Insights

Field notes from the continent.

Analysis, tutorials, and stories from PANEOTECH engineers, designers, and consultants on the realities of building digital systems for African markets.

Filtered insights

11 results

Tutorials

Offline-First, Multilingual Mobile Architecture: Engineering Knowledge Platforms for Sahel Connectivity

A mobile knowledge platform for the Sahel that assumes continuous connectivity and a single language is a platform the audience cannot use. Offline-first multilingual architecture is not a feature. It is the structural premise that decides whether the platform reaches the users whose decisions it exists to inform.

Read More
Field Notes

Translating Institutional Frameworks into Caregiver-Ready Content: Editorial Discipline for Infant and Young Child Feeding Platforms

The WHO and UNICEF infant and young child feeding framework is widely accepted institutionally. Translating it into content that caregivers can use in the moment of decision is a different problem. The architectural answer is editorial discipline, and the engineering supports it rather than replacing it.

Read More
Case Studies

Mobile Knowledge Platforms for Vulnerable Populations: The UNICEF Mauritania Young Child Nutrition App

Institutional nutrition frameworks reach caregivers unevenly through frontline health workers and mass communications. A free mobile knowledge platform reaches them in the moments of decision the frameworks exist to inform. The architectural answer is content the audience controls, and the discipline is institutional rather than technical.

Read More
Tutorials

Low-Bandwidth Web Performance for African Audiences: Engineering for Sub-3-Second Loads on Constrained Connections

A web platform that takes ten seconds to load on the connections the audience actually has is a platform the audience does not use. Engineering for sub-three-second performance on constrained connections is not a feature. It is the discipline that decides whether the audience reaches the platform at all.

Read More
Tutorials

AI on Public Sector Platforms: Grounded, Cited, and Subject to the Same Editorial Governance as Everything Else

Public sector AI cannot tolerate hallucination. The discipline of grounding every answer in cited source material, and routing every AI output through the same editorial governance as human content, is what makes it institutionally viable.

Read More
Field Notes

Engineering Public-Facing Content with Private Member Workflows: Three-Tier Architecture for Volunteer-Driven Platforms

A volunteer-driven content platform has three substantively different audiences with three substantively different needs. A single-tier deployment fails all of them. The architectural answer is three distinct surfaces sharing a single backbone, and the discipline is editorial as much as engineering.

Read More
Case Studies

Harmonising PFM Diagnostics: The Quiet Discipline Behind Continental Benchmarking

Cross country PFM benchmarking is only as credible as the harmonisation methodology underneath it. Treat performance normalisation as an analytical discipline, not a UI feature, and the platform earns the trust of finance ministries.

Read More
Case Studies

Youth-Led Digital Fact-Checking at National Scale: The Veilleurs du Web Programme in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Top-down fact-checking campaigns reach the audiences that already trust the institutions running them. Youth-led fact-checking reaches the audiences institutions cannot. The architectural answer is a platform that supports the volunteers themselves, and the discipline that makes it work is institutional rather than technical.

Read More
Tutorials

Multi-Stakeholder Knowledge Architectures: Library, Collaboration, and Tools as Three Distinct Surfaces

A platform that conflates the documentary library, the collaborative environment, and the operational tools into a single surface fails all three. The architectural answer is to treat them as three distinct surfaces with shared identity, and the discipline is editorial as much as engineering.

Read More