Nhyiraba kofi

1.5K posts

Nhyiraba kofi banner
Nhyiraba kofi

Nhyiraba kofi

@Kofidell8

Software Developer | dev @SuiNetworkGhana| Web3 Enthusiast & Educator | Founder | Empowering innovation through blockchain.🚀

Katılım Ekim 2022
2K Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Nhyiraba kofi
Nhyiraba kofi@Kofidell8·
Not born to be average. Get the shit done.
English
1
0
1
62
Nhyiraba kofi
Nhyiraba kofi@Kofidell8·
MIT lecturer with years of experience.
English
0
0
1
5
Veronpsalmist
Veronpsalmist@psalmist_veron·
What do you think😋
English
1
0
1
18
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
Blcvk_man🛡️
Blcvk_man🛡️@blcvkman·
Last night was all about Bitcoin, builders, and good energy ⚡️ @bitdevsAccra is where devs from Ghana 🇬🇭 come to learn, build, and contribute to Bitcoin open-source. Big shoutout to @kelvinator05 & the @btrustteam for pulling up 🤝 We’re just getting started.
Blcvk_man🛡️ tweet mediaBlcvk_man🛡️ tweet mediaBlcvk_man🛡️ tweet media
Bitcoin Developers Accra@bitdevsAccra

Last night, BitsDevs Accra came together for an amazing meetup Builders, ideas, and great conversations all in one room. Huge thanks to the @btrustteam team for the support and to @kelvinator05 for showing up and engaging with the community We’re just getting started. ⚡️

English
2
13
49
1.8K
Nhyiraba kofi
Nhyiraba kofi@Kofidell8·
This is MBA in minutes
English
0
0
1
10
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
MARKET INSIGHTS!
MARKET INSIGHTS!@IManghaila·
panic seller vs big investors.
English
114
1.5K
27K
3.4M
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
Volteryde
Volteryde@volteryde·
Eid Mubarak to our Muslim friends and community💚 May your day be filled with peace, joy, and celebration with loved ones! -Volteryde #EidMubarak #RideTheFuture #Volteryde
Volteryde tweet media
English
0
3
8
111
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
Julian Figueroa
Julian Figueroa@kinetic_finance·
⚠️ After 10 years in Bitcoin, I’ve noticed a strange pattern. The best time to buy always looks like the WORST possible moment. The headlines get hysterical. The conspiracy theories multiply. And something very predictable happens next. 💥 THE EXIT MANUAL – EPISODE 29
English
20
52
327
25.1K
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
redpillbot
redpillbot@redpillb0t·
1952 cartoon explains the stock market more clearly than modern courses.
English
15
588
4.5K
58.6K
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
Pike effect🧐 Very interesting🐟🐠
English
54
1.1K
4.7K
271.7K
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Steve Jobs literally predicted the iPhone, the Internet, AI and the next 50 years of technology in a single speech from 1983:
English
73
880
2.8K
257.3K
Nhyiraba kofi
Nhyiraba kofi@Kofidell8·
Wow
Athenaeum Book Club@athenaeumbc

