Rene Kayombya

309 posts

Rene Kayombya banner
Rene Kayombya

Rene Kayombya

@grk_19

Automotive Solutions Professional | Passionate about Urban Planning, Design & Development | Rookie farmer 🌱🌳

Kigali & Nairobi Katılım Eylül 2010
5.6K Takip Edilen581 Takipçiler
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
I. Cox
I. Cox@IanECox·
Money from 748 Air Services helped to start Java House. 🛩️🇰🇪☕️ Kenyan business lore: In the mid-1990s, 748 Air Services was launched in the remote northwestern town of Lokichogio (the key hub for Sudan relief flights) to support the UN's Operation Lifeline Sudan 🇸🇩🇺🇳 during the civil war. It flew humanitarian cargo/passenger missions into southern Sudan while also handling logistical support for SPLA 🇸🇸🪖 troops. The "748" in the name came from the Hawker-Siddley 748 turboprop that the company started operations with. Co-founder Kevin Ashley, a former relief worker, used the high-risk aviation venture as a springboard towards starting Java House in Nairobi at Adams Arcade in 1999 with profits and experience from those operations. From remote Loki ops to Nairobi cappuccinos: classic East African entrepreneurship.
FLY748.COM@748AIR_SERVICES

A familiar bird is back in the Kenyan skies. Fly748.com is back. Built on safety. Driven by standards. Ready to serve you with reliability you can trust. Book now at fly748.com #Afarmiliarbirdisreturning #Fly748 #Fly748Mombasa #Fly748Diani #AviationKenya #Kenya #Nairobi #JKIA #TravelMemories #IgersKenya #IGKenya #IgersNairobi #KenyaCoast #TravelKenya #MombasaToNairobi #beachvibes #travel #travelgram #travelphotography #beach #wanderlust #TravelKenya #KenyaTravel

English
6
63
184
23.5K
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Sequoia Capital
Sequoia Capital@sequoia·
In honor of 50 years of Apple, we're sharing - for the first time ever - Don Valentine's original 1977 memo for Sequoia's investment into Apple Computer. #Apple50
Sequoia Capital tweet media
English
173
827
5.9K
2.2M
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Clash Report
Clash Report@clashreport·
German Chancellor Merz: We are simply no longer productive enough. Each individual may say, “I already do quite a lot.” And that may be true. But when you return from China, ladies and gentlemen, you see things more clearly. With work-life balance and a four-day week, long-term prosperity in our country cannot be maintained. We will simply have to do a bit more.
English
3.8K
2.5K
18.5K
9M
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Clement Uwajeneza
Clement Uwajeneza@cuwajeneza·
In 2017, I stepped onto the Facebook campus in Menlo Park. They took us to the Oculus VR lab first. A geeky engineer gave us a demo of the VR features and ended on the haptic gloves that let you "feel" virtual objects without touching anything real. Then he paused, voice almost reverent: “Imagine connecting anyone in the world… real social interaction… without ever leaving home.” The demo was amazing but I walked out with a strange feeling. This guy is "solving for humanity" and is excited about a world no longer needs physical human connection We passed a long hall of developers. One guy—Black, friendly—leaned over his monitors and asked where the group of us (mostly Africans) was from. We chatted. His desk had big screens, half-eaten snacks, the faint smell of takeout lingering. His neighbor, paler watched curiously but, too timid to join. The desks were comfortable, the food smell everywhere, as it was available in every corner. It all felt… contained. Like this campus was its own sealed ecosystem, where the world outside was just data to optimize. Fast-forward to 2020. I work at Andela, where we placed remote engineers with Silicon Valley teams. Some companies flew their leads over to meet the "remote" teammates in person. When they visited the Kigali campus I went to dinner with them. They were 5. Of this dinner I vividly remember 2 conversations. One guy launched into how "all humans are actually lactose intolerant after infancy… we're the only species that keeps drinking milk." They all nodded, confessed their own intolerances like it was a quirky universal truth. Then came the photos: a dog's birthday party. Balloons, cake, friends invited. The owner beamed like it was his kid's party. I love dogs. But something twisted in my chest. These are the people shaping the tools billions use every day—yet their version of care, connection, family… felt redirected, abstracted. Now it's 2026, and Sam Altman says training an AI costs less than "raising a human"—because it takes "20 years of life and all the food you eat during that time before you get smart." He compared childhood—first steps, heartbreaks, scraped knees, bedtime stories, learning trust—to server racks and electricity bills. I think back to that VR promise of connection without leaving home… to offices smelling of food and isolation… to dogs celebrated like children while real human messiness gets optimized away
Chief Nerd@TheChiefNerd

🚨 SAM ALTMAN: “People talk about how much energy it takes to train an AI model … But it also takes a lot of energy to train a human. It takes like 20 years of life and all of the food you eat during that time before you get smart.”

