Hi Everyone! @mintylimeke is hiring for 2 full-time positions in Videography/Editor and UI/UX.
Please apply here if qualified: https://t.co/ZrFmSv0VVw
RT For awareness
#ikoKaziKe
Our Prayer Today and always🙏🙏
Proverbs 24:3-4 NKJV “Through wisdom a house is built, And by understanding it is established; By knowledge the rooms are filled With all precious and pleasant riches.”
Carrefour Kenya just quietly added one of the most useful AI features I’ve seen in local retail. You can now simply:
- Paste your shopping list
- Type your shopping list
- Or upload an image of your shopping list
And the app automatically finds the products and suggests items to add directly to your cart. Just like that.
Honestly, this is one of those examples of AI that might not make headlines but will save people real time.
Because Me personally?I don't enjoy searching for: “tomatoes, milk, tissue, cooking oil, bread, detergent, yoghurt, toothpaste, onions…” one item at a time.
Shopping online often feels like playing a scavenger hunt designed by someone who has never entered a supermarket.
This AI removes that friction. And that’s where AI shines. Not necessarily in replacing people…but in eliminating unnecessary work.
The most successful AI implementations won’t always be the flashy robots, viral videos, or futuristic demos.They’ll be the features that quietly save you:
* 5 minutes
* 10 clicks
* 20 searches
* and a little bit of your sanity.
What’s interesting is that we’re increasingly seeing Kenyan businesses move from talking about AI to actually embedding it into customer experiences.
That’s the real shift.
The winners in the AI era may not be the companies building the biggest AI models. They may be the companies asking: “What annoying task can we remove for our customers?”
Because convenience scales. And consumers quickly become addicted to things that make life easier.
I suspect after using this feature once, manually searching for every item in your shopping list is going to feel a little bit like typing phone numbers from memory lmfaoo.
Technology is at its best when it becomes invisible.
You don’t notice the AI. You just notice that shopping got quicker.
Have you tried it yet? I just added a list sent to me and BAM!
Wrote this when Kenya signed the US health pact. This Ebola quarantine facility seems less about the disease and more about lopsided transactions that Kenya is getting into with the US: https://t.co/lNxqsD4brg
When you pray for opportunities, keep your phone close and reachable. Do not ask God for open doors while your phone is on airplane mode, silent, or forgotten somewhere. Some chances come once, with urgent deadlines, and they reward those ready to answer. Stay alert.
Fuel is the backbone of movement, trade and access to services which keeps our economy active and fluid. When its price spikes, the effect is immediate. Transport costs rise. Food prices follow. Small businesses struggle to stay afloat. Essential services become harder to access.
For ordinary Kenyans, this will be the daily reality of choosing between mobility, food and basic needs.
The ongoing strike by the motorists’ association is a warning signal of the fragility of our economic stability amid high fuel costs. The nationwide transport strike is likely to disrupt supply chains, stall economic activity and paralyse urban and rural mobility alike.
Workers are unable to reach their jobs. Goods will fail to reach markets. Emergency and essential services would face delays.
The combined effect of high fuel prices and a transport shutdown risks pushing already strained households and businesses to the brink. This is how economic pressure quickly becomes a social crisis.
I urge the Government to engage urgently and meaningfully with stakeholders in the transport and energy sectors. We need sustainable, transparent and accountable interventions that stabilise fuel prices and protect livelihoods.
Failure to act will expose millions of Kenyans to deepening economic hardship and reduced access to essential services.
#MatatuStrike
A business without records is a rumour. Write everything down. Sales, expenses, debts, stock, suppliers, customers and losses. Data protects you from emotional decisions.
Saturday medical reminders:
-Don't give honey to babies <1year, you will make your baby sick.
-Don't use antibiotics for a cold.
-PEP isn't an alternative to condoms.
-Never self medicate. Google doesn’t substitute professional medical advice.
RT to create awareness ✅