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Monday, 2 February 2015

Make Your Life Easier With Keyboard Shortcuts for Windows 7 and 8.1

Whether you are hooked on using your keyboard, mouse, or a hybrid user like me with one hand on the keyboard and the other on the mouse, keyboard shortcuts are always good to know. Since I've been using Windows 7 for quite some time, I have a nice list of keyboard short cuts that are invaluable to me. Recently, I bought a new computer and now have the Windows 8.1 operating system. Though many of my shortcuts still work with 8.1, it still has some unique keyboard options. The following is a list of keyboard shortcuts that everyone should know. WK = Windows Key. WK • Opens the start menu in 7 • Opens the start screen or switch to the desktop in 8.1 WK+D • Switches you to the desktop in 7 • Switches you to the desktop in 8.1 WK+. • Unavailable in 7 • Pins and unpins Windows apps on the side of the screen in 8.1 WK+X • Opens the mobility manager in 7 • Opens the power user menu in 8.1 WK+C • Unavailable in 7 • Opens the charms in 8.1 WK+I • Unavailable in 7 • Opens the settings, which is the same settings found in charms in 8.1 WK+TAB • Allows you to flip through the open applications in a small screen view in 7 • Switches between apps and the desktop.in 8.1 WK+PRINT SCREEN • To use the print screen option just hit the print screen button in 7 • Creates a screenshot which is automatically saved into your My Pictures folder in 8.1 The following shortcuts are universal across the Windows Operating Systems CTRL+C • Copies highlighted text or item CTRL+V • Pastes text or object that's in the clipboard CTRL+Y • Will redo the last change you did CTRL+Z • Will undo the last change you did. Can be pressed multiple times to undo multiple changes CTRL+HOME • Moves the cursor to the beginning of the document CTRL+END • Moves the cursor to the end of a document CTRL+P • Opens a print preview of the current page or document. ALT+TAB • Flips through open applications in a full screen view ALT+F4 • Closes your current window Old or young, novice or expert, your classification doesn't matter. Keyboard shortcuts are a great way to help you save time as well as making you more productive in your computing endeavors.

