Short pieces on Nigerian software, on building businesses that survive, on AI that actually ships, and on the occasional unrelated thought. Updated when there’s something worth saying.
The 2026 schedule isn't a paperwork problem. It's an infrastructure problem hiding inside a paperwork problem, and the businesses that treat it as the former will run out of runway before the latter.
Ten ops audits, one notebook, and one consistent finding — the bottleneck is almost never where the founder thinks it is, and almost always sitting in WhatsApp.
Lagos has fibre now. So does Kaduna. So why is every system we ship still designed as if the network might leave at any moment — and why are we still right to do it.
A free audit costs the client nothing and costs us four days. The math doesn't work, and the relationship that starts with it almost never does either.
A practical writeup on prompt design, code-switching, and the unglamorous evaluation harness behind an agent that holds a Pidgin conversation without sounding like a translator from 2014.
A short, unrelated note on geography, on the assumption that the work has to happen elsewhere, and on what changes when you stop believing it.
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