English
97
900
5.7K
720.8K
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
sine.
sine.@sneminaj·
apparently telling your coworker that you knew they were born by c-section the way they avoid labor is not acceptable
English
275
7.9K
120.4K
2.4M
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Jay Alto
Jay Alto@theJayAlto·
you pity the moth confusing a lamp for the moon, yet here you are confusing a screen for the world
English
805
36.4K
190.8K
11.6M
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Alex Ponton
Alex Ponton@ponton_alex·
The Koko fall-out in Kenya is a cautionary tale. To paraphrase Theodore Roosevelt for Africa: "Disrupt softly and carry a big stick" The Koko cookers were heavily subsidized and so was the ethanol. Carbon credits enabled that. The "dirty fuel" of competition couldn't stand a chance. In Sillicon Valley, they applauded. A new market, technology, potential for massive scale. What not to like? In impact investors circle, they were also cheering. This was a clear example of capitalism reducing costs for customers (yea!) and CO2. The fuel was meetered. Usage was traceable. CO2 avoidance was credible (arguably). What they forgot is that it meant the LPG industry was getting disrupted. LPG is a big business with multiple interests. Like it's often the case, stakeholders with various agendas (some valid, some self-interested) started coming through with their demands. The single-point of failure was identified. Leverage positioning changed. You want an LOA, you have to meet our needs... I am assuming but it probably went like this.... "You want LOA, what's in it for us?" "We are investing heavily and helping reduce fuel costs to million" "Yes but what's in it for us?" "We are investing heavily and helping reduce fuel costs to million" "Yes but what's in it for us?" "..." Disruption is scary. Disruption also opens doors to such conversations... Would Mobile money have worked if it was not initiated by the TelCos? Disruption is scary, even at the micro level. I tried giving affordable loans to farmers in rural cooperatives as part of a small pilot we were doing in my agtech startup days. The first cohort was repaid in full. Farmers were ecstatic and telling all their friends. As we were gearing up funding to scale the pilot, everything stopped at once. We later found out the cooperative chairman was also the village moneylender... "Disrupt softly and carry a big stick"
English
53
308
761
68.9K
Rachael Jones
Rachael Jones@clover_cap·
Took 2 years, but finally got the parking lot paved! Have you ever seen anything so beautiful? 🥰
Rachael Jones tweet media
English
3
1
21
1.1K
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Ajay Rotti
Ajay Rotti@ajayrotti·
A little over 20 years ago .. when Lenovo announced acquisition of IBM's PC division...there was an element of shock, disbelief... Chinese company taking over a part of the Big Blue. What happens to quality of the ThinkPad brand?? Etc... Today... this hasnt even made it to the most discussed news!!! That is where China has reached. Sony Bravia is the IBM of TVs. No doubt.
Nikkei Asia@NikkeiAsia

BREAKING: Sony to spin off TV business, form joint venture with China's TCL s.nikkei.com/49FW1By

English
34
205
1.8K
227.5K
RushikeshH
RushikeshH@RushikesH27027·
Just a normal street in Shanghai wide roads, proper sidewalks, dense tree cover. Urban design done right✨️💪🏻
RushikeshH tweet mediaRushikeshH tweet mediaRushikeshH tweet mediaRushikeshH tweet media
English
146
769
7.9K
298.6K
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Michael Girdley
Michael Girdley@girdley·
One thing you'll notice in a business: If Sales start selling more, everything else seems to fall into place magically. Production will figure out how to deliver more product. Accounting will determine how to collect the increased accounts receivable. Support will figure out to answer more calls. As a CEO, the number one needle mover is always answering, "How can we sell more faster?" Everything else is just noise.
English
68
63
861
67.8K
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Cestrian Capital Research, Inc
@girdley Right. Here’s a whole MBA and McKinsey consulting package in 3 bullets: - Sell more stuff - Spend less money - Collect cash faster Thank me later
English
0
1
12
980
Moses Kagan
Moses Kagan@moseskagan·
Absolutely loath this parable. Living hand-to-mouth may be kind of romantic, if you're single. If you have kids, it means you're unable to protect them from many of the vicissitudes of life or to give them the kinds of opportunities that might help them build better lives for their own kids.
Joe Haslam ☘ 🇪🇺@joehas

An American investment banker was at the pier of a small coastal Mexican village when a small boat with just one fisherman docked. Inside the small boat were several large yellowfin tuna. The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took to catch them. The Mexican replied, “only a little while. The American then asked why didn’t he stay out longer and catch more fish? The Mexican said he had enough to support his family’s immediate needs. The American then asked, “but what do you do with the rest of your time?” The Mexican fisherman said, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take siestas with my wife, Maria, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine, and play guitar with my amigos. I have a full and busy life.” The American scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat. With the proceeds from the bigger boat, you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing, and distribution. You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then LA and eventually New York City, where you will run your expanding enterprise.” The Mexican fisherman asked, “But, how long will this all take?” To which the American replied, “15 – 20 years.” “But what then?” Asked the Mexican. The American laughed and said, “That’s the best part. When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions!” “Millions – then what?” The American said, “Then you would retire. Move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take siestas with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”

English
51
18
666
137.3K
Rene Kayombya retweetledi
Sam
Sam@SamanthaTeta·
Why UCI? Why here? 🚴‍♂️ Writers have a cardinal rule: show, don’t tell. Rwanda will do you both. For years, we’ve been intentional about brand Rwanda. You’ll see it light up the world’s biggest arenas, and on the jerseys and screens of sports watched by millions. It’s a gentle invitation: come, and see. UCI takes it further. It has taken the beauty of our roaring hills, our skyline, and the smiles & cheers of our people right into the homes and gathering places of millions across the globe. UCI also reaffirms this: Rwanda delivers at the highest level. Trust us, try us, and you will see that that, is a fact. And this is more than visibility, it is the kind of investment that endures, that even our children will reap. But what I love the most, is watching us enjoy our own city in this way. The world has been brought to us, but Rwanda has also been carried to the world. With riders from more than 100 nations, and audiences in the hundreds of millions, you see exactly what we can offer, and we welcome you to come share it. #Kigali2025 🫶🏾✨
Sam tweet mediaSam tweet mediaSam tweet mediaSam tweet media
English
14
240
709
59.6K