UK- Based Nexintell Ltd Unveils Infralytics-GIIS As It Enters MVP Development Phase
From dismantling radios in rural Nigeria to designing intelligence systems...
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Nexintell Ltd, a UK-based infrastructure intelligence company, has announced the development of Infralytics-GIIS (Global Infrastructure Intelligence System) as it progresses from a validated working prototype toward a decision-grade minimum viable product (MVP).<br />
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The system is designed to support governments, regulators, infrastructure planners and development institutions by transforming fragmented infrastructure data into structured, explainable, and decision-ready intelligence. The MVP phase will focus on a defined use case where intelligence-led planning can demonstrably improve infrastructure outcomes.<br />
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The announcement represents a key milestone for Nexintell as it formalises infrastructure intelligence as a dedicated decision layer, rather than a reporting or visualisation tool.<br />
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Infrastructure Planning Challenges Driving the Need for Intelligence<br />
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Across digital and physical infrastructure systems, large volumes of data are generated daily, including coverage maps, asset inventories, performance metrics, satellite imagery, and policy documentation. Despite this, infrastructure investment decisions often continue to result in duplicated assets, underserved communities, and gaps between planned coverage and real-world outcomes.<br />
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According to Nexintell, these challenges frequently stem from limitations in how infrastructure systems are interpreted and prioritised across multiple stakeholders, rather than from a lack of deployment capability or data availability.<br />
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This gap between data and decision-making quality formed the basis for the company’s establishment.<br />
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Founder Background and Company Origins<br />
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Nexintell was founded by Ogaba Joseph Attah, who brings over a decade of experience working across telecommunications, enterprise systems, and mission-critical digital infrastructure environments.<br />
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During this period, Ogaba Joseph Attah observed a recurring pattern: infrastructure initiatives often struggled not because the wrong technologies were deployed, but because decision-makers lacked ...