yes, i do and it’s actually more important than most people think
the blue flame is what u want, what everyone wants. it means the gas is getting enough oxygen so it burns clean and efficiently. it comes from complete combustion which produces heat, carbon dioxide and water vapor... hotter, safer and better for cooking.
the yellow/orange flame is a warning sign. it means incomplete combustion maybe cos the burner is dirty or airflow is blocked. that color can produce carbonmonoxide which is very dangerous for your health. it also wastes energy and gives you bad heat.
learn something 👍
“Unajua ChatGPT?”
That’s how it starts. On a boda, in a barbershop, in a dorm room in Eldoret or a cyber in Kisii. Some curious soul has just discovered you can ask a bot to write your CV, compose a love letter in Queen’s English, or break down the budget speech in sheng. Before you know it, there’s a ripple. Then a wave. Then Kenya becomes the number one user of ChatGPT in the entire world.
Yes-more than Japan. More than the US. More than the UAE or Israel.
According to a new report from Dataperf, 42.1% of Kenyans aged 16+ who are online use ChatGPT. That’s nearly one in every two internet-active Kenyans talking to a language model more often than to some relatives.
But should this shock anyone?
We’re the nation that turned Twitter and TikTok into a protest platform. That turned memes into manifestos. That turns side hustles into empires. Our lives are digital, our curiosity is unmatched, and our humour… well, it’s illegal in several countries. 😂😂😂
Why are Kenyans leading the AI race?
Because we have to.
With limited job opportunities, rising costs, and a hustler economy that never sleeps, Kenyans have done what we always do-adapt and innovate, with fire in the belly and bundles running out.
We use ChatGPT to:
•Finish that assignment last-minute
•Write speeches for weddings, protests, and presidential dreams
•Fix a CV from 2011 in under 3 minutes
•Build branding for our mitumba or kuku business
•Draft investor decks, LinkedIn bios, or even eulogies (yes, it happens)
So, what does this mean?
It means Kenya is no longer just a consumer of tech. We’re now co-creators of the digital economy.
We’re building AI literacy on the ground.
We’re teaching ourselves and each other through TikTok explainers and Telegram groups.
We’re turning prompts into paychecks.
And when the world asks what’s next for AI in Africa…
Tell them to check where the top users are.
They’re not in Silicon Valley. They’re in Siaya. In Buruburu. In Nakuru. In Umoja 2.
This is Kenya. Broke, brilliant, and beating the world at tech it didn’t even invent.
#KenyaTopsAI #ChatGPTinKenya #AIRevolution #DigitalAfrica #MadeInKenya #HustleTech #FutureOfWork #AfricanYouthLead #ChatGPTUsage #KenyanExcellence
@Leo_manne_ 🤣🤣🤣 Ukulima haitaki roho nyepesi.... But most importantly 'never ever count your chicks before they hatch', learnt that tomato farming, just a week before harvesting and hailstorms did dih ting!, saa hizo umekula mpaka deposit ya broker!
Ngugi wa Thiong'o's book River Between must have greatly inspired Margret Ogola's River & The Source. Ogola, first of the trailblazing feminist writers of the 90s, looks enraged by Ngugi's treatment of female characters. For every female Ngugi kills, Ogola kills 3 men. Payback!