Good day @MTNNG , I got the 5g router recently to improve my connectivity and working condition from @JumiaNigeria
Only for me to go and register it at a certified MTN registration center and I was told the number is invalid which most likely means someone else is already using the number of my new 5G router. Please I need a solution to this. Thank you
CC @MTN180@MTNNG
Do you know there’s something called “destabilization campaign,” usually used by foreign intelligence agencies like the CIA, against governments that oppose U.S. political and economic interests?
Let me know if you find any of these methods familiar 😉
1. Propaganda and Disinformation: Funding and managing media networks, planting stories, and running psychological operations (PSYOPs) to sway public opinion against the sitting government.
Say me hi to your media houses.
2. Economic Sabotage: Restricting international loans, orchestrating boycotts, and inducing labor strikes to cripple the target nation's economy and create domestic unrest.
3. Political Interference: Funding, training, and organizing opposition political parties, anti-government student movements, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs).
4. Paramilitary Operations: Equipping, financing, and advising militant factions, insurgents, or sympathetic military leaders to execute regime change.
Yea, the CIA claims they’re no longer into regime change operations so it might just be coincidence that some of the above listed operations have been seen in certain countries recently.
Disclaimer: I think I’m coming down with malaria so don’t take my word for it.
Let the "Esthers" fast and pray but let them also risk their lives and speak to the King.
God's generals who do "opening prayers" at political rallies and palaces should at least be loud about the bloodshed in the land.
However, if they are too afraid of losing the King's favor, they shouldn't expect their fasting and prayer to have much impact.
There are moments in life you can’t explain with strategy or talent, but with the God factor.
My name is Goodness Agaeze, I am a documentary photographer and this is the story behind the photo everyone has been talking about.
That Sunday started like every other service day...
There's just something about exam season, you have a valid excuse to put every other aspect of your life on pause. It's as if your life's goal is to just pass that exam, and nothing else matters.
Leadership conferences?
"The reg. fee is too exorbitant. Money wey I go use chop for 3 days?"
“Oya join Zoom webinar, Google Meet, X Space...”
"I don't have data..."
Okay, okay...
In the end, we all win. 🤝🏾
Inserts:
Serious with God? "No, I don't want to become a pastor."
Building a solid spiritual life? "I'm still in my soft girl era."
Personal development?
"I don't like reading books."
"Listening to podcasts is not my thing..."
NiMSA? You didn’t join.
FAMSA? Not interested.
IFMSA? Never bothered.
No affiliations outside your medical school.
Volunteer for outreach? Nope.
Student politics? Nowhere to be found.
Research? No time.
Skills training? Not for me.
Okay, at least get distinctions… Ah, still no.
I woke up at 4am with one question: why am I building this? why am I building Pewbeam?
Yesterday evening, while replying to customers, I scrolled past an Instagram post from weeks ago. A first-timer at my local church—Celebration Church, Ibadan—had tagged Pewbeam in a photo. He said we were part of what made his first Sunday whole.
I sat with that for a long minute.
8 months ago, I just wanted to build software.
In a few hours, about 300 churches around the world will open Pewbeam to put scripture on a screen the moment their pastor speaks. 300 churches. At an average of 1,000 members each. 300,000 people.
The projectionist in the booth. The media guy at the laptop. The pastor mid-sentence reaching for a verse. They are doing arguably the most important work in the world.
That's the answer.
Pewbeam exists so pastors, media teams, and members get an unbroken Sunday, scripture, songs, lyrics instantly, no hindrance between the message and the congregation.
To the ~300 churches running Pewbeam today: we've got you 🧡
Values are not just words, they're seen in what you do when push comes to shove. Any leader worth his salt stands by them no matter what.
Onto the next......😁
Two weeks ago, I got on a call with one of our paying churches because they were experiencing an issue with Pewbeam.
During the call, I found out they run three services every Sunday, with an average of 1,000 people in each service. They were using Pewbeam to project scriptures across at least 10 screens.
That moment shifted something for me.
I told my team: if Pewbeam works well in this church on Sunday, we are helping over 3,000 people follow the sermon more clearly. But if it fails, we are not just failing one media team, we are letting down 3,000+ people.
That gave us a deeper sense of responsibility.
We are not just building presentation software. We are supporting moments where people are trying to hear, see, and follow God’s word.
I might be wrong on this but there's never been a time Nigerian women were locked out of the work force and had to enter it en masse. I think we overly westernize our reality.
The closer truth is that yes, working moms helped popularize indomie but that's because Nigerian staples take notoriously long to make. So mothers, many who were already working, found Indomie extremely convenient— a full meal in a pack, in 2 minutes.