amaju

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amaju

@amaju

Product Design / Architecture / Photography

Home Katılım Nisan 2009
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
Product Design Journal Day 1 - Onboarding Session Today I began a journey into the world of Product Design with @10Alytics, an edtech company which is on an important mission - helping people transition into tech careers. 🤸‍♂️👟 I had heard good things about them a few months ago and was quite impressed by their setup. They seem to be constantly iterating. Unfortunately at that time the courses they offered did not appeal to me because I wanted something in the design field which is my passion. 🎨 A few months later I got word about one of their regular free information sessions and joined in. Due to the job market trends they had just added Product Design and DevOps to their lineup. 👊🏼💃 This course comprises 3 months of classes, mentorship sessions and other activities after which a 1 month internship begins. 😅 Proud to be a member of the inaugural cohort and will be posting for the next 180 days (hopefully 🤭) Walk with me…… #AmajuOnifadeProductDesigner #ProductDesignwith10alytics
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
OMG. Nature is something else.
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

Before it took off, the bird ate parts of its own liver, kidneys, and gut. That was the only way to be light enough to fly. Then it flew 8,425 miles from Alaska to Australia, in 11 days, without eating, drinking, or landing once. The bird is called B6. It's a bar-tailed godwit, four months old, weighing about as much as a can of beans. In October 2022, scientists at the US Geological Survey tracked its flight from Alaska all the way to Tasmania. The trip took 11 days and 1 hour. It is still the longest non-stop flight of any animal on Earth. For two weeks before takeoff, godwits eat until they almost double in weight. Fat ends up being 55% of their body, more than any bird ever measured. Then they shrink their own insides. About a quarter of their liver, kidneys, stomach, and intestines gets broken down and reused for fuel, making room for the extra fat and cutting weight. Their heart and wing muscles grow bigger at the same time. They never drink along the way. The water they need comes out of burning fat, the same reaction their muscles use for energy. They also never really sleep. B6 flapped its wings for 264 straight hours, cruising around 35 miles per hour with help from storm tailwinds. By the time it landed, it had lost almost half its body weight. The shrunken organs grew back over the following weeks. Scientists still cannot explain the navigation. B6 had never made this flight before. Adult godwits leave Alaska weeks earlier, so young birds fly alone with nobody to follow. How a four-month-old bird finds its way across 8,425 miles of open ocean to a place it has never seen is still an open question. About 100,000 bar-tailed godwits leave Alaska every fall. Most of them land in New Zealand or Australia 10 or 11 days later, having eaten parts of themselves to get there.

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amaju
amaju@amaju·
@markessien Some things can never be forgotten. Catwalk on the runway 😆
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Mark Essien
Mark Essien@markessien·
Anytime I see this dude, I remember the time his organization nominated me for an award and make me sit at the back of the hall, while the first half of the hall was blocked off for "important people", all of whom came to see the awards being given out.
BBC News Africa@BBCAfrica

When Chude Jideonwo, a popular Nigerian TV host, was diagnosed with Tourette syndrome, he was advised to keep it private for fear of judgement. Now, he’s speaking openly about living with involuntary movements and challenging misconceptions about the condition in the country.

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amaju
amaju@amaju·
« Claude, the AI model, is named after Claude Shannon, the mathematician who laid the foundation for the digital world we rely on today. »
Tech with Mak@techNmak

In 1948, a 32-year-old at Bell Labs published a paper nobody fully understood. Engineers found it too mathematical. Mathematicians found it too engineering-focused. One prominent mathematician reviewed it negatively. That paper - "A Mathematical Theory of Communication", became the founding document of the digital age. The man was Claude Shannon. Father of Information Theory. At 21, he wrote the most important master's thesis of the 20th century. Working at MIT on an early mechanical computer, Shannon noticed its relay switches had exactly two states - open or closed. He had just taken a philosophy course introducing Boolean algebra, which also operated on two values: true and false. Nobody had ever connected these two things. His 1937 thesis proved that Boolean algebra and electrical circuits are mathematically identical, and that any logical operation could be built from simple switches. Howard Gardner called it "possibly the most important, and also the most famous, master's thesis of the century." Every digital computer ever built traces back to this insight. At 29, he proved that perfect encryption exists. During WWII, Shannon worked on classified cryptography at Bell Labs. His work contributed to SIGSALY, the secure voice system used for confidential communications between Roosevelt and Churchill. In a classified 1945 memorandum, he mathematically proved the one-time pad provides perfect secrecy, unbreakable not just computationally, but provably, permanently, against an adversary with infinite power. When declassified in 1949, it transformed cryptography from an art into a science. It laid the foundations for DES, AES, and every modern encryption standard. At 32, he defined what information is. His 1948 paper introduced one equation: H = −Σ p(x) log p(x) Shannon entropy. The average uncertainty in a probability distribution. The minimum bits required to encode a message. Three things followed: > He defined the bit - the fundamental unit of all information. His colleague John Tukey coined the name. > He proved the channel capacity theorem, every communication channel has a maximum rate of reliable transmission. You can approach it. You can never exceed it. > He unified telegraph, telephone, and radio into a single mathematical framework for the first time. Robert Lucky of Bell Labs called it the greatest work "in the annals of technological thought." Where his equation lives in AI today: Cross-entropy loss - the function training every classifier and language model, is derived directly from H. Decision tree splits use information gain, which is H applied to data. Perplexity, the standard LLM evaluation metric, is an exponentiation of cross-entropy. Every time a neural network trains, Shannon's formula runs inside it. He also built the first AI learning device. In 1950, Shannon built Theseus, a mechanical mouse that navigated a maze through trial and error, learned the correct path, and repeated it perfectly. Mazin Gilbert of Bell Labs said: "Theseus inspired the whole field of AI." That same year he published the first paper on programming a computer to play chess. He co-organized the 1956 Dartmouth Workshop, the founding event of AI as a field. The man: He rode a unicycle through Bell Labs hallways while juggling. He built a flame-throwing trumpet, a rocket-powered Frisbee, and Styrofoam shoes to walk on the lake behind his house. He called his home Entropy House. When asked what motivated him: "I was motivated by curiosity. Never by the desire for financial gain. I just wondered how things were put together." In 1985, he appeared unexpectedly at a conference in Brighton. The crowd mobbed him for autographs. Persuaded to speak at the banquet, he talked briefly, then pulled three balls from his pockets and juggled instead. One engineer said: "It was as if Newton had showed up at a physics conference." He died in 2001 after a decade with Alzheimer's, the cruel irony of information slowly leaving the mind of the man who defined what information was. Claude, the AI model, is named after Claude Shannon, the mathematician who laid the foundation for the digital world we rely on today.

