@Mudomo341672@InesKid1@yigenga Des cartes de crédit "corporate" au nom des entités/Entreprises, pas des personnes. Kugira ntibigaruke hahandi ngo amahera yaciye aja kwalimenta marché parallèle
What happened in Bujumbura proved again Abanyagihugu are not the problem! The way people came through for each other is definitely something we need to talk about over and over again!!!! We need to continue holding on to that UBUNTU with every strength we have! #abatwip ❤️
In 2017, I stepped onto the Facebook campus in Menlo Park. They took us to the Oculus VR lab first. A geeky engineer gave us a demo of the VR features and ended on the haptic gloves that let you "feel" virtual objects without touching anything real. Then he paused, voice almost reverent: “Imagine connecting anyone in the world… real social interaction… without ever leaving home.” The demo was amazing but I walked out with a strange feeling. This guy is "solving for humanity" and is excited about a world no longer needs physical human connection
We passed a long hall of developers. One guy—Black, friendly—leaned over his monitors and asked where the group of us (mostly Africans) was from. We chatted. His desk had big screens, half-eaten snacks, the faint smell of takeout lingering. His neighbor, paler watched curiously but, too timid to join. The desks were comfortable, the food smell everywhere, as it was available in every corner. It all felt… contained. Like this campus was its own sealed ecosystem, where the world outside was just data to optimize.
Fast-forward to 2020. I work at Andela, where we placed remote engineers with Silicon Valley teams. Some companies flew their leads over to meet the "remote" teammates in person. When they visited the Kigali campus I went to dinner with them. They were 5. Of this dinner I vividly remember 2 conversations. One guy launched into how "all humans are actually lactose intolerant after infancy… we're the only species that keeps drinking milk." They all nodded, confessed their own intolerances like it was a quirky universal truth. Then came the photos: a dog's birthday party. Balloons, cake, friends invited. The owner beamed like it was his kid's party. I love dogs. But something twisted in my chest. These are the people shaping the tools billions use every day—yet their version of care, connection, family… felt redirected, abstracted.
Now it's 2026, and Sam Altman says training an AI costs less than "raising a human"—because it takes "20 years of life and all the food you eat during that time before you get smart." He compared childhood—first steps, heartbreaks, scraped knees, bedtime stories, learning trust—to server racks and electricity bills. I think back to that VR promise of connection without leaving home… to offices smelling of food and isolation… to dogs celebrated like children while real human messiness gets optimized away
@Martial_Benjam1 partons déjà de ce que L'état peut réguler. Parceque maintenat, umwe wese yidugiriza uko ashaka selon ses ambitions de richesses. None vyose biherere muri speculation?
L’entrepreneuriat local n’a pas besoin d 100aines de milliers de USD pr financer des formations animées par des "experts" étrangers/nationaux
q perçoivent des per diem et salaires élevés.
C dont il a besoin,
c’est d’1 plaidoyer fort, qui vise à rééquilibrer l forces économik