So this APC supporter asked me to go and hug transformer because I said I would not vote for Tinubu.
I hugged the transformer for 12 hours straight, nothing happened. No light.
Please everyone should get their PVCs
@pessin_pikin@ugborobizy1@Timmysofine Then you were probably already procrastinating.
My work rate went up by 2x when I started living in an area with constant electricity. It got to a point that the company I worked for actually asked me to take time off because I was “too efficient”.
Did this thing when I was younger.
Went to buy fireworks in the estate next to mine. This girl came in and started telling the woman to give her 2 of the exact bangers I wanted to buy, that she doesn’t have time.
I just told the woman to give me everything.
I did this to a woman last week or so😂
There were like 3 portions of spaghetti left and I didn’t even want pasta. But she came in and tried to jump the line despite seeing that there were people before her.
I was the last person before her and she’d been talking about “I hope that this spaghetti will be enough for me” as she huffed and puffed.
It was just me and her left snd she walked up to the second attendant and tried to order the pasta. I just told the attendant attending to me, “3 portions of pasta please”. Walai? She nearly cried when she said “but that’s what I wanted nau”
@urbandev__ My dad died a few months before I was born.
He had complications with his liver due to his alcohol intake.
I made a promise to myself and my unborn kids that I’ll try my best to live and eat right so I can be there for them.
This is the main reason I built https://t.co/oB4s7Bo5nA
I noticed that most teams use different apps for different tasks, and decided to place everything a team needs in one place.
Lynk reduces context switching by placing your tasks, texts, and code in one platform.
lol. Slack wasn’t supposed to exist.
In 2009, Stewart Butterfield and his team at Tiny Speck were building a game called Glitch.
Building the game was messy. Designers, engineers, writers all needed to talk constantly. Email was too slow, messages got buried, things broke because people missed updates.
So they built their own tool.
At first, it was simple. Real time messaging. Then they added channels so conversations stayed organized. Then search so nothing got lost. Then integrations so it connected with everything else they used.
Something strange happened.
The team stopped complaining about communication. Work sped up. Decisions happened faster. People could jump into any conversation and instantly understand what was going on.
The tool quietly became the most important thing they used every day.
When Glitch shut down in 2012, they didn’t just walk away. They looked back at what actually worked.
It wasn’t the game. It was the way they worked together. So they cleaned it up, redesigned it, and turned their internal survival tool into a product.
In 2013, they released Slack to the world.
And the crazy part? Other teams instantly felt the same thing they did.
It was a product born from a real problem they had already solved for themselves.
@Obed0x built https://t.co/rHNaQmzTMJ
These are one of the projects you can't vibe-code in 48 hrs fr😂😂😂
Where are those guys vibe-coding people's start-up and making it open-source
I publicly dare you!!!🙂