MycoTile grows mushroom roots to make affordable, eco-friendly panels. Fungi-based materials could help ease Nairobi’s housing shortage. Mycelium panels cost about one-third less than traditional ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. A Kenyan company makes building panels from mushroom roots that cost two-thirds the price of traditional materials ...
The rollout will cover all eight regions of the company, following a successful six-month pilot in Nairobi that began in ...
Kenya’s cloud and artificial intelligence boom may be entering its most consequential phase yet, as new data suggests local consultancies, AI startups and systems integrators stand to earn ...
Opinion
Business Daily Africa on MSNOpinion
Why Kenya’s next economic leap will be depend on its engineers
Engineering is no longer just a profession, it is a national imperative. The 32nd Institution of Engineers of Kenya (IEK) International Convention, under the theme Engineering the Future: The Roadmap ...
A convergence of political leaders, regional diplomats, and environmental advocates gathered in Nairobi for the official ...
AllAfrica on MSN
Kenya: DCI Unveils First-Ever Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Investigation Training Module
The Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) has officially launched a pioneering Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Investigation Training Module, a landmark initiative aimed at strengthening Kenya's ...
NAIROBI – A large mushroom farm near the Kenyan capital of Nairobi is one of a kind: It grows fungi on an industrial scale — not as food for restaurants but as a building material that some Kenyans ...
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