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abymael
abymael@abymaelx·
"Coisas que aprendi nesses 10 anos de UTI foi a mãozinha. É uma luvinha em cima e outa embaixo e aí a gente amarra para que o paciente sempre sinta que tem alguém segurando a mão dele. E acreditem ou não, os sinais vitais, como pressão, sempre ficam bons"
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Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
Former BYD and Huawei engineers made a device that turns any bike electric, reaching 32 km/h ⚡
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
@asemota « I will do unheard things with it » (Trump contemplating the American Presidency before assuming office)
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China pulse 🇨🇳
China pulse 🇨🇳@Eng_china5·
In China, a teacher and their students built a two-stage rocket using plastic bottles and water pressure:
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stan.richard
stan.richard@stanrichardrich·
@Thebestfigen That's what I keep telling my manager- I was at work much earlier. He just saw my light waves much later.
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The Best
The Best@Thebestfigen·
Paradox: If you see a baby located 90 light-years from Earth, right now it would be a 90-year-old, but you see it in your present, as a baby. While the light takes time to reach you, the baby grows and ages. When you look at the universe, you are always looking at the past.
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Blake ™
Blake ™@NeilNevins·
I showed up early to a 5K in December and another runner in his early 20s started stretching next to me. We just shot the shit for like half an hour. I gauged that he would have been in high school during Covid and I asked what that was like.
mc cracker@chowder94

“i’m 30+ what would i even talk to a 20 year old abt” literally anything bro that is also an adult. i think u guys r spending too much time on the internet.

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miss honey 🍯
miss honey 🍯@foyinog·
i have no issue reading long pieces of text but maaaaan tweets should not be essays. the whole point of this platform was brevity and now i’m seeing 20 paragraph long tweets. it does get to a point
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
Day 118 of 180 & Day 5 (Week 2 of 6) of the Design-to-MVP Bootcamp @devanddesignhq Last week we set up the pipeline from the agent-first IDE (antigravity) to deployment (Vercel) through GitHub. This week I learnt how to launch Opencode (light weight open-source AI coding assistant) on Antigravity and switch AI models. Made my first API key 😁. Also learnt: 1. The structure of a prompt - the specification document which tells the AI what to build (and what not to build). 2. How to write a prompt 3. How to refine a prompt 4. Technical requirements and context files. 5. About PWAs, ORM, MPA, SPA 6. Context windows and tokens, AI temperature, stack selection. Class continues next week as we go further in the workflow. On the side I have started work on a Healthtech mobile app (MVP product design prototype that I will build soon) Portfolio website is now live amaju.design #productdesign #productbuilder #180daysofproductdesign #BuildInPublic
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
Day 118 of 180 & Day 5 (Week 2 of 6) of the Design-to-MVP Bootcamp @devanddesignhq Last week we set up the pipeline from the agent-first IDE (antigravity) to deployment (Vercel) through GitHub. This week I learnt how to launch Opencode (light weight open-source AI coding assistant) on Antigravity and switch AI models. Made my first API key 😁. Also learnt: 1. The structure of a prompt - the specification document which tells the AI what to build (and what not to build). 2. How to write a prompt 3. How to refine a prompt 4. Technical requirements and context files. 5. About PWAs, ORM, MPA, SPA 6. Context windows and tokens, AI temperature, stack selection. Class continues next week as we go further in the workflow. Portfolio website is now live amaju.design #productdesign #productbuilder #180daysofproductdesign #BuildInPublic
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
@devanddesignhq Day 111 of 180 & Day 3 (Week 1 of 6) of the Design-to-MVP Bootcamp @devanddesignhq Learnt about git, commit, repository etc. Deployed first project to Vercel 👍🏾 Portfolio website live tomorrow.
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
Day 47/180 Heuristic Analysis of Lemfi ongoing. The first of Jakob’s 10 Laws of Heuristics - Visibility of System State. Don’t leave users confused or lost (Gulf of Evaluation). Lemfi does a fairly good job of letting you know your balances, daily limits, status of transfer, rate notifications etc. However the only button on the Home Screen that changes when you touch (not click) is the send button. The text on the button (Send money) becomes almost invisible I feel this could have been made more pronounced visibly. Maybe a change in colour, shade or size? None of the other buttons have any visible effect. #AmajuOnifadeProductDesignJourneywith10alytics #ProductDesignwith10alytics #ProductDesign #180daysofProductDesign
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amaju
amaju@amaju·
@OIuwatosin I agree. When I write first then I am less distracted by the rabbit holes the AI tries to force me down when I don’t. Sometimes it’s a bit much. At the other end of the spectrum, I am getting tired of poorly generated AI text all over the place.
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