A powerful scene in the Odyssey happens when Odysseus finally returns to Ithaca after twenty years of war and wandering. You would expect the story to end with celebration, with the hero coming home, the family reunited, and order restored. Homer does something far stranger. Odysseus arrives disguised as a beggar, because Athena warns him that the palace has been taken over by more than a hundred suitors who have been living there for years, eating his food, drinking his wine, and pressuring his wife Penelope to marry one of them. They believe Odysseus is dead and in their minds the kingdom is already theirs. So the king of Ithaca walks through his own halls dressed in rags while the men stealing his house sit comfortably at his tables. They mock him, throw scraps at him, and one of them even strikes him, and Odysseus takes it. That is the remarkable part, because the same man who blinded the Cyclops and survived twenty years of disasters now stands quietly while strangers insult him in his own home. Homer tells us his heart burns inside his chest and that he wants to attack them immediately, yet he restrains himself and waits. Instead of striking, Odysseus studies the room carefully. He counts the men, watches their habits, and quietly observes which servants remain loyal and which have betrayed him. The hero of the Odyssey does something most people cannot do, which is delay revenge until the moment is right. Eventually Penelope announces a contest and brings out Odysseus’ great bow, declaring that she will marry the man who can string it and shoot an arrow through twelve axe heads lined up in a row. One by one the suitors try and fail, because none of them can even bend the bow. Then the beggar asks for a turn. The suitors laugh at first, but the bow is eventually handed to him. Odysseus takes it in his hands and strings it effortlessly. Homer says the sound of the bowstring tightening rings through the hall like the note of a swallow. Then he places an arrow on the string and sends it cleanly through all twelve axe heads. In that moment the beggar disappears. Odysseus turns the bow toward the suitors and reveals who he is. What follows is one of the most brutal scenes in Greek literature. The doors are sealed and the suitors realize too late that they are trapped inside the hall. Odysseus, his son Telemachus, and two loyal servants begin killing them one by one. There is no escape, no mercy, and no negotiation. The men who spent years consuming another man’s house die inside it. It is a violent ending, but Homer wants you to understand something important. The real danger to Odysseus was never just the monsters and storms on the long journey home. It was the possibility that someone else might take his place while he was gone. When Odysseus finally returns, he reminds everyone in Ithaca of a simple truth: a man’s home is not truly his unless he is willing to fight for it.

QST
0
0
0
14
CHUKKA
CHUKKA@MRCGK01·
I need more developers to join my team for the meantime. ✍️ 💻
English
196
9
272
14.4K
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
W3A
W3A@Web3accra·
PRESS RELEASE Official Announcement of virtual asset sandbox participants
W3A tweet mediaW3A tweet media
English
0
10
23
1.1K
Nhyiraba kofi retweetledi
Naval
Naval@naval·
Is Traditional Software Engineering Dead? “Does this mean that traditional software engineering is dead? Absolutely not. Software engineers—even the ones who are not necessarily tuning or training AI models—these are now among the most leveraged people on earth. Sure, the guys who are training and tuning models are even more leveraged because they’re building the tool set that software engineers are using. But software engineers still have two massive advantages on you. First, they think in code, so they actually know what’s going on underneath. And all abstractions are leaky. So when you have a computer programming for you—when you have Claude Code or equivalent programming for you—it’s going to make mistakes. It’s going to have bugs. It’s going to have suboptimal architecture. So it’s not going to be quite right. And someone who understands what’s going on underneath will be able to plug the leaks as they occur. So if you want to build a well-architected application, if you want to be able to even specify a well-architected application, if you want to be able to make it run at high performance, if you want it to do its best, if you want to catch the bugs early, then you’re going to want to have a software engineering background. The traditional software engineer is going to be able to use these tools much better. And there are still many kinds of problems in software engineering that are out of scope for these AI programs today. The easiest way to think about those is problems that are outside of their data distribution. For example, if they need to do a binary sort or reverse a linked list, they’ve seen countless examples of that, so they’re extremely good at it. But when you start getting out of their domain—where you have to write very high-performance code, when you’re running on architectures that are novel or brand new, when you’re actually creating new things or solving new problems, then you still need to get in there and hand code it. At least until either there are so many of those examples that new models can be trained on them, or until these models can sufficiently reason at even higher levels of abstraction and crack it on their own… And remember: there is no demand for average. The average app—nobody wants it, at least as long as it’s not filling some niche that is filled by a superior app. The app that is better will win essentially a hundred percent of the market. Maybe there’s some small percentage that will bleed off to the second-best app because it does some little niche feature better than the main app, or it’s cheaper, or something of the sort. But generally speaking, people only want the best of anything. So the bad news is there’s no point in being number two or number three—like in the famous Glengarry Glen Ross scene where Alec Baldwin says, “First place gets a Cadillac Eldorado, second place gets a set of steak knives, and third place you’re fired.” That’s absolutely true in these winner-take-all markets. That’s the bad news: You have to be the best at something if you want to win. However, the set of things you can be best at is infinite. You can always find some niche that is perfect for you, and you can be the best at that thing. This goes back to an old tweet of mine where I said, “Become the best in the world at what you do. Keep redefining what you do until this is true.” And I think that still applies in this age of AI.”
English
386
1.1K
7.2K
834.1K