Seye

3.9K posts

Seye

Seye

@seyezxt0

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Ekim 2013
2.5K Takip Edilen417 Takipçiler
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Arsenal
Arsenal@Arsenal·
A season to be proud of. We pushed the boundaries over land and sea, and couldn't have done it without your support. Thank you, Gooners ❤️
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feranmi
feranmi@_bumblebee7_·
4 hours of this was spent understanding recursion to build a graph for finding the optimized route through mit buildings 🥲. recursion is lowkey tuff 😭
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Ógùnwàlè Álábì James
Ógùnwàlè Álábì James@OgunwaleAlabi·
Apart from the Old Oyo National park which is the 3rd largest national Park in Nigeria covering 2512km² and cut across 11 local governments (10 in Oyo and 1 in Kwara state) and equivalent to about 70% of total Lagos landmass, Oyo State still have additional 9 other reserves and they are below with their corresponding size. 1. Opara Forest Reserve: 248,640 ha = 2,486.4 km². 2. Igangan Forest Reserve: 40,643.885 ha = 406.44 km² 3. Ijaiye Forest Reserve: 25,544.856 ha = 255.45 km². 4. Gambari Forest Reserve: 17,982.964 ha = 179.83 km². 5. Lanlate Forest Reserve: 10,879.054 ha = 108.79 km². 6. Eruwa Forest Reserve: 7,488.207 ha = 74.88 km². 7. Oso Forest Reserve: 3,820.779 ha = 38.21 km². 8. Eleyele Forest Reserve: 526.092 ha = 5.26 km². So Opara reserve and the old Oyo National park is about 36% larger than the entire Lagos state. Just 2 Reserve forest oooo. If all the Lagos state security architecture are deployed to these 2 reserves,, they can't police them sucessfully. Apart from the above, Oyo State still has the other 3 reserves — Olokomeji, Olasehinde, and Okoo-Iro but their exact sizes weren’t fully documented. In conclusion the @oyostategovt under the leadership of @seyimakinde and the @followlasg under the leadership of @jidesanwoolu are miles apart and their security headache can't be the same and must not be compared. Kindly take note @Oyoaffairs Thank you for your attention to this matter.
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RAY 🌊@SlimmytiNY

The gazetted areas in Oyo state for reserves and park is almost the same diameter as the whole of Lagos state. Lmfao you guys must be out of your minds.

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Justine Moore
Justine Moore@venturetwins·
Me using Claude Opus 4.8 to rename a file
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Dwarkesh Patel
Dwarkesh Patel@dwarkesh_sp·
A large portion of animal intelligence doesn't require any learning, claims @karpathy: it's baked into DNA. AI models, by contrast, start from random weights. They have to learn their intelligence, mostly by imitating the internet. This is so different that Andrej thinks it's a fundamentally different kind of intelligence: LLMs are more like ghosts than animals.
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Olaoluwa!
Olaoluwa!@oc_olorunfemi·
A few months ago, I saw this tweet. It sparked our curiosity on: - what healthcare workers actually earn in Nigeria - their plans on leaving the country We had over 500 respondents and here are some key points we found. Please RT, like and share:
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Jobs with Aramide@AramideOyekunle

Entry Level Salary Range For Nigeria Doctors Fresh Graduate (House Officers). Federal and State Hospitals: N150,000 - N220,000 Federal Medical Centers: N150,00 - N220,000 Specific Institutions: N250,000 - N350,000

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Christopher Maduewesi
Christopher Maduewesi@Xtopherewesi·
When I say Tobi Amusan is the greatest Nigerian athlete in history, it's because I look at it from the prism of how difficult it is, consistently being a top 3 Hurdler in the world. America will always produce great hurdlers. It's like a traditional event for them. In the last decade, we have had Kendra Harrison, Tia Jones, Nia Alli, Grace Stark, and Masai Russell; all from the US. Guess the outsider who had always been in the mix against these top hurdlers? Tobi Express. Tobi has raced different eras of American hurdlers, and is still top 2 in the world. That longevity and talent sets her apart. To have a Nigerian consistently beaming the spotlight on us, is truly remarkable. Honestly, Tobi needs an Athletics statue in Nigeria... I am serious!
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Olúmáyòwá.dev
Olúmáyòwá.dev@akintunero·
What made it easier for me in the past was that I was working in Côte d’Ivoire, and by default my Netflix movies would come up in French audio, so I’d just use English subtitles. All my Ivorian friends who spoke English also pushed me to use French back then. I’ll be better this year!
Olúmáyòwá.dev@akintunero

I’m gradually picking up French and being intentional about it this year. But accent yiii noni, it’s not coming together at all 😂😂. The biggest motivator for me getting back into French is my younger brother’s fluency.