Saturday, 31 January 2015

I quit Eagles because Chukwu didn’t like me –Agali

In this exclusive interview with ex-Super Eagles’ striker, Victor Agali, the goal poacher spoke on his career, particularly, why he quit the national team prema­turely, his involvement in a fake Nigeria passport scandal and the current national team under the guidance of Coach Stephen Keshi among others. Excerpts! May we know how you started your career? I started my career from a Nigeria division two club, Nitel F.C in Lagos. It was there that somebody came around in search of a player, whose name I won’t mention. When he saw my performance, he called my coach and said; ‘I love this guy and I prefer him to the player I came in search of. That was how the whole thing started and offers began to come from Belgium, France, Germany and hosts of other European countries but I opted for France before I ended up in Germany. How did you break into the Nigeria National team? Well, it was an unexpected experience for me. Playing for Nigeria’s national team was really tough. I couldn’t imagine myself competing for a shirt with the likes of Finidi George, Garba Lawal, Nwankwo Kanu, Julius Aghahowa, Victor Ikpeba, Pius Ikedia and a host of others. I actually started my national team career at the U-23 level, where I played at the Olympic Games in Sydney in the year 2000. It was there that I showcased my talent under Coach Bonfere Jo. After that competition, I started receiving invitation letter to the national team and that was how I broke into the senior national team. Can you recall your most painful defeat at national team? All defeats are painful, but it pains more when you crash-out in the knockout stage of a competition. The most painful and frustrating defeat I could re­member was at the Sydney 2000 Olympics, where we were beaten by Chile with a wide margin of 4-0 before we eventually scored a consolatory goal and the game ended 4-1 in favour of the Chil­eans. We actually thought that we were good enough because of our performances in the group stage, but the Chileans were better. Tell us about your greatest goal as a striker My greatest goal was the one I scored for Nigeria against Liberia and that was in our quest for the Korea/Japan 2002 World Cup. I scored earlier in the game and we needed a second goal which to reduce the pressure mounted on us by the Liberians. All of a sud­den, a counter attack came from the midfield down to the flanks, and Finidi George passed the ball to me in the middle of the box, then I just tipped ball into the net. That goal sealed our ticket to the World Cup. Who was the toughest defender you played against in your career? I can never forget Lucio. He is a Brazilian. He played in the German League, for Bayern Leverkusen to be precise. We played against each other several times. He moved to Bayarn Mu­nich and I also moved to Schalke 04. He is a very strong guy with hard tackles. We’re friends and I loved playing against him. Despite the fact that you were the highest goal scorer in the Super Eagles’ qualifiers to the Korea/Japan 2002 World Cup, you were left out of the squad to the event by Coach Adegboye Onigbinde. What went wrong? I wasn’t dropped from the team. An issue occurred. Could you believe that at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, all expenses were fully paid by me but there was no refund, I pleaded but no one heard my cry. After playing German Cup final in the year 2002, the national team called me, without flight ticket and invitation letter to my club. I felt bad and I wasn’t the only one complaining of that issue back then. Same thing also happened to Finidi George who played all the qualifying games and was doing well for his club, despite that he was dropped due to lack of proper invitation letter. I think it is high time we eradicated such practice for the development of the game. Is it true that mafia existed in the Super Eagles in your time? Yes, I think mafia existed in the team. Let me tell you this, there are players who had stayed longer in the team, and they felt they were the big boys. It also happens in clubs which I think is bad, and it is still happening till date in our present Eagles. We can’t go higher with such at­titude. It would be a thing of joy if we work in unity. Years back at the 2004 AF­CON, you were sent packing with two other players in the Super Eagles camp what actu­ally went wrong? Yes, Yakubu Aiyegbeni, Celestine Babayaro and I were sent away from the team after breaking a camp curfew and that was after losing to Morocco in our first match of the competi­tion. We were called back but I decided not to go back because I was not treated well by Coach Christian Chukwu. Why were you treated badly by a man who listed you in his team? I didn’t know what I did wrong. I had always respected him but he didn’t just like me. Does that mean the team won’t go on? Besides, the team regained form and went on to reach the semi-final stage of that competition before they were knocked-out. You were once involved in a fake passport scandal, what really went wrong? That was the worst day in my life. It happened in Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, I was told that my Nigeria passport was a fake. It was crazy when the immigration officer told me you are under arrest. It hap­pened like a movie, but I don’t like to recall the experience be­cause it was my worst moment. It was a terrible day for me, but the issue has been resolved and my family and I have forgotten about it. What’s your take on the Super Eagles’ absence at this year’s AFCON? To me, the game of football has improved so much that the tag of ‘minor teams’ has been eradicated. We are currently the African champions no doubt, but if things like these don’t happen, it won’t add unique­ness to football. A team that lacks physical preparation can’t defeat any African team. We lost that game due to lack of preparation. We never played any friendly before the game against Congo and our admin­istrative procedure was bad. I think all these cost us the AF­CON ticket and it should serve as a lesson. Is Stephen Keshi the right coach for the Super Eagles of Nigeria? Keshi is a good coach, no doubt about that. But if one wants to make it in life, one must listen to advice. Lack of advice killed Keshi. Nigeria football has gone beyond build­ing team year by year. We have players that can turn things around in a tinkle of an eye, but he refused to call them into the team. For instance, if Ike Uche had been called earlier during the AFCON qualification series, we might have made it to the competition. Things can still be better if Keshi turns a new leave. Highly-rated coaches have come and coached this country and their records cannot be compared to Keshi’s in term of success. So to me, I don’t see the Eagles’ failure as Keshi’s fault. Presently, what are you into and what should your fans be expecting from you? I have something going on which I am not ready to disclose. It’s a slow process and I want to dedicate my time to it until it is fully mature for the whole world to know about it.

