Gideon Rukundo

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Gideon Rukundo

Gideon Rukundo

@RukundoGideon

Tech Entrepreneur love creating solutions, believe in possibilities💫🇺🇬

Kampala, Uganda Katılım Ocak 2014
1K Takip Edilen314 Takipçiler
Gideon Rukundo
Gideon Rukundo@RukundoGideon·
@CallMeKulubya I am going all in on solar. Installed a 5kva unit in the village. Working on getting a 10kva unit in the city. Imagine what this setup can do for you if you own a PHEV.
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Call Me Kulubya
Call Me Kulubya@CallMeKulubya·
Everyone Accepted this Lie. I can’t believe that to date the lie has grown bigger to a point that others would even defend it. Paying Electricity bills is not freedom, it’s control, yes you have the card and the meter , you can always load as much as your pocket decides but here is the problem. They can always switch it off, even when you don’t buy their tokens, they have a monthly charge packaged as maintenance fee. They lied that it’s cheap, but is deep, they want you to spend more, they don’t want to tell you that each appliance consumes energy differently and here is the sad part. In a blackout , they see your messages, they ready those texts and their chatbots respond with bureaucracy , here is the escape plan. The sun is free but they would never tell, you, they know it dries their coffee and also gives you free light in the day. Solar energy looks expensive in the initial set up but it becomes a one time payment for many years, they can’t tell you this because it’s how they survive. Take this home, Solar can power almost every appliance in the home, when I got to know this truth, I decided to share it here. What stops you from joining the transition?
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Buregyeya Apollo, PhD
Buregyeya Apollo, PhD@ApolloBuregyeya·
How Kampala Designs Its Own Potholes. ======= At Wandegeya junction, the story does not begin with a pothole. It begins with trapped water. The drain is there, but it is closed, hidden beneath concrete covers. On paper, it looks modern, clean, and efficient. In reality, it is inaccessible. Once silt, plastics, and organic waste enter the system, as they inevitably do in Kampala, the drain gradually loses its ability to receive and evacuate runoff. What follows is not dramatic failure, but something more subtle and more dangerous. Water begins to stagnate along the road edge. That stagnation is where the real problem starts. Water remains in prolonged contact with the pavement, seeping into small cracks and weak points. It reaches the base layers and softens the support structure beneath. Traffic then completes the process. What begins as a sound pavement slowly loses integrity from below, until one day, a defect appears. Weeks later, we call it a pothole. But the pothole is not the problem. It is the evidence of a failure that has already taken place. The mistake is not simply technical. It is conceptual. We are designing for appearance instead of performance. We are also copying drainage ideas from cleaner, wealthier, and more organized cities without paying enough attention to our own reality. There are cities where stormwater channels carry relatively clean runoff, where waste management works, where sediment loads are lower, and where drainage lines are so clean and stable that fish can live safely in them. Kampala is not that city. Our catchments are different. Our runoff carries silt, plastics, organic matter, and all the evidence of a city still struggling with waste discipline, exposed soils, informal discharge paths, and uneven maintenance. Our urban hydrology is not a copy of theirs. Yet too often, our drainage choices suggest we are designing for another environment, not our own. Closed drainage is not wrong in itself, but it assumes clean flows, disciplined waste management, and consistent maintenance. Kampala operates under different conditions. Access is critical. When a system is closed without making cleaning easy and routine, it does not fail immediately. It fails gradually, then completely. What follows is a cycle we have normalized. The pothole is patched. The drainage remains blocked. Water returns. The patch fails. Another repair is funded. The same location consumes resources again and again. This is not maintenance. It is repetition driven by design oversight. The most expensive roads in Kampala are not the ones we build. They are the ones we keep repairing. If we are serious about durable infrastructure, then design must reflect reality. Water will carry waste. Systems must be accessible. Maintenance must be designed into the structure, not assumed after the fact. Our catchment conditions, waste streams, and urban hydrology must shape our engineering decisions more than imported aesthetics do. Until then, every pothole we fix will simply be another one we designed in advance.
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Ian Rumanyika
Ian Rumanyika@irumanyika·
Nothing straight for him. On a fair ground, he will not.
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Lucy Smize
Lucy Smize@Lucy_Smize·
If you were recommending a RELIABLE internet service provider in Kampala, which would it be ?
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Appelez-moi-Kizza
Appelez-moi-Kizza@AppelezmoiKizza·
Sarah is tall and we shall make Luzzi,tall also.🤗 Comedian, clown, pretender, mufere, Munyarwanda, Munyamurenge or not…👊🏾 Cc: @GKatabazi @JonahNkwangu
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Ben Mwine 🇺🇬 π
Ben Mwine 🇺🇬 π@benmwine·
The redesigned Hilux is out and should be wearing government plates on our roads soon courtesy of @Toyota_UG. What do you guys think about the new angular front? Oba I prefer the current one.......
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MAX
MAX@maxxmalist·
I just trained a custom GPT on the following alex hormozi books: - 100M offers - 100M leads - 100M money models - the black books given to those who donated 200 books - + the playbooks, launch book and lost chapters like, rt + reply with "HORMOZI" and i'll send it straight to your DMs (must be following so i can dm)
MAX@maxxmalist

upload $100M offers book from @AlexHormozi to Claude before writing any script/ad thank me later

