Enohonfoh Osagie

1.8K posts

Enohonfoh Osagie

Enohonfoh Osagie

@dynamicosfa

God lover. Innovative and creative

Lagos Beigetreten Nisan 2013
847 Folgt242 Follower
TechGunner
TechGunner@tech_gunner·
@Morris_Monye I use one of the most powerful Claude ( Claude 4.6 (1 million context) ) with GitHub Copilot, with it I have built two startups, one has won a grant with a UK firm.
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Morris Monye
Morris Monye@Morris_Monye·
Today we will all be talking about Claude. Let’s discuss.
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Ajayi Oluwatobi
Ajayi Oluwatobi@OluwatobiAjayiJ·
A simple and verifiable fact: a brand new, decent car, regardless of brand, will almost always be more reliable in its first few years than a used car that is already six or more years old. This is not unique to cars. It is true of almost every type of machinery. Many Nigerians understand this instinctively when it comes to generators. A new generator, even from a modest brand, will usually be far more reliable in its early years than a fairly old one, no matter how reputable that brand is. So when conversations about used cars versus new cars become overly emotional, it helps to return to this basic reality. Personally, I always advise our sales and marketing team not to spend energy trying to convince people who strongly prefer older used cars. They are simply not the target market for brand new vehicles. Introduce them to our vehicles, invite them to our events, and let them see how impressive the vehicles are, but do not pressure them to buy. In every part of the world, buying a brand new car is not just a financial decision. It is also a mental one. You have to reach a point where you tell yourself that you deserve the experience of owning and driving something new. In Nigeria today, the most natural market for brand new vehicles, whether assembled locally or imported from places like China, is people who currently buy fairly recent used cars, typically between one and five years old. Those who buy vehicles older than five years should not be pressured. Many of them will eventually move up over time through personal growth, improved financing access, or simply a stronger economy. My own small contribution to that future is continuing to build manufacturing businesses and expand auto financing so more people can gradually access brand new vehicles. Until then, it is important that we have these conversations with realism and respect for where people are in their journey.
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AFRICAMUSTBEFREE!!!!!!!
AFRICAMUSTBEFREE!!!!!!!@engrICO2015·
How to improve ur car A/C to blow ice cold ❄️🥶 air !!! Please share so others will learn
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Ubon | Business Analyst | Website Developer
My small contribution to humanity: Taking people to work for free instead of driving alone. Today I dropped someone at Lekki Phase 1. She was so thankful and I felt embarrassed 😂 I didn't realize how much it could mean. ₦5,000 for transport every day = ₦100,000/month for some people. And I'm just driving the same route anyway. If you’re driving alone with empty seats, offer someone a ride. It costs you nothing
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Interesting STEM
Interesting STEM@InterestingSTEM·
This is the 1% question. It’s tough! But then only 1% of people can get this in 30 seconds. CAN YOU?
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💕Mide💕
💕Mide💕@HaYoMiDe_·
Are you part of the 3%?
💕Mide💕 tweet media
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Enohonfoh Osagie
Enohonfoh Osagie@dynamicosfa·
@objectvmedia Interesting clip. I listened the whole 19 minutes. I feel for Customer A. All the fault is with Bank A from what I see
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Objectv Media
Objectv Media@objectvmedia·
Supreme Court Judgments Can Now Be Changed, Hear This Latest Gist…
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Fundamental Investor ™ 🇮🇳
Fundamental Investor ™ 🇮🇳@FI_InvestIndia·
A businessman once bought a massive diamond in South Africa, about the size of an egg yolk. But to his disappointment, the stone had a crack inside. He took it to a skilled jeweler, hoping for advice. The jeweler examined it carefully and said: “This diamond can be split into two perfect gems, each worth more than the original stone. But one wrong strike and it will shatter into worthless fragments. I won’t take that risk.” The businessman traveled the world, showing the diamond to jewelers in many countries. Each one gave the same answer: "Too risky". Finally, someone told him about an old master jeweler in Amsterdam known for his golden hands. He flew there the same day. The old jeweler studied the diamond through his monocle and warned him again of the risk. The businessman interrupted: “I’ve heard that story before. I’m ready. Just do it.” The jeweler nodded, agreed on the price, then turned to a young apprentice working quietly nearby. The boy took the diamond, placed it on his palm, and struck it once, clean and precise. The stone split beautifully into two flawless gems. Without even looking up, he handed them back to the master. Astonished, the businessman asked: “How long has he been working for you?” The old jeweler smiled. “This is his third day. He doesn’t know the real value of the stone, that’s why his hand didn’t tremble.” Sometimes the more we fear losing something, the less capable we become of doing what needs to be done. Treat life’s challenges as if they are lighter than they seem, and your hand will stay steady.
