July is almost here.
A new cohort.
New opportunities.
New skills.
The first Monday of July marks the beginning of another transformative journey at SQI College of ICT.
Will you be watching the future happen, or will you be building it?
🚀 Admissions are still open.
Your tech career doesn’t just start “someday” it starts NOW
Admission into the Full-Time National Diploma (ND) Programme at SQI College of ICT is still ongoing.
Don’t miss this chance to kickstart your tech journey.
Apply Now: https://t.co/bYaAYUXgCa or message: 0906 281 9993
Interesting point.
The Philosopher David Hume would argue that even our wildest ideas are built from things we've already experienced. You can imagine a flying basket because you've seen a basket and you've seen things fly.
What we often call "impossible" is usually a gap between imagination and capability.
That's why skills matter.
The telephone, AI, and self-driving cars didn't appear because people imagined them. They appeared because people learned, built, tested, failed, and kept going.
That's the foundation of innovation which can only be acquired by skills.
You should have things you don't do, places you don't go to, substances you don't take, words you don't say
By all means, have Principles and Standards.
Your body has been trying to tell you something.
More than 7.2 million cases are currently sitting on NHS waiting lists.
GPs often have just 10 minutes to understand months of symptoms.
We’re building a daily symptom companion that helps people capture what they’re experiencing and turns it into structured health insights clinicians can actually use.
Less time explaining. More time treating.
Your body speaks. We translate it before it’s too late.
We start with the NHS.
Then expand into chronic disease management, maternal health, mental health, and medication monitoring.
The long-term vision?
To become the health memory of the human race.
A future where no symptom is forgotten, no health story is lost, and billions of people can build a lifelong record of their health journey.
Starting in the UK.
Building for the world.
#HealthTech #DigitalHealth #HealthCare #AI
This is how we check World Cup fixtures when there was no access to internet, gone are those days at Ojota, like it’s was so interesting, they will sell to us then unfolded in other to make it easy to access, we will fold it and begin to write score after each match.
Childhood 🙌🏼
SQI COLLEGE OF ICT ANNOUNCES 2026/2027 POST-UTME SCREENING EXERCISE.
SQI College of ICT wishes to inform all qualified candidates who have applied for admission into the Full-Time National Diploma (ND) Programme that the Post-UTME Screening Exercise has been scheduled as follows:
Date: Friday, 19 June 2026
Time: 10:00 AM
📍To apply, visit: https://t.co/g0DQNHNKtS
All candidates are advised to take note of the date and make the necessary preparations for the screening exercise.
For SQI admissions updates, follow
✍️ Signed:
SQI College of ICT
Admissions Now Open for the 2026/2027 Bachelor of Science (https://t.co/3AJbHbyoAS.) Degree Programme!
Take the next step toward achieving your academic and career goals with a recognised Bachelor of Science degree.
Why Choose Our https://t.co/3AJbHbyoAS. Programme?
✅ Flexible Learning Schedule – Convenient classes tailored to accommodate working professionals, entrepreneurs, and busy individuals.
✅ Accredited & Recognised Degree – Earn a respected https://t.co/3AJbHbyoAS. certificate that enhances your qualifications and career opportunities.
✅ Career Advancement Opportunities– Gain relevant knowledge and skills that can help you progress in your chosen field.
✅ Supportive Learning Environment– Learn from experienced lecturers and engage with a vibrant academic community.
📌 Applications for the 2026/2027 Academic Session are now in progress.
Apply Now: Visit https://t.co/vEzvcquCdQ to begin your application.
Call/WhatsApp: 0906 281 9997, 090 628 20000
You store a user's country as a plain text string
in 8 different tables.
Country names change
How many rows do you update?
What should you have done instead?
UI/UX – You love clean aesthetics, hate bad fonts, and say “this app is ugly” 3x a week.
Data Science – You like numbers, spreadsheets, and proving people wrong with facts.
Digital Marketing – You know the trend before it trends. You say “insight” and “algorithm” a lot.
Software Engineering – You solve problems for fun and break things, just to fix them.
Cybersecurity – You don’t trust public Wi-Fi. You lock your phone like it holds CIA secrets.
A king once heard that thieves had become so advanced that they could enter homes without breaking doors, take what they wanted, and leave no trace. So he summoned two groups of men.
The first group were trained guards. The second group were former thieves who had “retired.”
The king gave them the same task:
“Protect this palace from thieves like the ones I described.” The trained guards did what they knew best, they stood at the gates, checked movements, and watched for suspicious behaviour.
But the former thieves did something different. They didn’t just guard the gates, they thought like thieves. They knew where a thief would test weakness, how they would think, and the tricks they would use to confuse security.
That night, there was no robbery.
When the king asked why, the chief guard said:
“We watched the doors.”
The former thief said:
“We thought like the person trying to open them.”
Now bring that into software engineering in the age of AI.
AI has become like that “fast invisible thief”, it can generate code, fix bugs, and build features quickly. But here is the real question:
If you don’t understand what good code looks like, how will you know when AI is wrong?
If you don’t understand debugging, how will you know where the problem is when the app breaks?
If you don’t understand system design, how will you know if the AI built something scalable or something fragile?
AI doesn’t remove the need for developers.
It increases the need for developers who can think like systems, not just type code. Because at the end of the day, AI can write code, but it cannot be fully responsible for whether that code makes sense in the real world.
So software engineering is still a career path. But it is now divided into two types of people:
Those who use AI to write code for them.
And those who understand enough to judge, correct, and direct AI like a tool not a master and only one of those groups will stay relevant long-term.