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Gideon Rukundo
Gideon Rukundo@RukundoGideon·
Comment section is on fire with questions, but the @UDB_Official social team must be on ghost mode.
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Prajwal Tomar
Prajwal Tomar@PrajwalTomar_·
a lot of you asked how i built this hero section using lovable and midjourney → comment “car” and follow i’ll dm you the exact steps, prompts, assets, and the remix link
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Eyad
Eyad@eyad_khrais·
This JSON structure will change how you do e-commerce retention forever. It’s called a Context Profile - a structured snapshot of everything your customer has done: - Order history - Website behavior - Promotion engagement - Cancellation attempts - Preferences I shared this on the AI Frontrunners community call, and people went crazy for it. Most brands dump raw data into GPT and hope for insights. But without structured context, your AI just guesses. With a Context Profile, you can feed the model exactly what it needs: - When a customer tries to cancel, trigger a retention offer based on their lifetime spend - If they abandon a cart, generate a personalized follow-up email - After they cross a spend threshold, surprise them with a loyalty reward Here’s how it works: - Create a JSON file for each customer with key signals (purchases, behavior, engagement) - Upload it to GPT or Claude as part of your prompt - Ask the model to draft promotions, emails, or retention scripts using only that profile Comment “PROFILE” and I’ll DM you the full template you can use for your e-commerce brand.
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Damian Player
Damian Player@damianplayer·
LEAKED: The ULTIMATE AI coding prompt collection… 7000+ lines of PURE GOLD from v0, Cursor, Lovable, Replit Agent, Windsurf & more... These aren't just prompts... They're the SECRET SAUCE that transforms any LLM into PROMPT ENGINEERS - almost one-shotting entire builds. Upload these into your AI models and watch them code like senior developers instead of confused interns. To STEAL these prompts: Like + RT+ Comment "Gold" & I'll send over the drive. PS: The AI coding wars just got transparent. This is where most prompt gurus get their prompts.
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Joseph Kabuleta
Joseph Kabuleta@JKabuleta·
In 2010 Bill Gates said he intends to use new vaccines and reproductive healthcare (read sterilization) to reduce world population by 10-15% (which is a billion pple). Ever since I watched this video, I don’t rush to inject my kids with anything just bse it’s called a vaccine
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Ron Kazooba Kawamara
Ron Kazooba Kawamara@Ronkawamara·
Friends and colleagues, from April 1st, 2025, if you want money to come, invest and trade in solar systems, generators, inverters, UPS, battery systems, power banks, or kerosene lamps!
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AIKN
AIKN@AngeKagame·
One thing the ‘International Community’ has in abundance is AUDACITY. Rwanda was left for dead 30 years ago under the watchful gaze of the same ‘International Community’ we’re told to delegate all matters of national security to. Fortunately, we’re better students of history.
Stephanie Nyombayire@PressSecRwanda

Unlike what the international community will have you believe, the idea that a political solution is necessary to solve the conflict in Eastern DRC is far from new. It is what Rwanda has been calling for, for YEARS. It is exactly what President Tshisekedi has openly and REPEATEDLY refused to do. And we will not join you in pretending otherwise. The underlying message of the selective outcry is not that there is a sudden genuine concern for the plight of a country that everyone knows is a failed state. The message is clear: the decision made 30 years ago—that the lives of Rwandans are expendable in the face of geopolitical interests—still stands today. That is why the leadership of DRC is enjoying the perks of sharing the same interests as their masters: talk crazy, recruit genocidaires and European mercenaries to fight your wars, sit back, relax, and let the international community bury the real issue. What every resolution and statement is calling for is an immediate return to business as usual: a nation that must remain a lawless playground where leaders get their cut to go buy castles in Brussels, the international community thrives off the business of peacekeeping and poverty alleviation programs, and their companies protect their profits. Every country throwing its weight behind DRC knows they would never tolerate a fraction of the kind of security threats Rwanda has been facing for 30 years. The gaslighting is deliberate because the truth is bad for business. It turns out that in this equation, the citizens of either country don’t actually matter, and in the end, their goal is NOT in fact a path to peace.

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Alex Hormozi
Alex Hormozi@AlexHormozi·
Really exceptional. @JeffBezos
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Leila Hormozi
Leila Hormozi@LeilaHormozi·
Nothing drains a high performer faster than realizing their reward for excellence is cleaning up someone else’s incompetence.
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Michael Katagaya
Michael Katagaya@mkatagaya·
Dear Ugandan businesses, How are we going to compete with the rest of the world if for every inquiry you want a customer/client to come to your branch/office? Everyone here behaves like a mufere. Bambi document prices and processes and give them to the client on request. It’s how we’re trading with Japanese, Chinese etc. One WhatsApp message and the guy sends you a full product catalogue. We’re buying cars, parts, tiles etc from people whose names we can’t pronounce and whose address we can only see on a website. Naye here, 1,2,3 “come to the branch!” Mwe! Mutwagaza ki? Tewali budde!!
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