Big Mummy☺️

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Big Mummy☺️

Big Mummy☺️

@ShickShally

Afro-Feminism | Oriental Nigerian.

เข้าร่วม Eylül 2018
208 กำลังติดตาม288 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด
Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
GOD IS GOOD, CHRIST IS KING!!!!!
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Big Mummy☺️ รีทวีตแล้ว
ALI
ALI@Saifthesage·
This sounds really cruel until you realize a war has been happening in the north east for about two decades now and we have a refugee crisis right now in this country. I can bet you’ve partied in these two decades.
mr. freewill@mbxnaa

During the Biafra war, niggas were in Lagos partying

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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
@elizaego Tie His hands and suck His Cock. That’s the answer for amorous People like Me. But “untie Him/remove the blindfold ” is the correct answer.
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
A moving Woman will One day meet an investor willing to drop a Million Dollar investment in Her Creative agency.
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
@Okenyi__Monica @doyin_deji I actually have. Now if You talk about SHEIN, yeah those ones are lying but not Temu. Temu is only dishonest with that 300K voucher
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Monica
Monica@Okenyi__Monica·
@ShickShally @doyin_deji One day, calculate every item in your cart one by one, check your calculator for the total and check the total on Temu😂 If you buy 1 or 2 items, you can maybe bypass this but multiple items? Story😂
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doyin
doyin@doyin_deji·
that 300k coupon on temu. please is it real, if you pay for an item wil they give you 300k
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
@Okenyi__Monica @doyin_deji There really is a way around it. If You add it to the cart and leave, they’ll revert it back to the original price but if You research for it again, the item in the cart will become discounted again.
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Monica
Monica@Okenyi__Monica·
@doyin_deji It’s doesn’t work. And any discount you’re getting, just know that you are buying overpriced items that already covers that discount. Forget all this “there’s a way around it” talk. You can’t outsmart their system. It’s well programmed.
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Kate Cornell
Kate Cornell@KateCornell·
Can I just buy a copy of Word? I shouldn't have to pay for it every year. The subscription model has ruined everything.
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
@chudy_jnr But it’s not misinformation it’s omitted information. Igbos weren’t painted in bad light, do not let stubborn bias blind Your eyes to the revelations in it. There was only one Yoruba Man recounting His story, every other person was from a Biafran—claimed region
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PABLO OF UNN🦁
PABLO OF UNN🦁@chudy_jnr·
I just finished watching the BBC documentary on the Biafran War, Surviving Biafra: Voices from the Nigerian Civil War, and I couldn’t help but shake my head in disbelief. The amount of misinformation in that documentary is alarming, but I don’t even blame them. As Chinua Achebe wisely said “Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.”
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
This is nonsense btw because computer codes need metaphors as they are not written in human language and one cannot think in codes
Millie Marconi@MillieMarconnni

