@Collinspeter27@Kenya_Dubai No one trusts this country. They are relying on American and European screening. Kenyans are cons with a lot of forged documents. Dubai also wants high value consumers, not economic refugees
@janetmachuka_ There is a big difference. I bought some Reebok sneakers at Nairobi sports house. They were on offer for 13,500. 2 years later they still look like new and are very comfortable. They are my daily beaters and still look new.
@elonmusk@Coinvo I actually agree. Weakness in the rule of law is the guarantor of African underdevelopment. That's the principal issue. Not the only one but the principal one.
@janetmachuka_ The main issue is Kenya being greylisted by FATF and we are gaining a reputation of being scammers. This means Kenyan based accounts are subject to a lot more stringent due diligence.
@4Real_KE You people talk like Kenya is a market for these things. You don't buy new, you import used. These things come here to die. This is not their market. They stopped selling well in Japan, that's why you don't see them here. Desperately need an update..
@SilvanusPeter5@DaviesKinanga I don't know if it's all. It really isn't an issue with Samsung flagships since the S23. Samsung flagships have gone for a flatter colour profile.
@SilvanusPeter5@DaviesKinanga This is something you see on cheaper Samsung's. My S25+ doesn't oversaturate colours like that. I suspect it might be an A series Samsung.
@DaviesKinanga Photo 1 looks like iPhone, photo 2 looks like iPhone too but with the contrast is cranked up to the max and the colours are overly saturated. So I'd guess Samsung. But I'm surprised this came from a Samsung flagship. I've got an S25+ and it doesn't do colours like that.
@FrancisMuthusi3@OmaeOkara These are provided for by the laws that underpin these professions. Maybe you should start with reading the acts that establish these professions instead of just running mouth.