
Audio By Carbonatix
Microsoft Corp. plans to spend more than $100 million over five years to open its first development centers in Africa to work with local partners and governments, as well as hire engineering talent.
Initial sites will be in Nairobi, Kenya’s capital, and Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial hub.
The software giant plans to hire 100 full-time developers at the two sites by the end of this year and expand to 500 by the end of 2023, Microsoft said in a statement Tuesday.
The Redmond, Washington-based company plans to use the sites to recruit African engineers to work in areas such as cloud services, which use artificial intelligence and applications for mixed reality – where customers use goggles to project 3-D images onto the real world.
Cloud technology companies like Microsoft, Amazon.com Inc. and Huawei Technologies Co. are looking to expand in Africa to take advantage of growing telecommunications infrastructure and work in areas like e-commerce and mobile payments.
Microsoft has been partnering and looking for cloud customers in Africa where it has opened data centers in South Africa.
Microsoft said it is working with Kenyan and Nigerian companies in areas like financial technology, energy and agriculture. Cloud rival Amazon, whose Amazon Web Services is larger than Microsoft’s Azure, is also opening a data center in Africa next year.
Latest Stories
-
Boakye Agyarko marks Easter Sunday with a call for Godly leadership ahead of nationwide campaign tour
21 minutes -
Pepsi withdraws as UK festival sponsor after Kanye West backlash
24 minutes -
Pope Leo calls for global leaders to choose peace in his first Easter Mass
32 minutes -
Kpando MP highlights progress on road projects
46 minutes -
Government secures $92m for Engineering and Agriculture University
52 minutes -
Several Ghana-bound vegetable trucks detained in Nigeria
2 hours -
Black Sherif questions Wendy Shay’s absence in “Artiste of the Year” talks ahead of TGMA 2026
3 hours -
Government confirms arrival of 100 new buses to ease transport challenges
3 hours -
$600m tomato imports undermining Ghana’s economy — Chamber of Agribusiness
5 hours -
Rainstorm wreaks havoc: Faulty transformers, feeder failures leave parts of 3 regions without power
5 hours -
CUTS International calls for urgent competition law amid sachet water price hikes
5 hours -
‘I never did this advert’, AI clones hijack Ghanaian identities for profit
6 hours -
25-year-old woman battles trauma after surviving deadly Nkwanta attack
6 hours -
Vice President honoured at Tortsogbeza as South Tongu leaders highlight development needs
6 hours -
Kwahu Business Forum 2026: Corporate citizenship, sustaining African businesses take centre stage with KGL as the case study
7 hours