in 1997 at Unisys as a software engineer.

Between 2001 and 2015, he worked as a senior software engineer at AMI Entertainment Networks, which specializes in innovative entertainment solutions. From 2017 to 2018, he served as chief technology officer at Taxi Rouge, a Moroccan e-mobility start-up.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 13:06 Written by

Villgro Africa, in partnership with The Fred Hollows Foundation, is accepting applications in Kenya for the Eye Health Innovation Accelerator 2026. The programme targets Sub-Saharan African startups developing technology solutions to improve access to eye care.

Selected startups will receive strategic support and may secure between $100,000 and $250,000 in seed funding.

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 09:40 Written by

Tanzanian fintech NALA has received approval from the Bank of Ghana to launch its money transfer services, formalized through a Letter of No Objection and a strategic partnership with local provider BigPay. The collaboration will enable direct transfers to bank accounts and mobile wallets, significantly reducing costs and processing times.

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 09:32 Written by

The National Science and Engineering Infrastructure Agency (NSEIA) launched its FutureMakers programme on Thursday, Dec. 11. Aimed at children aged five to 16, the initiative seeks to boost innovation and core skills in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

The programme will run from December 2025 to February 2026 and will select 60 participants from the country’s six geopolitical zones. Top performers will be eligible for prizes of up to 5 million naira (about $3,500) and scholarships.

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 09:27 Written by
  • South African start-up Meetable organizes weekly group dinners that match six strangers based on personality, interests and availability.
  • Founder Sibs Qetu-Yates launched the platform in 2025 and reports over 1,000 people matched since launch.
  • The company prepares a B2B offering, Meetable for Work, to help employers strengthen team cohesion across cities.

Meetable, a South African digital platform, seeks to reconnect people socially in a hyper-connected yet socially fragmented urban world. The company aims to reconcile modern technology with authentic human interaction through shared dinners booked via its web and mobile applications.

The Cape Town–based start-up launched in 2025 under the leadership of Sibs Qetu-Yates. The platform facilitates the weekly organisation of group meals that bring together six strangers selected according to their personality traits, interests and availability.

Users book a dinner online through the app or website, pay a fixed fee and join a group of six people at a partner restaurant. The model aims to recreate the conditions of genuine social encounters, far from the dynamics of social networks or conventional dating applications.

“Cities are full of people, but loneliness is rising,” Qetu-Yates said. “Adults often struggle to make friends after university, especially if they move to a new city or work remotely or in hybrid mode.” She added: “Dating apps dominate the space of ‘new connections,’ but very few apps exist purely for friendship and human relationships.”

Since launch, Meetable reports connecting more than 1,000 people, with many events selling out. The concept appeals to newcomers to major cities, expatriates, remote workers and individuals in transition who often seek social anchors in unfamiliar environments.

The start-up also prepares a B2B service called Meetable for Work. The offering targets companies that want to strengthen cohesion among employees spread across several cities. The platform intends to rebuild social ties, reinforce team spirit and reduce workplace isolation.

As African cities continue to expand and mobility reshapes traditional social structures, platforms like Meetable could play a significant role in rebuilding social bonds and supporting the integration of new arrivals.

This article was initially published in French by Adoni Conrad Quenum

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 03:20 Written by
  • MindHYVE.ai and the Inter-University Council for East Africa signed a partnership to equip 170+ universities with AI learning tools and certifications.
  • The agreement enables universities to access ArthurAI, 50 certified courses, and AI literacy credentials co-issued with the California Institute of Artificial Intelligence.
  • The two-year programme aims to build regional AI skills, improve academic mobility, and align higher-education systems with labour-market demand.

The rise of artificial intelligence continues to redefine educational priorities across East Africa. The region, shaped by a young population and a fast-changing economy, seeks to structure its capability building to remain competitive in the global digital transformation.

MindHYVE.ai, Inc., a US-based company specialising in agentic artificial intelligence, and the Inter-University Council for East Africa (IUCEA), the regional body responsible for higher-education harmonisation, signed a partnership on Tuesday, December 9, in Kampala. The agreement aims to turn the region into a future AI skills hub by equipping IUCEA-member universities with advanced learning tools and internationally recognised certification programmes.

“This partnership marks a defining moment for East Africa. Equipping our universities, educators and students with AI knowledge and ethical mastery is essential for the advancement of our region,” said Professor Idris A. Rai, IUCEA’s acting executive secretary. He underscored the region’s ambition to strengthen its competitiveness in the global digital economy.

In its first phase, the agreement will give more than 170 universities access to ArthurAI, MindHYVE.ai’s agentic learning platform, which will be deployed through a regional pilot. The project also includes 50 certified courses under the “The Dawn Directive” programme, AI literacy and proficiency certifications co-issued with the California Institute of Artificial Intelligence, and training sessions for lecturers and academic leaders. A joint committee will supervise the two-year implementation, evaluation and potential scale-up.

