🎯 Step by step AI and ML roadmap with a YouTube playlist 👇
Step 1 - Python programming:
https://t.co/6PYrEOrg40
Step 2 - Foundation of AI/ML:
https://t.co/YEGxnEzrBC
Step 3 - Data Science:
https://t.co/DOc1I5z9Tb
Step 4 - Gen AI + LLM foundation:
https://t.co/K02cQ64Spp
Step 5 - LangChain + LangGraph:
https://t.co/qK4gcECTrd
Step 6 - Model Context Protocol:
https://t.co/ypOY8j402t
Step 7 - Google ADK + A2A:
https://t.co/zOqXPrFdkX
🚨BREAKING NEWS: Ghana president declares I a televised address->
“We are going to stop selling Cacao to foreign countries, buy our own cocoa and transform it locally”
@ezekiel_aleke Career growth doesn’t happen passively. If you’re not applying for roles and taking interviews routinely, you’re not positioning yourself to move up. I applied for three roles today before completing my first task of the day and I randomly get rejection mails, stay focused on you
@iam_Uchenna There’s no need to worry, you have the knowledge, technical expertise, and experience to secure any data analytics role in this country. Just be yourself, highlight your soft skills, and make a strong, lasting impression.
You be baba. No worry.
This is a hands-on, practical SQL training designed to take you from beginner to advanced level in just 4 weeks.
You’ll complete 10 world-class SQL projects and assignments that simulate real-life data challenges.
Register here: https://t.co/hkRmAWv6r3
according to psychology people who often talk to themselves build fake scenarios and have full conversations in their heads often assume it’s normal. but in reality, it’s a form of self regulation, away to process emotions when there’s no one who truly understands them. 1/5
Chimamanda Adichie, you are a liar, a terrible human being and a veiled ethnic bigot.
The Nigerian Civil War was a tragic series of complex political, ethnic, and military events, not a fictional tale of religious persecution or oil greed.
First, let’s set the record straight. On January 15, 1966, a coup was carried out by mostly Igbo junior military officers, including Major Chukwuma Nzeogwu and Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna. The coup led to the assassination of top political and military leaders from the North and the West, such as Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa, Ahmadu Bello (Premier of the Northern Region), and Samuel Akintola (Premier of the Western Region). Notably, President Nnamdi Azikiwe, the only prominent Igbo in national leadership, was conveniently out of the country on medical leave at the time.
Although the coup was officially presented as a move against corruption and misrule, the ethnic tilt of the victims and the survival of key Eastern leaders (especially Major General Aguiyi-Ironsi, an Igbo who became Head of State after the coup) led many in the North to perceive it as an Igbo led power grab.
This perception triggered massive reprisals. In May and September 1966, waves of attacks swept through Northern cities, targeting Igbo civilians. Thousands were brutally murdered, and countless others fled back to the Eastern Region. This was not unprovoked; it was clearly a reaction to the January coup, not a spontaneous or religiously motivated act. To suggest religion was at the heart of the conflict is not only historically false but dangerously revisionist.
Then came May 30, 1967, when Colonel Odumegwu Ojukwu declared the Eastern Region an independent Republic of Biafra, citing the massacres and failure of national reconciliation (including the collapsed Aburi Accord) as justification.
But contrary to the idea that Biafra simply wanted to “secede and be left alone,” Biafran forces went on the offensive almost immediately. In August 1967, they launched “Operation Torch” an invasion of the Mid-Western Region (present day Delta and Edo States), capturing Benin City, and advancing as far as Ore in present day Ondo State, just 150 km from Lagos, the federal capital at the time. That was not a defensive move. It was a bold attempt to encircle and destabilize the Nigerian federation, possibly even capture Lagos.
This was not simply a war for self-determination within the East; it was a military campaign to take over territories outside Biafra, including non-Igbo areas that had not consented to secession.
Lastly, the common myth that “Nigeria fought Biafra because of oil” does not align with the timeline. In 1967, the full economic value of crude oil from the Niger Delta (A region not in the South East) was not yet realized. Most of Nigeria’s earnings still came from agriculture, and the oil infrastructure was still developing. To suggest that oil was the primary reason the war was fought is a lazy, ahistorical take.
Let’s honor the memory of those who died by being honest about the causes and consequences of the war, not by reshaping it into a one-sided narrative to fit modern agendas.
@iam_Uchenna I currently dey look into creating a tool that can run a sequence of SQL scripts for a validation process in python and have some kind of GUI where other users can run the tool on their own data.
📞