Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄

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Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄

Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄

@timiolaifa

Building stuff at @energylucidhq | Product Architect & Founder building digital infrastructure for Africa’s energy and complex markets.

Future Присоединился Mayıs 2015
1.8K Подписки280 Подписчики
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Adewale Yusuf
Adewale Yusuf@AdewaleYusuf_·
Around 2012, I was struggling to find my place in tech. Then Facebook posted a photo of its engineering team and I saw a Black engineer who looked like me. I later learned he was Nigerian. His name was Ola. That moment made the dream feel possible. I kept that photo as my screensaver for 3+ years. Every time I felt like quitting, I reminded myself:
“If he can do it, why not me?” Today, @ola works at OpenAI. And after 14 years, I finally get to meet him. You never know who’s watching you…
Or whose life you’re changing just by showing up.
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Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄@timiolaifa·
@AdewuyiRoseline 😀 Tiktok can be like that sometimes. It will eventually see your values and match you with your audience pool. You could try using their features a lot more. They need people to use it, so they reward the ones who try.
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ADEWUYI Roseline Adebimpe
ADEWUYI Roseline Adebimpe@AdewuyiRoseline·
30,000 followers… wow. I remember when I started on Twitter, constantly disturbing my friend with “I don’t even understand how this thing works—teach me.” I really had no clue. I stayed, I kept posting, and somehow, it became one of the most powerful tools in my journey. Twitter has given me visibility in ways I didn’t imagine. So many opportunities have come from here. Most of my collaborations in Nigeria started from connections I made right on this app. It taught me the power of positioning and visibility. It is funny because Twitter is known for short posts, but my style has always been different. I write epistles, long which is pretty unconventional and somehow, those are the ones that resonate the most. Thank you for reading them. For engaging, reposting, supporting, and rooting for me. I don’t take it for granted 🤍
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impulsive
impulsive@weezerOSINT·
i went to clickup.com. opened the page source. found a hardcoded API key in the javascript. copied it. sent one GET request. got back 959 email addresses and 3,165 internal feature flags. employees from Home Depot. Fortinet. Autodesk. Tenable. Rakuten. Mayo Clinic. Permira. Akin Gump. government workers from Wyoming, Arkansas, North Carolina, Montana, Queensland Australia, and New Zealand. a Microsoft contractor. 71 clickup employees. fortinet sells enterprise firewalls. tenable makes Nessus, the vulnerability scanner half the industry runs. their employees emails are exposed because clickup hardcoded a third party API key in a javascript file that loads before you even log in. this was first reported to clickup through hackerone on January 17, 2025. its now April 2026. the key has not been rotated. i just pulled the response five minutes ago. every email is still there. clickup raised $535 million at a $4 billion valuation. claims 85% of the Fortune 500 use their platform. looks like the proof is in the page source.
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Pretty Jenny Jnr 👄
Pretty Jenny Jnr 👄@Itz__Priscy·
Which of these skirts is the most ideal for secondary school students? Best length goes to?
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Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄
@aditiitwt It's unprofessional on their end for not sharing sharing ahead what the mode of interview would be. Except if you have missed that information. The sender is definitely throwing away a valuable candidate if you were the right fit for the company.
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aditii
aditii@aditiitwt·
Had a technical interview scheduled, got two missed calls, and I straight up blocked the number thinking it was spam Now I got this mail... and found out it was the company’s HR calling😭
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🍂
🍂@Lovandfear·
Your car is German. Your democracy is Greek. Your coffee is Brazilian. Your movies American. Your shirt is Indian. Your electronic Chinese. Your numbers Arabic. Your letters are Latin. And you complain your neighbor is an immigrant!
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Osaretin Victor Asemota
There are many niche CRM tools built by Africans for the African market, they are just not loud. At @Infibranchesng our guys built one for the Solar industry in Africa. In South Africa there are also several niche CRM for specific sectors. Generic CRM doesn't work well in Africa as you will always need a lot of unorthodox customizations. They have a high failure rate. Take it from me, I was an SAP consultant and I have seen things.
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SB
SB@seyedele·
It’s been 26 years and there’s still no CRM tool purposely built for African (Nigerian) businesses that meets us at our point of need and pocket.
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Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄
@GeminiApp talks a lot for a simple task. Can you just reorder the schemas? 🤷‍♂️ 🤦‍♂️ I don't need a full lecture.
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David Senra
David Senra@davidsenra·
"You should be failing." Elon designs his organizations to create small failures as quickly as possible: “If you're not adding back in 10% of the things you've removed, you're not taking out enough.” When he hires people, he tells them: “If you can't tell me the four ways you fucked something up, then you weren't the one doing the real work.” When he sets deadlines, he's like: “I want to pick a deadline that I'm 50% likely to make.” “We're going to miss half our deadlines, and I'm totally fine with that because it means we'll be moving as fast as we possibly can." "And we're going to make some deadlines that nobody thought we were going to make.”
David Senra@davidsenra

