@Liko,
No one "got" fired for buying
Trade Bank, Kenya National Assurance, Lehman Brothers or Fokker, but try that today and tell me what will happen.
IBM did not come from space in a blue spacesheep (pun intended) at one time they where the underdog selling weighting scales but they did not wait for government intervention in the same way that Liko did not wait for the KICTB a.k.a KICTA to fund him before starting various ventures.
@All
Please read what is posted in its entirety and stop forming religious sects based on single bible verses such as "and Jesus wept", the mention of IBM in the tender could not be made generic just as we can not have a generic tender when ordering spares for the President's jet (it must be for a Fokker). The server being
upgraded, please note the operative word here which is upgraded, is an IBM.
No one but ourselves are responsible for killing our industry because we believe that an amorphous collection of bits and bytes needs to have a say, even the so called free internet has a duly constituted and registered organisation behind its activities.
When we send requests to the CS and PS who will they say sent it, in the event that they would like a formal report who will sign it, when they want to appoint someone to a board where do they send the email and if someone needs to be sued who will be served?
Regards
Robert Yawe
KAY System Technologies Ltd
Phoenix House, 6th Floor
P O Box 55806 Nairobi, 00200
Kenya
Tel: +254722511225, +254202010696
From: Agosta Liko <agostal@gmail.com>
To: robertyawe@yahoo.co.uk
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke>
Sent: Thursday, 19 September 2013, 7:57
Subject: Re: [kictanet] How we are killing our Kenyan ICT Industry, what we could do to revive it!
The reason these projects are "designed" for big boys is .. you never get fired for hiring ibm
"No one ever got fired for buying IBM” (or “Nobody gets fired for buying
IBM") means that no one gets fired to making the safe pick and choosing
an industry leader. Other companies might have better products or offer
lower prices, but they often come with greater risks. The phrase
possibly dates to 1978 (or earlier), but was used most frequently since
1984.
In the 1990s, the phrase became: “No one ever got fired for buying
Microsoft.” In the recession of 2008, the phrase became: “No one ever
got fired for buying gold.”
http://www.barrypopik.com/index.php/new_york_city/entry/no_one_ever_got_fired_for_buying_ibm_microsoft_gold/
Technocrats are making safe choices - thats why Accenture and all those "experts" came to tell us what we should do with our BPO sector ..
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