Grateful to have been selected for the Port Harcourt Tech Expo Pitch Competition.
Even though I didn’t pitch on the final day, the onboarding and preparation sessions were incredibly valuable. Learnt a lot, met great people and shared ideas around Re:Call.
Thank you #PHTechExpo🙏
Stay organized, schedule your follow-up calls and messages to customers, set reminders for appointments and meetings and never have to worry about missing out.
Never forget what matters with Re:Call
#ReCall#TechInnovation#TechTrends#TechCareers#trendingnow
It's a new week! 'Thank God It's Monday' now sounds fun with Re:Call. Schedule those meetings and follow-up on clients without forgetting. Re:Call is your personal productivity App.
#ReCallCampaign#TechCareers#TechInnovation
Hey everyone, let me introduce this project (an App) I have been working on for some time now, built with the sole purpose of solving a problem. Let introduce Re:Call;
I fell asleep and missed sending an important message to someone.
That night changed everything
I built Re:Call
If you have ever:
→ Forgotten to send a birthday message
→ Missed an important call
→ Wished your phone just remembered for you
Re:Call was built for you.
Follow for launch updates.
RT to help someone who needs this 🙏
#ReCall#ComingSoon#MadeInNigeria#Tech#Techie
@Neddy_ali This man has been speaking up about bad governance, built free school, sent relief materials to those in distress, placed thousands on his scholarship, trained people under David Ibiyeomie foundation, oga which one did you hype? Its TCT u are wailing like midnight cat, taaar
The gaming industry made $189 billion last year. The entire global box office made $33 billion. Gaming is nearly six times the size of Hollywood.
One comparison tells the whole story. GTA V, a single game from 2013, has generated nearly $10 billion in lifetime revenue. Avatar, the highest-grossing movie ever made after 15 years and re-releases, sits at $2.9 billion. One game made more than three Avatars.
The gap comes down to how each industry makes money. A movie gets one shot. Opening weekend, a few weeks of ticket sales, then streaming. Gaming figured out something Hollywood still hasn’t: your best customers don’t want a two-hour experience every three years. They want to live inside your world every week.
GTA V still has 22 million monthly active players. Fortnite made $1.5 billion in 2024, and the game is free. Minecraft pulls 16 million daily players more than a decade after launch. Players keep coming back to these worlds hundreds of times over.
Hollywood’s response has been to turn game brands into movies. A Minecraft Movie made $957 million this year. But 73% of the 2025 domestic box office already came from sequels, remakes, and franchise films. Hollywood knows audiences want familiar worlds. What it hasn’t learned is how to keep people inside those worlds between releases.
Gaming solved that with regular content updates, in-game events, and letting players build their own stuff. Fortnite hosts concerts. Roblox lets users create the games. Minecraft players have built more hours of content than any studio could produce in a century.
The average gamer plays 8.5 hours a week. The average movie is two hours, watched once. Hollywood keeps making events. Gaming builds actual habits. That’s where the $156 billion gap comes from.
Systems like Global Positioning System (GPS) rely on a network of satellites constantly orbiting Earth. Each satellite is basically a flying clock and radio transmitter. Every second, they broadcast two key things: their exact position in space and the exact time the signal was sent.
Your phone or car doesn’t send anything out. It simply listens.
The GPS receiver inside your device picks up signals from multiple satellites at the same time. Because radio waves travel at the speed of light, the receiver measures how long each signal took to arrive. From that time delay, it calculates distance. If a signal took longer, the satellite is farther away. If it arrived quicker, it’s closer.
Now here’s the clever part. With distance from one satellite, you only know you’re somewhere on a big sphere. With two, you narrow it down to a circle. With three, you get two possible points. With four or more satellites, the device can pinpoint your exact 3D position latitude, longitude, and altitude. This process is called trilateration.
Once your location is known, mapping apps take over. They match your position to roads on a map, calculate routes, estimate traffic, and give you directions. GPS itself only answers one question: “Where am I?” Everything else is software built on top of that answer.