Charlette Desirée N'Guessan is an Ivorian software engineer, tech entrepreneur and writer. She was the first woman to win the Africa Prize For Engineering Innovation for the image recognition system, BACE API.
Charlette N'Guessan | |
---|---|
Born | Charlette Desirée N'Guessan c.1994 |
Nationality | Ivorian |
Education | Meltwater Entrepreneurial School of Technology |
Occupation | software entrepreneur |
Employer | BACE Group |
Known for | first woman to win the Africa Prize For Engineering Innovation |
Life
editN'Guessan was born in about 1994. Charlotte's name is not unusual in her family as all of her five sisters have that name.[1] She studied at the Meltwater Entrepreneurial School of Technology in Accra which is where the idea for the software was first developed. In 2018 she created her company BACE group.[2]
N'Guessan was living in Ghana when she became the first woman to win the annual Africa Award for Engineering Innovation awarded by the British Royal Academy of Engineering,[3] in the 2020 competition to showcase engineering science. After being the first African woman to receive this award, she also raised the honor of Ghana being the first to reach this high level. N'Guessan won the award because of the technology she and her team created BACE API, a technology that identifies and identifies African people. The announcement was made by the Cameroonian entrepreneur Rebecca Enonchong on behalf of the judges.[4] This technology has been made wise in order to be identified and evaluated through thinking and wisdom in an easy way, which the public and many companies have been satisfied. The technology can verify a person's original photo or video taken on a cell phone and quickly identify the target.[4]
The BACE API software uses Ghanaian Passports and other documents for authentication and verification.[5] This relied on good cooperation with the officials who are in charge of this part of the country's government. The technology was created to help companies that rely on personal identification. Two Ghanaian companies are using the software to identify their customers.[5]
When she achieved this success, she received an award and praise, including from the minister of Africa in the UK, James Duddridge.[5]
Writing
edit- Space Fostering African Societies: Developing the African Continent through Space, Part 1 - contribution to Annette Froehlich's 2019 book[6]
- She discusses "AI Opportunities in the African Financial Sector" in "The AI Book: The Artificial Intelligence Handbook for Investors, Entrepreneurs and FinTech Visionaries", 2020[7]
References
edit- ^ "The Charlettes: An AI engineer in Ivory Coast and Ghana". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ "Featured Speaker: Charlette N'Guessan Desirée:Tech founder & AI Consultant". World Bank. February 21, 2023. Retrieved 10 November 2024.
- ^ Vanguard, The Patriotic (2022-04-22). "Harnessing Africa's Creativity and Innovation to drive human development". The Patriotic Vanguard. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ a b Salaudeen, Aisha (2020-09-07). "A 26-year-old is first woman to win the Royal Academy of Engineering's Africa Prize". CNN. Retrieved 2024-11-10.
- ^ a b c Engineering, Royal Academy of (2020-09-03). "Charlette N'Guessan is the first ever woman to win the Africa Prize, and the first winner from Ghana". FE News. Retrieved 2024-11-11.
- ^ Froehlich, Annette (2019-12-24). Space Fostering African Societies: Developing the African Continent through Space, Part 1. Springer Nature. p. 261. ISBN 978-3-030-32930-3.
- ^ Bartoletti, Ivana; Leslie, Anne; Millie, Shân M. (2020-06-29). The AI Book: The Artificial Intelligence Handbook for Investors, Entrepreneurs and FinTech Visionaries. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-55190-4.