I just built what could be South Africa's first AI-powered ridesharing app.
I'm just a guy dedicated to building something we can proudly call our own, a platform designed for South Africans, by South Africans.
Try my app on android @hikeappsa retweet and share
Today, we unveil the official SACR logo.
More than a logo, it is a symbol of a growing citizen-led movement committed to accountability, public participation, and ensuring that the voice of ordinary South Africans is heard.
The hand, formed from the colours of our national flag, represents the people of South Africa. It reflects our belief that the Constitution belongs to the people and that citizens must remain at the centre of shaping our country’s future.
We invite every South African who shares these values to stand with us and make this symbol their own.
Reclaiming the Voice of the People.
#SACR #Constitution #AccountabilityMatters
South Africans! 🇿🇦
The SACR constitutional litigation campaign now stands at R471 895 (94%).
Thank you to everyone who has donated, shared the campaign and refused to accept that citizens should be ignored after being invited to participate.
Don’t forget, as public pressure continues to grow, the Constitutional Review Committee in @ParliamentofRSA is scheduled to receive legal opinions on some of the submissions today at 9:30am on Parliament’s YouTube and DSTV channels.
We are within touching distance of our goal. If you believe public participation must be meaningful and that the voices of South Africans matter, please donate and share.
Donation link: https://t.co/iH6QvhGiEe
Breaking: Your smart TV takes a screenshot of your screen twice every second and sells what it sees.
It is called ACR, and it has been running since you set the TV up.
Texas already sued over it. Here is how to turn it off in under 2 minutes:
Morning my fellow South Africans. 🇿🇦
Just a reminder that they used money for bursaries meant to change the lives of ordinary South Africans to fund foreigners 🚮
REMINDER: the future of your Municipality is being decided right now.
Water, electricity, potholes, service delivery, etc.
Have your say through SACR’s online form.
Link: https://t.co/hMZiBdUMFb
Cc @NationalCoGTA#Government#Accountability#SouthAfrica
Why is SACR taking the @ParliamentofRSA to court?
Because South Africans were asked to make submissions on constitutional amendments and now those voices are being ignored.
This legal challenge is about accountability, constitutional compliance, and protecting meaningful public participation.
Support the litigation by donating to SACR.
Donation link: https://t.co/iH6QvhGiEe
بعد الولادة ، فيه كلام قاله لي الدكتور ما عمري بنساه طول حياتي..!
"المشيمة اللي توها طلعت قبل شوي..هذي تعتبر جزء من جسم الأم ، وعضو كامل يتكوّن عشان يغذي الطفل ويخليه يكبر."
بعد الولادة ، الدكتور بدأ يتكلم بهدوء وقال :
لما المشيمة تخلص مهمتها وتنزل من الجسم فهذا يعني ..
At this U.S. visit to China dinner banquet, the most eye-catching figure in the prime center seat between Musk and Cook was Lansi Technology founder Zhou Qunfei—from a rural factory girl to China's richest woman, with absolutely no background to rely on, building everything from scratch through her own grit. She was born in a small village in Hunan Province. At age 5, her mother passed away, and her father became disabled and blind from a work injury, leaving the family in dire poverty with nothing to their name. At 16, unable to afford school fees, she was forced to drop out and head to Guangdong to work in a factory, grinding glass on the assembly line—working days away during the day and furiously self-studying at night, earning certifications in accounting, computer operations, and other skills. That's how she spent a few years, until she scraped together 20,000 yuan from her wages, rallied eight relatives including her brother, sister, sister-in-law, and brother-in-law, and started a small workshop in Shenzhen doing watch glass processing. She handled machine repairs and sales runs single-handedly, grinding away like that for another four years.
By the 2000s, the mobile phone industry began booming on a massive scale. By a stroke of luck, her watch glass factory landed an order for TCL phone screens. She spotted the huge potential in the phone glass market and quickly founded Lansi Technology, specializing in the production, R&D, and sales of phone glass. At first, they only handled domestic phones and knockoffs, but everything changed when she went after a Motorola order—foreign companies had insanely strict quality standards. She bet nearly all her resources to meet Motorola's demands and snagged the V3 order, which sold over 100 million units worldwide, catapulting Lansi Technology straight to industry leadership. From there, she smoothly secured deals with Nokia, Samsung, and other foreign giants.
The pivotal turning point hit again in 2007, when Jobs unveiled the first iPhone, revolutionizing phones toward full-glass touchscreens. Jobs' obsessive craftsmanship demands left the whole world scrambling for a supplier that could meet them. Zhou Qunfei keenly sensed this was another massive opportunity, so she led her team in a three-month joint push with Apple engineers, breaking through key processes to mass-produce the first-generation iPhone glass panels. That locked in a long-term Apple contract, and soon after, nearly all Apple gear—from iPads to MacBooks—went to Lansi Technology for production. It also propelled Lansi to become the world's top player in touch glass panels.
That's why she got to sit next to Cook. But why was Musk right there beside her too?
After dominating global glass panels, Lansi Technology branched into more diverse smart devices, including car cockpits and robots. In autos, they've already locked in deals with 30 carmakers like Tesla, BMW, Mercedes, and Li Auto for windows, center consoles, and more. In robotics, they handle joints, sensors, and other components—areas with deep overlap in Musk's businesses.
A girl who dropped out at 15 with just a junior high diploma, emerging from rural Hunan to build an empire from nothing and become China's richest woman—forty years later, stepping into U.S.-China talks, seated between Musk and Cook. That's Zhou Qunfei's story.
- @hihongjie