I’ve seen people land jobs through posts here, so I’m giving it a shot. I’m a Frontend Developer with 3+ years of experience building websites for businesses, skilled in React, TypeScript & Next.js. Open to remote roles/freelance gigs,
My portfolio: https://t.co/DtTeGrLhwU
What the actual hell.
And you guys ask me why I don’t like AI. It’s because of the intentions behind it.
These people openly talk about turning intelligence into a utility they control and sell back to humanity like electricity.
One man or one company should never have that much influence over human thinking, creativity, learning, and decision making.
I genuinely don’t think kids should be heavily exposed to AI this early either. A generation growing up depending on machines to think for them is dangerous long term.
Countdown is on: 2 days to go! 🍕
Proudly partnering with @Zcash for this year's event. Let's talk tech, history, and why privacy matters. 🛡️
CC: @ZecHub@CQ_Elzz
7 Days to go until Bitcoin Pizza Day 2026! 🍕
Get ready for another unforgettable hangout with Blockchain Lautech as we celebrate the historic first real-world Bitcoin transaction 💙
🎮 Fun & Games
🧠 Quiz & Giveaways
🍕 Pizza & Drinks
🤝 Meet & Greet
📅 May 22, 2026
📍 Venue: TBA
🎟️ This is an invite-only event and FREE passes are already being distributed within the community.
Stay active during the campaign period… yours might be next 👀
#BitcoinPizza
Nigeria just set 150/400 as the minimum university admission score. That's 37.5%.
Polytechnics? 100/400. A pass mark of 25%.
This is how nations fail.
Meanwhile:
🇨🇳 China — 10 million students compete annually in the Gaokao. One exam. Brutal. No mercy. You either earn your place or you don't.
🇰🇷 South Korea — the Suneung is so serious that military drills stop, flights are rerouted, and the entire country goes quiet on exam day. 31% of students retake it to improve.
🇯🇵 Japan — entrance exams are so rigorous that students spend years in preparation school (ronin) just to qualify.
Oxford and Harvard don't lower the bar so more people can get in. They raise the bar so the best are forced to rise.
Nigeria has over 200 million people, the talent exists, but when you tell a generation that 37.5% is enough, you get garbage in, garbage out — at every level of public life.
The crisis in Nigeria isn't just political. It starts here.
#Nigeria #Education #JAMB #NigeriaEducation #HowNationsFail
are building something cool?
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There’s a new kind of burnout now.
Not from working too much.
From trying to keep up
with tools, models, frameworks, launches,
and 600 people saying “it’s over” every morning.
I am crashing out this morning.
Petrol is now ₦1,000 per liter. Yesterday evening, NEPA brought light for less than 10 minutes. Less than 10 minutes. Then darkness. From then till now, nothing. Absolute nothing.
And this is the part that burns me. Every serious country on earth knows that oil prices are tied to global crises. Wars, sanctions, supply chain chaos. These things will always happen. That is why functioning nations invest in their power grid. So that when fuel becomes expensive, ordinary people are not stranded. They have electricity. A backup. A system that works.
In Nigeria, the backup is dead. The grid barely survives on a normal day. So when the world shakes and fuel prices climb, the common man gets punished twice. Expensive fuel and no light. Not even for 30 minutes. You are on your own in every direction.
Do the maths with me. A small generator burns about 1 liter per hour. At ₦1,000/liter, running it for just 5 hours a day is ₦5,000. That is ₦150,000 a month. The minimum wage is ₦70,000. You would need more than double your entire salary just to power a generator. Just to have light in your house. Not luxury. Light.
Someone will say use solar. With what money. A basic home setup costs ₦500,000 to ₦1.5 million. The same worker earning ₦70,000 would have to save every single kobo for over a year. No food. No rent. No transport. Just saving. And even that is not enough.
I talk about investing and building wealth on this page every single day. But I would be lying to you if I said any financial strategy can survive this. How do you budget when the system is fighting you from every angle. How do you plan when the most basic thing a government should provide does not exist.
This is not politics. This is pain. And the arithmetic does not lie.
I got a message request here yesterday about a Web3 job.
Before I even had the chance to think of posting it publicly, I had already recommended 3 of my friends who are great at it.
That’s when it hit me, most opportunities never make it to the public. Insiders get first access.
Build a solid circle today.
Deployment was so difficult they launched Vercel.
Google was time-consuming, so they built Stack Overflow.
Debugging APIs was painful, so they built Postman.
Design handoff was chaos, so they built Figma.
Team communication sucked, so they built Slack.
Payments were messy, so they built Stripe.
Finding answers was slow, so they built ChatGPT.
Writing CSS repeatedly was exhausting, so they built Tailwind CSS.
Frontend state became unmanageable, so they built Redux.
Deploying backend apps was painful, so they built Heroku.
Setting up servers was hard, so they built AWS.
Manual testing wasted time, so they built Selenium.
Local dev setups broke often, so they built Docker.
Managing Git visually was confusing, so they built GitHub.
CI/CD was slow and brittle, so they built GitHub Actions.
Authentication took weeks, so they built Auth0.
Forms validation was repetitive, so they built Formik.
Tracking bugs manually failed, so they built Sentry.
Meetings wasted time, so they built Zoom.
So the next time something wastes your time,
don’t ignore it.
Don’t normalize it..
Someone just submitted a ticket asking why their laptop is running slow.
I remote in. They have 3 Chrome windows open with 60+ tabs total.
I close all but 5 tabs. Computer runs fine now.
I write in the ticket: "Resolved - Optimized system memory allocation and cleared background processes."
They reply: "Wow, thank you! What was wrong?"
I reply: "Just some resource management issues. Should be good now."
I didn't lie. I just used technical language to describe "you had way too many tabs open."
If I say "close your tabs," they'll feel scolded. If I say "optimized memory allocation," they'll feel helped.
Same result, better optics.
Also, they'll probably open 60 tabs again next week and submit another ticket.
And I'll "optimize" it again.
This is called job security.