everyone is building products quick, but they get less visibility - imagine spending hours to build and no one knows your product
Already built a community for it - https://t.co/hXMZZOuDbm
— Ministry of Interior website is hacked
— Ministry Of Health Website hacked
— Ministry of Agriculture website hacked
— The Presidency Account hacked
But hey, let's build an AI center and name it Aku after we impose laws on the Tech guys through NITA.
I want to thank everyone for the outpouring of love and thank you for believing in me to lead the company that has always put you at the center of our work. This is not goodbye. It’s a hello to John and I can’t wait for you to get to know him like I do! 🙏
50 years of @Apple
From the early days of the #iPod to bringing the #iPhone into the world, some of the most formative years of my career were spent there. The products and teams stay with you. But more importantly so does how Apple thinks.
A few lessons that have held true for decades:
1) Start with the user, not the tech. The question isn’t “what can we build?” but “what problem actually matters?”
2) Focus is everything. Apple is defined as much by what it says no to as what it builds.
3) End-to-end matters. Hardware, software, services. It all has to work together.
4) Details are the product. What feels small is what users remember.
5) Debate hard. Commit fully.
6) Build for the long term.
We’re in another moment of massive technological change. The fundamentals haven’t changed.
The companies that win build things people actually use and can’t imagine living without.
Congrats to everyone who has been part of Apple’s first 50 years! 🙌
Gold prices are at historic highs. Ghana is Africa's largest gold producer and is also one of the IMF's biggest African debtors.
Ghana tries to raise royalties to close that gap.
The US and China immediately show up together to say no.
This is what resource colonialism looks like in 2026.
President Nkrumah, together with five comrades Kojo Botsio, Komla Agbeli Gbedemah, Archie Casely-Hayford, Krobo Edusei, and N.A. Welbeck, wore FUGU during the Declaration of Independence on 6th March, 1957.
President Nkrumah chose FUGU over Western suits to symbolize African pride, cultural identity, the African Personality, and a rejection of colonial norms. It was a bold Pan-African statement made at the historic event held at the Old Polo Grounds in Accra.