My conversation with @EricJorgenson, author of The Book of Elon (@elonmusk). 0:00 Book Reveal 0:39 Build Useful Things 2:19 Engineering Talent Edge 4:26 Wired for War 6:47 Tip of the Spear 8:47 Burn the Boats 13:13 Facing Fear 15:16 Origin Story Myths 18:19 Know Business A to Z 22:17 Simplify and Fail Fast 25:35 Reality and Physics 28:18 The Algorithm Begins 30:34 Delete and Simplify 34:25 Starlink War Room 36:52 Repetition as OS 38:18 Step Three Simplify Optimize 38:43 Question Every Requirement 39:13 Tesla Battery Pack Delete 40:43 Repetition Installs Ideas 42:02 Step Four Accelerate 43:26 Design Org for Speed 46:06 Step Five Automate 46:29 Control and Clean Sheet 48:54 Vertical Integration and Costs 50:47 SpaceX Incentives and Mars 57:11 Frontier Unlocks Starlink 1:00:26 Time as True Currency 1:03:58 Speed Triage and Bottlenecks 1:10:11 Internalized Responsibility 1:12:56 Avoid Serialized Dependencies 1:14:31 Aligning the Team 1:15:07 Time Is the Constraint 1:16:00 One Metric Focus 1:18:03 Directional Predictions 1:19:06 We Must Make Stuff 1:25:39 Manufacturing as Moat 1:26:23 Speed and Direct to Customer 1:28:41 SpaceX Feasibility Study 1:33:07 Edge of Sanity Leadership 1:37:10 Bottlenecks and Integration 1:40:01 Design and Simplify 1:45:15 Catch the Rocket 1:48:14 Capitalism and Closing Includes paid partnerships.

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Science girl
Science girl@sciencegirl·
Turkish photographer Uğur Gallenkuş portrays two different worlds within a single image
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Zainab hates misogynists and loves ML✨
Why don't we drink gbegiri as a soup. Like pepper soup yk. It's just pureed beans. Then we can add meat inside.
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Ex-Grammaton Cleric
Ex-Grammaton Cleric@OtunbaBrickz·
All of you GenZ’s and unlearned millennials that clown Nigeria asking mockingly “why are we even called Giant of Africa, self?” this is why! In the 60s-90s, Nigeria was literally Africa’s sugar daddy, $20m here, $10m there, and so on and so forth to other African countries! we didn’t only talk about Pan-Africanism we put our money where our mouth was. Also, at independence, many African countries didn’t have as many educated professionals as Nigeria. In a lot of African countries that gained independence after us from 1963 onwards, the first chief justice, auditor general, surgeon general, vice chancellors of universities were all Nigerians! The first black chief justice of Botswana was Akinola Aguda, the first black chief justice of Gambia was Emmanuel Ayoola, when the portuguese left Mozambique in the 70s Nigerian health care officers (doctors and nurses) were sent to shore up their healthcare system from collapse bcos they just didn’t have enough qualified doctors. after all said and done we sent over 10,000 professionals across africa and the carribeans to help them incubate their newly independent nations should we even talk about the ECOMOG troops in the 90s that 70% majorly funded (spent over $3b+) and equipped by Nigeria with Nigerian soldiers forming 75% of the peacekeeping force? ECOMOG led by us was highly responsible for ending the Liberian and Sierra Leonean civil wars. I won’t even go into details of what Nigeria contributed to the South African anti-apartheid efforts! Nigeria gave and gave and forgot to pay attention to its own development and today we’ve become the pariah amongst nations!
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja

“During Murtala’s regime, we gave Angola $20 Million which was N12 Million. Nigerian Airways helped them have access to the outside world. We did the same with South Africa.”- Former President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo

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Timileyin Olaifa UX 🦄
There is a new challenge regarding that: clearing up the leaves. We now pay cleaners to do it, unlike in the past when we did it ourselves. It would be a waste if there is no courtyard or a proper architectural design suitable for our climate, like the old buildings were designed
Moe@Mochievous

We need more trees in Lagos. A friend lives in a compound full of trees with large windows on opposite sides of the flat. She doesn’t use air conditioning during the day because she doesn’t need it at all. Trees make spaces breathable and actually livable. We need more trees.

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Abiola Adebayo
Abiola Adebayo@Biola_bayo1·
Give me a beautiful ancient Yoruba name
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Abhijit
Abhijit@abhijitwt·
Every time you see a startup with “.ai” in its domain… someone is getting paid. Not the founders. Not the VCs. A tiny Caribbean island is. → Anguilla Back in 1995, countries got their domain codes: > India got .in > The UK got .uk > The US got .us > Anguilla got .ai At the time, it meant nothing. No tech scene. No startups. Just tourism. Then ChatGPT happened. And suddenly: > .ai started to mean credibility > .ai started to mean cutting-edge tech > .ai started to mean something investors take seriously So every startup rushed to buy it. The result? > Domains grew from ~60K to 1M+ > ~2,000 new registrations per day > ~$130 per domain (2 years) And here’s the crazy part: > Nearly HALF of Anguilla’s national budget now comes from .ai domains That money is funding: > Lower taxes > Free healthcare for kids > A brand new international airport No strategy. No master plan. Just… two letters assigned by chance. Sometimes, the biggest leverage in the world is pure luck.
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Madam Suzie🌴🤍
Madam Suzie🌴🤍@madam_suzie_·
Y'all need to decolonise your minds...Calling someone Aunty or broda, sister or uncle isn't part of Yorùbá culture sha...what Yorùbá actually use is titles (iya/baba/olori ebi and other traditional titles), nicknames,name of your Odu Ifa,pet names and oriki . Then we have the honorific pronoun "ẹ́" which stands to show respect....in my family I call my uncles and aunty's their nicknames and use "ẹ́" while Talking to them, my younger siblings don't call me aunty or sister they call me by my name and use "e" cos that's the true Yorùbá way...it's even crazier that when we're speaking Ekiti dialect there's nothing like "ẹ́" everyone is "o" ....y'all need to touch grass...lol.
Big Uncle@Usmanashafe

But jokes apart, why will Enioluwa call Wumi Toriola by her name? The tree of the nose is far from the head Wumi is close to 40 and Enioluwa is just 26 In Yoruba culture, that’s very disrespectful

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