A Dutch computer scientist gave one lecture in 1988 arguing that programming is unlike anything humans have ever tried to do before, and the reason most software on earth is broken is that we are still teaching it as if it were a hobby. His name was Edsger Dijkstra. He won the Turing Award in 1972. He invented the shortest path algorithm that every GPS on earth still runs on. He wrote the paper that killed the goto statement in modern programming languages. He spent 50 years quietly being one of the most consequential thinkers in the entire history of computer science, and he was in a very bad mood by the time he stood up at the ACM Computer Science Conference in 1988 to deliver the lecture that almost nobody at the conference wanted to hear. The lecture was called On the Cruelty of Really Teaching Computer Science. It is now one of the most cited papers in the entire history of computing education. It was filed in his archive as EWD1036, handwritten in his careful fountain-pen calligraphy because he refused to use a typewriter and famously refused to use email for the rest of his life. The argument was simple and uncomfortable. Programming, Dijkstra said, is a radical novelty. Not a new tool. Not a new skill. Not a faster version of something humans already knew how to do. A genuinely new category of intellectual activity that has no real precedent in the entire history of the human species, and our brains have not been built to handle it. Here is what he meant by that. When a programmer writes a line of high-level code and presses run, that single line might trigger a billion operations at the level of the silicon. The ratio between the abstraction you are working in and the physical events you are actually causing is roughly one billion to one. No engineer in history before computing ever had to reason about a system spanning that kind of ratio inside their own head. A bridge builder reasons about steel beams and the physics of weight. A surgeon reasons about organs and the physics of tissue. A chemist reasons about molecules and the physics of bonds. All of them are working inside ratios of physical scale where the largest and smallest things they need to think about are within a few orders of magnitude of each other. A programmer routinely writes one line that orchestrates a billion physical events on a chip, and is expected to predict the behavior of all of them in advance. Dijkstra argued that the human brain was simply not built for this. Every intuition we have evolved over hundreds of thousands of years comes from a world of medium-sized objects behaving in continuous ways. Computing is the opposite. It is discrete, not continuous. A program that runs perfectly a billion times can crash on the billion-and-first iteration because of a single bit. A single character missing from a line of code can take down a power grid. There is no margin. There is no graceful degradation. The system either works or does not, and the only way to know is to actually run it. This was the part of the lecture where Dijkstra made everyone in the room uncomfortable. He said the way computer science was being taught in universities was a quiet disaster. Professors were teaching programming the way carpenters teach woodworking. With examples. With metaphors. With analogies to things students already understood. Files are like folders. Memory is like a desk. A function is like a recipe. Dijkstra said this was actively making it harder for students to think clearly. The whole point of a radical novelty is that there is nothing in your past experience to compare it to. The moment you start reaching for metaphors, you are smuggling in old intuitions that do not apply, and those intuitions will betray you the first time you try to reason about a system the metaphor was not built to describe. His exact line was this: the usual way in which we plan today for tomorrow is in yesterday's vocabulary. And yesterday's vocabulary, he argued, was killing the field. The reason most software is broken is downstream of this single misunderstanding. Programmers are taught to think of code as a craft. Something you get a feel for. Something you pick up through practice. Something where intuition gets sharper with experience. Dijkstra said this is exactly backwards. Programming is not a craft. It is closer to mathematics than to carpentry, and the moment you treat it as a craft, you guarantee that the software you produce will be full of the kind of bugs that craftsmanship cannot catch. The fix, in his view, was to teach programming the way mathematics is taught. You should be able to prove your program correct before you run it. You should reason about your code formally, the way a mathematician reasons about a theorem, not the way a carpenter feels their way through a joint. The students who learned this way, he said, would walk out of their classes with a kind of confidence that no amount of typing practice could produce. The lecture was published in Communications of the ACM in 1989. The field did not listen. Universities kept teaching programming the same way. Software kept getting bigger. Bugs kept compounding. By 2026, almost every piece of software on earth has known security vulnerabilities, undefined behaviors, and edge cases that nobody has ever proven safe. The doom that Dijkstra warned about in 1988 is now the default condition of the digital world we have built. The deeper lesson is the one most readers miss the first time through. Dijkstra was not just talking about software. He was making a much bigger point about how humans learn anything that is genuinely new. The instinct to translate the unfamiliar into the familiar is the most natural thing in the world. It is also the single biggest obstacle to actually understanding something that has no precedent. If you keep reaching for analogies, you will never see the new thing clearly. You will only see your old framework projected onto it. This is happening right now with AI. The same instinct that made people learn programming through metaphors of files and folders is making people understand large language models through metaphors of brains and people. Almost every framework being used to describe AI in 2026 is borrowed from a previous domain. None of them quite fit. The few people who are actually building useful intuitions about how these systems work are the ones who have done what Dijkstra recommended forty years ago. They have set down the old vocabulary. They have looked at the new thing on its own terms. They have accepted that the radical novelty is radical for a reason. You are not slow. You were taught a discipline as if it were a hobby. The cruelty is real. The fix is still available.

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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
@Dmaybellinetimi @treazyblaq How did You turn around and make it Her fault , even when You can see the aggression He is trying to use on Her? Wow, Your brain might be on recess
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Maayy..
Maayy..@Dmaybellinetimi·
@treazyblaq At some point in our life we need to be accountable as women. Phyna is trying to make it that same industry and they all do unhinged things, she sat there, saw the wager and still sat down there. If you will not give yourself respect I am sorry, no one will.
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
Is the @DSGovernment Ministry of Education aware of the facts that students are writing waec exams into the night? Questions are arriving late and schools are closing as late as 7:30pm @waecnigeria
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Big Mummy☺️
Big Mummy☺️@ShickShally·
Stella Li, The CEO of BYD is an actual baddie🤭
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your boy Armani 🫂
your boy Armani 🫂@armanifeante·
Bandits entered Bayelsa to kidnap Niger Delta boys round them up like poultry chickens. Give them phones to call their families for ransom. They are demanding 50million each for the 6 of them. Aura for aura.
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