Silicon Mountain

Silicon Mountain
Town
Buea (Silicon Mountain harbor) from the foot of Mount Cameroon
Buea (Silicon Mountain harbor) from the foot of Mount Cameroon
Nickname: 
Silicon Mountain
Map
CountryCameroon
RegionSouth West Region
DivisionFako
Time zoneUTC+01:00

Silicon Mountain is a nickname coined to represent the technology ecosystem (cluster) in the Mountain area of Cameroon, with its epicenter in Buea. The name refers to Mount Fako. Silicon Mountain is currently[when?] home to tech startups and a growing community of developers, designers, business professionals as well as universities such as the University of Buea, Catholic University Institute of Buea, Saint Monica University and many others. This region occupies the entire Fako Division of the South West Region of Cameroon. The phrase originally was the de facto reference to the Buea Tech Community popularized during local tech community meetups such as BarCamp Cameroon 2013, Google I/O Extended Buea 2015 and the Kamer Design Meetups; but has eventually come to refer to the community of developers, creatives, organizers, business professionals, universities in the area.

Origin of term

Landscape of Mount Fako

The Silicon Mountain is a term used to refer to the tech ecosystem (cluster) in Fako division of Cameroon with epicenter Buea. The term is a play ( phrasal portmanteau ) on Silicon Valley and Mount Fako (which is the most dominant feature of Cameroon's topography and the highest geographical point in West and Central Africa). It was first used publicly by Rebecca Enonchong at the BarCamp Cameroon conference which took place at Catholic University Institute Of Buea, Buea in 2013.

History

Buea city

Silicon Mountain is located in and around the city of Buea,[1] which according to social scientists[citation needed] was founded by a hunter in search of game. Eye Njie Tama Lifanje came from the Bomboko clan behind the Buea Mountain (Mount Cameroon or Mount Fako). On that fateful day he founded Buea, he had set out in search of animals but there were no game to be hunted only a vast piece of hospitable land that could harbor his family. Eyé Njie named it “Mwea”, meaning, hospitable land for farming. The settlement soon grew into a clan but made tardy progress until the later part of the 19th century, when there was an influx of Europeans into Africa for exploration and colonialism purposes.[2] Tea growing is an important local industry, especially in Tole. Buea was the colonial capital of the German Kamerun from 1901 to 1919, and the capital of the Southern Cameroons from 1949 until 1961. The German colonial administration in Buea was temporarily suspended during the eruption of Mount Cameroon from 28 April – June 1909. Originally, Buea's population consisted mainly of the Bakweri people. However, due to its position as the defunct capital of the Federated State Of West Cameroon, regional capital of the South West and university town, it has attracted a significant number of other ethnic groups.

Bismarck Fountain in Buea
Side view of the Prime Ministers Lodge in Buea

The epicenter of the Silicon Mountain, Buea, hosts the University of Buea, the first Anglo-Saxon-styled university of Cameroon, alongside the Catholic University Institute Of Buea, the Pan African Institute Of Development, just to name a few. The city still has a handful of colonial era buildings, notably the palatial former residence of the German governor, Jesko von Puttkamer. Other German colonial buildings especially the Prime Minister's Lodge (Schloss) and the Bismarks' fountain are still standing, albeit some of them suffer from lack of maintenance and old age. As of 2010, a study[citation needed] showed that about 3000,000 people live in Buea ( including Bokwaongo, Muea, Bomaka, Tole, Mile 16 (Bolifamba), Mile 17, Mile 15, Mile 14 (Dibanda), Bova, Bonjongo, Likombe, Buasa, and surrounding villages). It also hosts the Nigerian Consulate in Anglophone Cameroon and is the main operational hub of the Naigahelp medical aid organisation.

In 2017, businesses in Silicon Mountain were negatively affected by several internet shutdowns that authorities enacted in the English-speaking areas of Cameroon in an effort to clamp down on criticism of the government.[1]

Silicon Mountain Annual Conference

The Buea Tech ecosystem starting from 2015 organizes the annual Silicon Mountain conference popularly referred to as #SMConf (2021 hash tag) or SMCON (as of 2023) which brings together over 500+ like-minded creatives and hackers from the Mountain Area and around Africa for two days of sessions, labs, speakers. It features tech talks, design and code labs. The Silicon Mountain Conference has the following;

SESSION Categories

  • Creativity Workshops
  • Panel Discussions
  • Community Pavilion
  • Startup Booths

Universities, Colleges, Professional Schools

  • University of Buea
  • Catholic University Institute of Buea
  • Saint Monica University
  • University College of Technology
  • Trustech Institute of Technology
  • St. Joseph's College, Sasse
  • Buea Institute of Technology
  • PanAfrican University Institute Buea.
  • Higher Institute of Management Sciences
  • Bilingual Grammar School, Molyko
  • Baptist High School, Buea
  • Bishop Rogan College, Soppo
  • Fotabe Universal Higher Institute of Cameroon
  • Fotabe Entrepreneurial leadership academy
University of Buea Campus. "The place to be"
Elephant Monument at the University of Buea

Mobile apps

  • Another Eye

Technology Startups

There is a growing[when?] number of high technology startups/companies headquartered in Silicon Mountain as is listed below;