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Everest
Everest@novieverest·
All Nigerians should watch this.
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Iconuzor
Iconuzor@icons_closet·
I attend a church that still practices this… Definitely not perfect but they ace community. My father in-law had issues with his business at one point, they put my husband through university in the US… A member got him his first job at the big 4. When I had my babies, they set up meal and help trains to make sure we had food and help everyday. A family friend visiting from Nigeria passed away giving birth, leaving 3 babies under 4, I cried for help. The older women showed up everyday for 1 month to help her husband a total stranger until they were able to take her back to Nigeria. I can go on and on…
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Osaretin Victor Asemota
Osaretin Victor Asemota@asemota·
Yesterday morning, as I was getting ready to go to church, I heard people already singing at a church nearby. They were not singing happily, and there was a tone of despair in the voices. It made me start reflecting on Christianity as a whole. Christianity started at a time when there was great oppression and injustice. The life and ultimate crucifixion of Jesus for committing no crime that was worth his death reflected how terrible things were at the time. One of the greatest lessons of Christianity, which people often miss, is how the early Christians survived and thrived despite hostile conditions because they were a community. Christianity was fundamentally about community, not ritual or rites, or even church structures or clerical hierarchies. Community wasn't performative. Christianity has drifted very far from those humble beginnings. However, one still gets glimpses of it from time to time, as many churches do actually help the less privileged in society. A church in North Carolina that I will always find a way to send money to was helping those with job troubles to pay their rent. That is what communities do for each other. Jesus stressed this extended community nature of Christianity with the Parable of the Good Samaritan. Church wasn't about piety, as he clearly showed with his disdain for the Pharisees and the Jewish religious leaders of the time. It was those same people who were eventually responsible for his crucifixion as they saw their authority and hold on people threatened. How did we end up misinterpreting everything written in black and white, then end up with the performative religious structures we have today? It is human nature. We somehow find a way to work against our best interests because of selfishness and pride. Our egos always need feeding. As I was listening to the singing yesterday morning, I realized that the Roman Empire hijacked the Christian movement at a point for a very good reason. Someone on Reddit mentioned that the conversion to monotheism enabled the emperors to control religion across the empire more tightly. Others argued that Christianity was also a primary reason for the empire's decline. Christians triumphed against their oppressors, and the Vatican forever remains a symbol of that victory. This, however, was also weaponized in many ways by the powerful, and the church had a troubled history until recent times. We MUST go back to the communal roots of Christianity, and this is desperately needed in Africa with all of the oppression and violence against Christians happening today. It also makes more sense economically. I was toying with an idea of faith-based ecumenical cooperatives that can help people meet the failed social contracts of government, an insurance against poverty, using the power of community. I will share more of my thoughts about this over time. I have already seen crude versions of it, but they are too small. If there is anything Christianity has proven, it is that to fight oppression effectively, there is strength in numbers—"Vires In Numeris."
Osaretin Victor Asemota tweet media
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Scholarship for PhD
Scholarship for PhD@ScholarshipfPhd·
Say hi and I’ll recommend a research topic that perfectly fits your profile.
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Enohonfoh Osagie retweetet
Sir Dickson
Sir Dickson@Wizarab10·
A man who calls his kinsmen to a feast does not do so to save them from starving. They all have food in their own homes. When we gather together in the moonlit village ground, it is not because of the moon. Every man can see it in his own compound. We come together because it is good for kinsmen to do so. - China Achebe
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