This collaboration emerges as demand for digital skills accelerates. East Africa, home to one of the continent’s youngest populations, still struggles to meet the needs for advanced training in emerging technologies. The World Bank estimates that sub-Saharan Africa could create nearly 230 million jobs requiring digital skills by 2030, even as qualification gaps continue to hinder this transition. Governments in the region are adopting national AI, innovation and higher-education reform strategies, creating favourable conditions for regional initiatives.

The implementation of this partnership should enable East Africa to train more students and professionals in skills essential to a digital economy. It also provides universities with a shared foundation to enhance programme quality, increase academic mobility and structure training pathways aligned with the region’s rising technological needs. The initiative could further support member states’ efforts to modernise higher education and integrate emerging technologies into academic curricula.

This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 02:55 Written by
  • Ezeebit converts customer crypto payments into local currency settlements for merchants with no exposure to volatility.
  • The platform processes payments by converting crypto to USDT instantly, then to South African rand (ZAR) for merchants.
  • Ezeebit enables in-store and online crypto payments through POS systems, QR codes, and an API for e-commerce.

Daniel Katz’s initiative addresses a major barrier that still limits the adoption of digital payments in Africa. It enables merchants to access a new category of transactions while maintaining the stability of their operations.

Daniel Katz, a South African entrepreneur and co-founder and chief executive of Ezeebit, leads a start-up that allows African merchants to accept cryptocurrency payments while receiving settlements in local currency without any exposure to price swings in digital assets.

Ezeebit, founded in 2022, aims to make cryptocurrency payments as simple and secure as traditional transactions. The company seeks to create new growth channels for merchants by giving them access to customers who prefer to pay with digital assets, while ensuring that settlements remain stable in local currency.

The solution enables customers to pay with a wide range of cryptocurrencies, while merchants receive their settlement in South African rand (ZAR). Ezeebit eliminates the risk of market volatility by automatically converting the cryptocurrency paid into the stablecoin USDT at the moment of the transaction. The company then converts and transfers the equivalent amount in local currency to the merchant’s bank account.

In physical stores, the payment process works through an electronic point-of-sale terminal. Staff enter the amount in ZAR, select the blockchain network and the cryptocurrency, generate a QR code, scan it, and print the receipt. Merchants may also display a static QR code in the shop for customers to scan before selecting the amount, the cryptocurrency, and their wallet.

For online shops, Ezeebit offers a crypto payment gateway that lets merchants add digital asset settlement options to their e-commerce platforms. Ezeebit ensures next-day settlement in fiat currency through an API integration.

Before Ezeebit, Daniel Katz co-founded Delve Systems in 2019, where he served as chief technology officer until 2023. That start-up helps retailers and brands make data-driven decisions using real-time insights, forecasts, and predictive analytics.

Katz graduated from the University of the Witwatersrand, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering in 2019 before pursuing a master’s degree in the same field.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 02:43 Written by
  • HireSales uses AI-driven precision matching to analyse job descriptions and candidate profiles simultaneously.
  • The platform, created in 2024, connects companies to a vetted pool of sales talent in South Africa.
  • HireSales enables companies and candidates to publish profiles and receive automated matching based on skills, experience and cultural fit.

After several years in South African banks, Brandon Ragunanan moved into entrepreneurship. He developed a system that rethinks how sales candidates are identified and ranked.

Brandon Ragunanan, a marketing specialist and entrepreneur based in Cape Town, is the founder and chief executive of HireSales, a recruitment platform dedicated to sales professionals.

HireSales, created in 2024, connects companies to a pool of sales talent in South Africa. The platform analyses job postings and candidate profiles at the same time to propose matches based on skills, experience and organisational culture.

HireSales operates with artificial-intelligence technology focused on “precision matching.” The system examines job descriptions and CVs in detail to identify the profiles that best meet company needs. Its filters and algorithms isolate suitable candidates within a large talent base and integrate qualitative criteria such as compatibility with the work environment.

Companies create a profile and publish their recruitment needs, while candidates join the talent pool and input their career information. The platform then automates the matching process. Users access the suggested matches, contact candidates and adjust their criteria at any time through the online interface.

Alongside HireSales, Brandon Ragunanan serves as sales and marketing director at C Life Marketing, a South African marketing company. He graduated from Damelin in 2009 with a bachelor’s degree in marketing.

He began his professional career the same year at Nedbank as a channel manager. In 2011, he joined Bidvest Bank Ltd as corporate relationship manager. Between 2014 and 2018, he held the position of regional sales director at Altron, a South African technology group.

This article was initially published in French by Melchior Koba

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

Posted On vendredi, 12 décembre 2025 02:36 Written by
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