  • Abeboh
  • AfroVisioN Group
  • Agro-Hub
  • Akwajobs
  • Aleigro
  • Another Eye
  • BlueMOON Outsourcing
  • Bohikor
  • Buyam
  • Colorfluid
  • Clone Multimedia
  • Digital Renter
  • FeePerfect
  • Ferdsilinks
  • Findie
  • FindMe
  • Flip2Read
  • GI-ANT TECH
  • Go-Groups
  • Hitech-cm
  • Jombba
  • Kiffcode
  • Kilimanjaro Systems
  • Maibeta
  • Makonjo Media
  • Matriix
  • Mountain Cooperative Credit Union (MOCU)
  • Mungenow Properties
  • MyGaz
  • NdissaGroup
  • NGT
  • Njorku
  • Njangi.io
  • Nkwa
  • Loop Technology
  • Panus
  • PiAR
  • Pulse
  • Quesers
  • Quick Ticket
  • SBSC
  • Skademy
  • Skylabase
  • Summitech
  • Swift Tech
  • Swychr
  • Tech Republic
  • TeksTedia
  • Touko Banix
  • Vehseh
  • WandaGuides
  • Wasamundi
  • Webshinobis
  • Yopisode
  • Zepstra
  • Zinger Systems
  • Zito Financial
  • Zuoix

Startup Incubators

Tech Blogs

Technology Communities

There exist local developer communities aimed at promoting Computer Science, programming, Startups and developer technologies. These local tech communities organize large gatherings with demos and tech talks, to events like code sprints and hackathons.

  • Buea Docker Hub[3]
  • Buea Mozilla
  • Buea JUG
  • Buea WAAW Stem Cell
  • Bamboo (Artificial intelligence and Robotics)
  • Cameroon Programming Contest
  • Elite Programmers Club
  • Meta Developer Circle Buea (DevC Buea)
  • Google Developer Group Buea (GDG Buea)
  • Google Developer Group Limbe (GDB Limbe)
  • Hardware Innovation Valley Community(HIVC)
  • JavaScript Junkies Buea
  • Nervtek Community
  • Play With Python
  • Women Techmakers Buea
  • WordPress 4 Startups
  • ICOTEL
  • UB R-Club

Non-Tech Communities

  • SWAG-PD
  • Juicii
  • Njangi Farms
  • Nanny Africa
  • Tohkam
  • Huslas Cameroon

See also

Further reading

The Standard Tribune [4] The Observers France 24 [5] The Guardian Newspaper [6] E-Kwat News Mag [7] Africa News Hub [8] Disrupt Africa 2016 - Silicon Mountain Conference[9] The Afro Hustler Magazine [10] BBC Africa Business Report 2016 [11] Made In Buea Blog[12] Daily News Cameroon [13] Mifos Initiative Blog[14] Disrupt Africa News 2015 [15] TechCabal News 2015 [16] VC4Africa on Cameroon [17] Makonjo Media [18] Disrupt Africa News [19] Silicon Mountain Conference Website [20]

References

  1. ^ a b Ritzen, Yarno (2018-01-26). "Cameroon internet shutdowns cost Anglophones millions". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2018-08-02.
  2. ^ "History of Buea - Buea.cm". 2016-02-21. Retrieved 2016-09-28.
  3. ^ "Docker Buea". Meetup.
  4. ^ "This website is currently unavailable". thestandardtribune.com.
  5. ^ "Welcome to "Silicon Mountain," Africa's next tech hub".
  6. ^ Ford, Tamasin (26 July 2016). ""I couldn't even pay for the internet": the Cameroonian who built jobs site in his bedroom" – via www.theguardian.com.
  7. ^ "Silicon Mountain Buea – E-KWAT TV BLOG". 18 June 2016.
  8. ^ Hub, Africa News. "2nd annual Silicon Mountain conference set for Cameroon".
  9. ^ "2nd annual Silicon Mountain conference set for Cameroon". 31 May 2016.
  10. ^ Sandra, Borno (15 April 2016). "Cameroon: Silicon Mountain Community in BBC World News. #MustWatch - Afro Hustler".
  11. ^ "Cameroon's high-tech hub". 15 April 2016 – via www.bbc.com.
  12. ^ "MADE IN BUEA – welcome to silicon mountain buea !". madeinbuea.com.
  13. ^ "Home — Daily News Cameroon". Daily News Cameroon.
  14. ^ "Summiting the Silicon Mountain in Cameroon - Mifos Initiative". mifos.org. Archived from the original on 2016-08-05.
  15. ^ "Cameroon to host 1st Silicon Mountain Conference for startups". 17 June 2015.
  16. ^ "Cameroon's Silicon Mountain Community Holds its First Technology Conference - TechCabal". techcabal.com.
  17. ^ "VC4Africa and Cameroon's startup Entrepreneurs".
  18. ^ "How Silicon Mountain Evolved into Cameroon's Most Vibrant Techsphere".
  19. ^ "Cameroon to host 1st Silicon Mountain Conference for startups".
  20. ^ "Silicon Mountain Conference website".

4°09′10″N 9°14′28″E / 4.1527°N 9.241°E / 4.1527; 9.241