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@ProjectProofHQ

Blockchain timestamps for research ideas, theses & projects • Prove you had it first • No journals needed • Protect your work early • Ambassadors join!

Beigetreten Şubat 2026
69 Folgt84 Follower
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Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
Your projects, research and academic work deserve more than just submission. They deserve proof, permanence and recognition.
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Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
@welandfab Checked your profile. Your work reflects real talent and innovation. If you ever decide to document it properly and make it permanently accessible, we’d be glad to support you.
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Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
@welandfab Nice work... tell us more about it, don't just fabricate.
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@aadunolowosibi It may feel distant now but completing a thesis is a gradual process... each step brings you closer to that point of relief.
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Aadùn
Aadùn@aadunolowosibi·
One day, I’ll finish my thesis and I’ll be free. 😮‍💨🥲
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@_deoluwaa Access to basic lab equipment shouldn’t be delayed until final year... it directly affects how well students can engage with their field.
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Adeolu needs to catch a break.
My guy say hin do microbiology in a federal university without getting to use the microscope until his final year project 😭😭😂
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Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
@Rxbremen Supporting research goes beyond scholarships... investment in labs, infrastructure and ongoing projects is critical to improving both the quality and impact of academic work. It can unlock far more value from the talent already within universities.
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Bremen
Bremen@Rxbremen·
Please the top guys at big corporations in Nigeria, can you please redirect your companies energy in CSR to research in Nigerian universities 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏. We say thank you for the scholarships, but many laboratories, and investment in STEM and mathematics would go a long way please. There are many PHD candidates and Masters candidates that need proper funding, we really need to intensify research 🔬. Please we know the lecturers were probably not nice back then, but please let our CSR start going back to the public universities 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏.
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Faria Khaliq
Faria Khaliq@FariaKhaliq03·
@ProjectProofHQ Thank you! That was exactly the goal—using AI in a way that actually supports real-world decisions, not just theory.
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Faria Khaliq
Faria Khaliq@FariaKhaliq03·
🚀 ScanFractX – AI Powered Fracture Diagnosis System Upload an X-ray. Instantly know if a fracture exists — and exactly where. For my final year project, I built an AI-based system that detects fractures from X-ray images and pinpoints their location with precision.
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Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
🏆 Research of the Week “Starch-Based Biodegradation of Plastic using Nano Banana Peel & PVA” By Ajetunmobi Mustapha Ladoke Akintola University of Technology A project exploring biodegradable alternatives to plastic using agricultural waste with real-world application potential.
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Publish Papers
Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
Most final year projects never leave the department shelf. Not because they lack value but because there's no permanent record of when the work existed. Students graduate. Files get lost. Ideas get reused. That gap is what PublishPapers exists to close.
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@charmainemahach Consistency adds up... Small, steady progress over time often makes a bigger difference than it seems.
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Charmaine Mahachi
Charmaine Mahachi@charmainemahach·
A paper a day, keeps the doctor away
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Idunnu🤓
Idunnu🤓@IdunnuOlukayode·
Sha sha I’m working on my final year project and I will probably be ranting about it here🙂‍↕️✨ listen and be blessed ✨
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Publish Papers@ProjectProofHQ·
@BradRobinsonKE That stage carries a different kind of pressure... After months of work, presenting and defending it brings everything into focus. It’s a crucial part of the process, translating your work into something clear, structured and defensible.
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Zen Grit Guru
Zen Grit Guru@BradRobinsonKE·
Final year presentations are next week. My stomach just dropped. After months of late nights fixing PARP, incorporating user feedback, and questioning if the whole thing actually makes sense, it's time to defend it in front of lecturers. This is the part nobody talks about. Thread.
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@ByIshaat Moments like that tend to stay with you... After all the pressure of final year, experiences like those become part of what makes the journey memorable beyond the academics.
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Aisha
Aisha@ByIshaat·
This reminds me of my final year. After all the project saga, the hostel was almost empty, everyone had gone home except the finalists. It rained heavily one evening, and my friends and I went to the back of the hostel and danced in the rain till we got tired. It was so refreshin
Bisola baby is talented@creatively_biah

