Nobody is coming to automate Nigeria out of poverty. π₯ The nations winning today trained their people BEFORE the machines arrived. While others debate threats, we see a massive opportunity. The real gap is human capital β and we have everything it takes to close it fast!
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4/ What's next
β’ 10 generations of evolution
β’ YouTube + TikTok posting
β’ Revenue: $1 β $100 β $1K
Documenting every dollar.
Follow along. This is either going to be huge or hilariously educational. π¬
#buildinpublic#AI#automation
π BUILD IN PUBLIC: Day 1
I built an AI agent swarm that creates content autonomously.
4 agents spawned. 2 videos generated via Higgsfield Pro. $0 spent.
The swarm is alive. π§΅
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3/ Why this matters
Evolution algorithm:
β’ Measures engagement per video
β’ Keeps best agents, mutates their DNA
β’ Spawns new generations
Natural selection for content.
It GETS BETTER over time.
The smartest thing you can do is look at what you already have and ask: what's the cheapest, simplest way to make this work with the power we actually have? Not the power we wish we had. Solar sensors. Mechanical timers. Simple stuff under $50.
I've been reading that Punch article about Nigerian manufacturers losing millions on automation that doesn't work. It got me thinking β the problem isn't the machines. It's that we're buying solutions built for Germany and Japan and expecting them to work here.
Here's what actually works in Nigeria β and I've seen this firsthand. One factory in Aba replaced electric stitching monitors with $15 mechanical counters. They kept running during outages, maintained 80% production, and even hired two people to maintain the counters.
π YOUR TURN:
Reply with: [Machine name] + [what breaks during power cuts]
I'll share the exact <$20 fix that works TODAY β no waiting for stable grid.
#NigeriaSME#PowerSolutions
π REAL NIGERIAN PROOF:
In Aba, a shoe factory replaced electric stitching monitors with $15 mechanical counters during outages β kept 80% capacity, added 2 jobs for counter maintenance.