We produced 50,000 pieces of 40-leaf exercise books to support struggling school children across Nigeria who lack basic writing materials for learning.
Education opens doors to a brighter future. It creates future leaders, innovators, and stronger communities.
XM Charity Foundation.
“If you look at the people we call leaders—go to the Senate, go to the House of Representatives—why should a senator or a member of the House be a praise singer for anyone? Why are those in government not able to face their boss and say, “Oga, this is the truth”? You have people who are supposed to represent the values of society behaving like illiterates. By the time you become a governor, you should be beyond looking for money. Most of Nigeria’s ruling class lack values—they are too cheap. If we truly want to fix this country, we need a principled ruling class. The ruling class needs to have values—values beyond stomach infrastructure.”
—HRM Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.✅
Proud to see this being built right here in Nigeria 🇳🇬
This is how nations grow by creating, innovating, and owning the future.
NEV Motors. Made in Nigeria. 🇳🇬🚗🌍
Nigeria is rising again — and this time, with proof 🇳🇬☕️
From the highlands of Plateau State, Mai Shayi Coffee has helped bring Nigerian arabica back to global relevance, achieving scores as high as 88 points — placing it among the world’s elite specialty coffees.
What was once overlooked is now undeniable. Through discipline, quality, and belief, Mai Shayi Coffee is leading the charge in proving that Nigeria belongs at the top.
This is bigger than one brand.
This is Nigeria reclaiming its place on the global stage. 🇳🇬☕️
Never give up on a good dog 🐕💪
This brave boy was living in the woods with bears
God bless every hero who has a heart and willing to go the extra mile. The play toys were a great idea
Do a good deed today if you can 🇺🇸
My state, Kano, should consider investing and establishing modern meat storage and processing facilities. Such infrastructure would create the opportunity to properly process and preserve meat, enabling the state to transport clean, well-processed products to different parts of the country and even to international markets. It would also reduce the need to transport live animals from the North to the South.
Beyond creating employment opportunities and strengthening the economy, that would further consolidate Kano’s position as a major hub for livestock and meat trade in Nigeria and across West Africa.
#InvestInKano | @Kyusufabba
In Nigeria, there’s an inclusion gap in professional events that many Muslim attendees experience quietly.
When conferences and networking events are planned, organisers often think about publicity, aesthetics, and logistics. But faith considerations are frequently overlooked, even when Muslim professionals are part of the audience.
Last Ramadan, I attended a two-day youth conference in Lagos. Day 2 was held in a church. When we arrived, the service was still ongoing, and attendees waited outside until it ended before the conference setup began.
And I want to be honest about the human side of it.
Imagine how I felt. I had paid for the event, travelled across states, I am Muslim, and it was Ramadan. I did not like it at all.
A friend shared a similar experience. She only discovered the venue was a church after paying, and the registration fee was not small.
Since sharing this, several Muslim professionals have shared similar experiences. Many people are simply not comfortable in those settings, and that discomfort deserves consideration.
I understand that organisers may not always plan around Muslim prayer times. People can step out to pray. That is not the core issue.
The deeper issue is transparency and inclusion.
A church is not a neutral venue for every attendee. If Muslim participants will be present, choosing a faith-based venue without clear communication before registration can place people in an uncomfortable position or leave them feeling overlooked.
To make the point clearer, imagine a professional event hosted inside a mosque with non-Muslims in attendance, without prior notice. Many would understandably pause, ask questions, or opt out. That would not be intolerance. It would be personal conviction and comfort.
Inclusion means planning with that awareness.
To event organisers: if you care about diverse participation, choose neutral venues where possible. If a faith-based venue is unavoidable, communicate early. Give people the dignity of informed consent. Provide a prayer space and build short breaks into the programme where possible.
To Muslim professionals: confirm the venue before making payment. Ask direct questions. Plan for your prayers. Protect your deen.
Inclusion is not only who is invited. It is who is considered in the details.
Professional spaces should not require anyone to quietly compromise their faith in order to belong.
Any skill you’re good at monetize it.
As a trader, monetize your skill.
If you truly know what you’re doing and you’re Profitable:
• Sell structured courses, not hype.
• Offer signal services with proper risk management.
• Partner with exchanges, brokers, or prop firms.
• Provide 1-on-1 mentorship or consultations.
• Build a community people are proud to pay for.
There is nothing wrong with charging for value.
If your knowledge helps someone avoid losses or make money, it has value.
Don’t let broke opinions talk you out of building income streams around your expertise.
This guy just built a driver’s drowsiness detection software using Python. The software detects when a driver is sleepy or distracted and immediately triggers an alarm to wake them up. He also integrated a voice system that speaks to the driver as an additional alert.
The system allows the driver’s company to monitor the driver’s activity, and a report is sent to the company whenever the driver appears sleepy or distracted.
“What kind of brain do the Chinese have?”
— A man says in shock after seeing a massive underground highway built beneath another main road, with a skyscraper rising from below ground level in China.
Aliko Dangote has unveiled plans to build Africa’s largest detergent feedstock plant within the Dangote Refinery complex.
The new facility will produce 400,000 tonnes of Linear Alkyl Benzene annually, enough to meet the continent’s entire demand.
The project is expected to be completed in 30 months and highlights the refinery’s evolution into a broader industrial hub.
This move will reduce Africa’s reliance on imported detergent raw materials and deepen Nigeria’s petrochemical footprint.
https://t.co/wKOWMryEaE
Okay I’m not touching Dangote Refinery shares at listing.
Not because it’s a bad company.
But because most Nigerians buying it will lose money.
Not long term.
Immediately.
Why?
Because hype has replaced understanding.
And in my 8 years as an investor, I’ve never seen this level of noise end well for early buyers. Hype creates bad entries.
Most people aren’t investors.
They’re tourists.
They’ll buy because of headlines, not balance sheets.
Then life will happen.
Bills will come.
Pressure will rise.
And they’ll be forced to sell at a loss.
Great companies still punish impatient money.
Markets don’t reward hype, they tax it.
I’ll wait.
Because when the noise dies, real prices appear. when the hype buyers cry, investors get discounts.