I want to experience the kind of Joy I felt dacing in the rain with my best friend Dolapo in SS2. We were the only people that came out in my class, everybody was was forming maturity. It was unplanned, messy, fun. I fell down, stood up back and still kept laughing and playing

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@seigino99707047 Unexpected results are often where deeper understanding begins. Rather than forcing outcomes to match expectations, it may be worth exploring why the results differ... that’s where meaningful insights often come from.
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pranshu-raj-211
pranshu-raj-211@seigino99707047·
Did a few more experiments on the final year project (that I wasn't supposed to do) Found some interesting and counterintuitive results. I don't know why this is happening, and this makes me curious Time to do more to improve the data according to my expectations
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OmolowoAkande🥇
OmolowoAkande🥇@Tonyjay·
After project defēnse in final year what Next ?
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@MereSophistry Peer review should strengthen the work, not introduce vague or self-serving requests... Citation suggestions are most useful when they are specific, justified and clearly improve the manuscript’s quality and context.
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John Gallagher
John Gallagher@MereSophistry·
Academic peer review is not an opportunity to make preference citation requests. If you suggest citations, you need to state specific ones, why, and how it improves the manuscript. Otherwise, we’re playing a meaningless quoting game.
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@NudgeTM Quality writing has always existed... AI is built on that foundation. Assuming strong writing must be AI-generated overlooks the skill and effort people have developed over time.
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Nojeem ‘Nudge’ Yusuf
AI writes well because people have been writing well for so long. AI tools are trained on actual writings by real people. To now assume every good piece of writing is enabled by AI is so unfair to those who have crafted the art well before AI.
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@mrajiabdulwasiu Strong mentorship often shapes not just research quality but direction, confidence and long-term impact... It’s a reminder that mentorship works best when it’s intentional and reciprocal.
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@mrajiabdulwasiu
@mrajiabdulwasiu@mrajiabdulwasiu·
Mentorship Matters in Academia: How to Find, Cultivate, and Leverage Mentors. Come with me. There is almost no successful researcher who got there alone. Behind every strong academic career, you will find a network of mentors, people who gave advice at the right moment, opened a door, read a draft, or simply said 'keep going' when the researcher in question was ready to stop. Mentorship is not a luxury. It is one of the most powerful accelerators of an academic career. But most graduate students and early-career researchers either wait to be mentored or assume that their primary supervisor is their only mentor. Both of these approaches leave significant value on the table. Do you know who a mentor is? A mentor is not just someone who supervises your work. A mentor is someone who takes a genuine interest in your growth and is willing to share experience, perspective, and connection. Supervisors can be mentors, but they are not automatically so. And you do not need to wait for your supervisor to fulfil this role. The most effective researchers build what is sometimes called a mentorship portfolio. What is that? This are diverse group of people who offer different kinds of support at different career stages. This might include your 1. primary supervisor, 2. a senior researcher in your department who you can approach informally, 3. a researcher at another institution who works in a related field, 4. an industry professional if you are considering non-academic careers, and 5. peers who are slightly ahead of you in the same journey. How do you find mentors when you do not already have connections? Start with your institution. Most universities have formal mentoring programmes for graduate students. Even if the match is not perfect, these programmes are a starting point. Beyond that, conferences are gold. When you attend a talk that resonates with you, introduce yourself to the speaker afterward. Not to ask for anything immediately, but to begin a conversation. Emailing researchers whose work you admire is not as scary as it sounds, if you do it well. Keep the email short. Show that you have actually read their work. Be specific about what you are asking for not 'can you be my mentor' (too vague and too much pressure) but 'could I ask your perspective on a specific challenge I am facing in my research?' Most researchers are willing to help when the ask is clear and reasonable. Once you have a mentor relationship, maintaining it requires effort from you. - Do not reach out only when you need something. - Share your progress. - Send a message when their advice led to a good outcome. - Ask how their work is going. Mentorship is a relationship, not a service. It grows when both sides invest in it. Also, be aware that mentors have limits. No single person can provide everything you need. Your supervisor may be excellent at technical guidance but less helpful about career strategy. A senior peer may be wonderful for emotional support but lack the network connections you need. So, build breadth into your support system. The best thing about being mentored well is that it teaches you how to mentor others. Therefore, pay it forward whenever you can. So, do you have a mentor or are you a mentor to someone?
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