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trish
trish@TrisH0x2A·
a Stanford professor named Nick Parlante spent years writing short focused documents on C and put them all free online Essential C is ~ 45 pages covering all the common features and techniques for the C language he wrote at the bottom: "I hope you can share and enjoy this document in the spirit of goodwill in which it is given away" that was in 2003 and it has been free ever since
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Hazel
Hazel@Hazel_qs·
Last semester, my English professor spent an entire lecture complaining that the library charged him for a “lost” book he had already returned. I work at the library, so after class I checked the system. Found the book in under 10 minutes. It was sitting on the shelf the whole time. Someone just forgot to scan it back in. Easy fix. I cleared the fine and emailed my professor: “I’ve taken care of the issue. It shouldn’t bother you anymore.” Professional. Polite. Totally normal. Then I signed the email with my full name. Now, this is important: I have an aggressively Italian last name. The kind of name that sounds like someone either owns a restaurant… or controls the docks. The next class, my professor looked at me completely differently. Not scared. Just… respectful. By the end of the week, my classmates stopped using my real name. They started calling me: “The Librarian Mafia.” One guy even whispered: “The family handled it.” Honestly? Best nickname I’ve ever had.
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Die Hard
Die Hard@jassjegs·
Life is somehow scripted and nobody can sit boldly to tell what might happen tomorrow. Remember in early 2015 when Brig Gen Yekini moved then Col Y Shaibu (Now COAS) to do blocking force in Yoyo, a town before Monguno then 5 Bde HQ. Oga Shaibu is someone who will never say /1
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Seye
Seye@seyezxt0·
@temivalentine_ How does Gemma skip the OCR preprocessing I am amazed
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marqix ☆
marqix ☆@fwmarqix·
Me: in Japan during earthquake, tiny shaking starts. I panic instantly. Japanese coworkers continue typing, completely calm. building shaking harder now. Me: SHOULDN’T WE DO SOMETHING? Coworker sipping coffee: If computer falls, catch computer. Me: ...what about us. Coworker: We are already employed. Computer still has purpose. earthquake stops. everybody resumes work normally. then office manager walks out calmly holding emergency helmet. Manager: Good news everyone. Me: What. Manager: Vending machine survived. office erupts in relieved applause. I finally understood national priorities.
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🇨🇭🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿InLucysHead🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇨🇭©
A British spy goes undercover in America and tries to infiltrate the political ranks... To get into politics, he has to pass an oral exam. Examiner: When did the USA gain independence? Spy: July 4, 1776 Good. How many continents are there? - Easy peasy, seven. Damn, you're good. Which continent is Turkey in? - Technically, Turkey is in two continents; Asia and Europe, since some parts of- *gets cut off* -Woah, you know your geography. Let's do some history now. Examiner: Who first discovered America? Spy: Most people think Christopher Colombus did, but actually Leif Erikson first discovered the lands of our blessed country, America. Who was the first President of the United States? - Peyton Randolph. George Washington was the country's first *elected* president. But he was by no means the country's first president. At this point, the examiner realised this dude was a spy, because an actual American doesn't know shit.
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Aniela Allotey
Aniela Allotey@ani_ela_·
For Sagna, Koscielny, Aubameyang, Lacazette, Ramsey, Cazorla, Sanchez, Fabregas, Ozil, Xhaka, Walcott, Wilshere, Bellerin, Mertesacker, Giroud, Monreal, Podolski, Vermaelen, Clichy, Nasri, Rosicky, Tierney, Szczesny, Chamakh, Ox, Diaby, Song, Welbeck, Torreira, Elneny, Holding…
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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
I’ve spent the past couple of weeks building Looters: a public archive of Nigerian political corruption since the 1990s. Governors, ministers, shell companies, Swiss accounts, the Jersey trusts, — one searchable graph. You too can connect the dots: 1000reasons.vote/looters
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SHAV★
SHAV★@shavnyuy·
Africa didn’t run out of good building materials. It was taught to distrust them… and then it chose to keep distrusting them long after no one was forcing it to. Colonisation introduced the bias. Building codes written during that period classified mud brick, laterite, and earth construction as non-compliant. Cement was imported and institutionalized through those same codes. But here is what that argument leaves out: South Korea was colonized and flattened by war. Vietnam fought three consecutive wars until 1975. Singapore had no natural resources. They rebuilt anyway, with intention and with accountability. The colonization argument explains how Africa got here. It does not explain why it is still here. After independence, the concrete block became a status symbol that African buyers, developers, and architects chose voluntarily. Local materials were not just abandoned by colonial decree, they were abandoned by African hands, long after colonization ended. That is the conversation worth having. This is what A Threshold built instead, in Kaggalipura, Karnataka, India. Subterranean Ruins is a community centre dug into a sloping three-acre orchard south of Bengaluru. Red brick walls, stone paving, black granite cobblestones, every material sourced within 50 kilometres of the site. The mortar binding it all contains five per cent cement. The rest is lime and mud. The rooftops are planted. The courtyards regulate airflow. There is no air conditioning. Local masons, artists and craftspeople from the surrounding villages built it; trained on site, employed through the construction process. The result looks like it has always been there. That is not an accident. That is the point. Africa is not short of brick. It is not short of laterite, stone, or clay. What it is short of is architects and clients willing to treat those materials as the complete answer they already are, instead of reaching for the cement block that costs more, performs worse in heat, and hands the economy of construction to supply chains communities don’t control. The history matters, but the choice being made on every building site today belongs to us. Subterranean Ruins, Kaggalipura, Karnataka, India 🇮🇳 | A Threshold | Avinash Ankalge, Harshith Nayak | 165m² | 2022 | 📷 Edmund Sumner
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