Here’s a quick guide to help you pick the best cake size for your next event🤗
Don’t forget to save this video for later and share with your friends. Follow for more
#sweetlifeadvocate#consumereducator
The Wig Is Home...
On this long road, I have found a home in two worlds: law and creativity. And finally, in a few sleeps, after eight years, the wig comes home.
The sober elegance of the legal profession and the organised chaos of my creative world have coexisted beautifully throughout my journey.
These pictures, this set, are a visual reminder that neither side of me has ever been out of place. Creativity belongs here. And now, so does the wig. #TheCorporateCreative
#CalltoBar
#CalltoBar2026
#RoadtoEsquire
Images by Ireoluwatunmise Ajewole
Creative Assist @annaodiachi
The wait is over.
We have 2 golds: Chimdiebube Onwubiko and Don Anele Munachimso.
We are the best in the world!
Egejurum Onyedikachi’s name was omitted. He should have a gold.
Hello folks,
The Africa Deep Tech Challenge 2026 is here. This year’s theme is The Laptop LLM Challenge: local, on-device AI for the hardware people already have.
We are organizing this competition to surface the best talent and ideas tackling frontier problems in local inference.
The challenge asks builders to create useful language-model applications that run fully offline on standard laptops: 8GB RAM, integrated graphics, no cloud dependency, and no API fees.
Participants submit a working prototype through an open-source GitHub repo.
Submissions are scored on accuracy, speed, and efficiency, with strict resource limits.
The total prize pool is $20,000.
If you are working on local inference, quantization, edge computing, model optimization, or practical deep tech infrastructure, this is worth your attention.
Deadline for submission: August 25, 2026.
Apply here: https://t.co/iv2zdbK2yM
i don't know what kinds of stupid simple stuff people are working on that models one-shot it but for research they still seem to be oddly dumb sometimes in an unpredictable way
I'm going to say something that might upset some people, but I believe it deeply and the evidence backs it up.
The single most powerful thing Black people anywhere in the world can do to fight racism is to become collectively wealthy.
Not just individually successful, but wealthy as a community.
I watched this happen with other groups. When Japan was poor, Japanese people in America were put in internment camps. When Japan got rich, suddenly everyone wanted a Toyota and Japanese culture became aspirational.
Korean Americans were targets of violence in the early 1990s. Today, after South Korea's economic rise, Korean culture is one of the most admired in the world.
The pattern is so consistent it's almost boring: poverty invites contempt, prosperity commands respect.
So when I hear debates about fighting racism in America, I always think the same thing. Yes, call out injustice when you see it, absolutely. But also build businesses, create wealth, and invest in your children's education like your life depends on it.
Make your community so economically powerful that discrimination becomes expensive for anyone who practices it.
That is how you win the game everyone else already figured out.
I didn't know what JEPA is, and at this point I am too afraid to ask ...😬
so I made a video tracing the last 30+ years of self-supervised learning, covering ideas from contrastive learning, distillation, masked modeling, JEPA, and world models.
https://t.co/4HQp48gqYp
Want to hear about where ASR is headed? Check out @HuggingFace's webinar about their new Far-Field ASR Leaderboard with @shinjiw_at_cmu and our own @Julianfmack on Thursday, June 11th.
We'll be chatting about Cohere Transcribe and how to evaluate ASR systems in the real world. Sign up here: https://t.co/TqS7qYn9nO