Thursday, 29 January 2015

Handle Failure

I haven’t heard of any person who has not had a taste of a single failure in life; we all succumb to mistakes. The difference between successful people and ordinary people is how they handle failure. There are people who handle failure so well. They may feel sad; they may cry and feel sorry for themselves. They may be demotivated and may even be depressed. But this situation they are in will last only for a short while. They quickly recover. We all agree that we need to triumph over failures; but still majority of us finds handling failures a challenge. I am reminded by a quote from Winston Churchill "Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts." How should we handle failure? How do we get the courage to press on? It all starts with having a different perspective. We need to understand that failure is a fertile training ground. You may fail at your first attempt in putting up a business. You may have lost a lot of money and it has become difficult to get up. Whatever happened, you need to get up. You need to analyse and review what went wrong. Look for the gold nuggets from your failure. Using your failure as a lesson, think of different techniques and tactics. Probably, you should start small the next time you put up a business. Starting small may create a smaller profit but return on investment is realised sooner. Start small and grow your business at a steady pace until you feel comfortable at investing more and earning more. Test different ways to market your product or service. Each failure trains you to be stronger, better and more experienced than before. Failure is a fertile training ground that improves your skill, knowledge and your personality. Failure is a normal occurrence. As I said, I have yet to find a person who has not had a single failure in his or her life. The pain of failure becomes more intense if we wallow in it; if we keep thinking about it and feeling sorry for ourselves. It is okay to have a pity party but keep it short. Use that pity party to think of what happened – what you should have done to avoid the failure and what you should now do to turn the failure into success. Start counting your blessings. Stop thinking that you are the only person suffering failure. Remember that all people experience failure. Failure is a temporary setback. It is not permanent as long as you take action in handling failure properly. Do not dwell in the pains of the past. Every day is a new day; a new start. Be hopeful. A positive attitude will help you to think clearly and constructively to create a new beginning towards success. Face failure; handle failure with the courage to get up and try again.

Handling Life Changes

Nothing is permanent in this world except change. Life changes are bound to happen; some of them are beyond our control. Life changes may be good or bad. What happens when the life changes are bad? How do you handle these bad life changes? Always expect change as this is inevitable. I have this life principle, “Expect the best, but be prepared for the worst”. It doesn’t mean being a pessimist but rather being prepared when bad times come. You need to be proactive. Prepare a strategy that you can easily navigate through. The transition to the change needs to be as comfortable as possible and it must be productive. Life is a series of chapters with themes and characteristics. Enjoy every chapter, good or bad, by viewing each chapter as an opportunity to improve yourself. Needless to say, you need to always exhibit a positive attitude. Change causes disruption in life. If you caused the change, you feel more in control of the situation. Even if the change happened without your consent, you still need to make sure that the transition does not take control of your decisions. You need to react positively by accepting the change and doing your best to turn the bad things around. Instead of feeling threatened, terrified or immobilized, react by being excited, stimulated and inspired. Doing so will help you protect your health. If you react negatively, you will succumb to stress. We all know that stress can be detrimental to your health. React positively by doing more physical activities; get plenty of rest and exercise. Even if you don’t feel like it, eat healthy. Drink more water to flush out the impurities caused by toxic stress. Exercise to burn off some of the stress. It is easy to get an undisturbed sleep when you are physically exhausted. Get at least eight hours of sleep every day. When life changes happen, never hibernate. You will not achieve anything by being sorry for yourself. Do not isolate yourself. Do not be afraid to share your fears, sadness, or anxieties with others. Change is an opportunity that can lead you to meet new friends who will help and inspire you. Change will be easier to handle when you let others help you. Build a network of support who will help you move forward to the path of success. When unfavorable life changes happen, solve it by being yourself. Do not try to be someone else that you think people want you to be. This is your life change, transition to it by being who you are, not being what others want you to be. You can’t live in somebody else’s story; it will just cause you more disappoints. You need to set your “own” goals. If you set goals for what you believe could be the best outcome, you will have a positive target to work on. Focusing on a goal allows you to establish an action plan to move ahead, one step at a time, toward that goal. You can achieve your goal if you believe in yourself. Stop doubting yourself and start building your self confidence. Recite to yourself the achievements you’ve had. Also, remember that you are human and you are bound to make mistakes but that doesn’t make you less of a person. Believe in your capabilities, talents and skills, even if other people disagree. Above all else, embrace your dream. Think of what you are passionate about and focus on that dream. Asking questions such as “Where am I now?” and “Where do I want to be in the future?” will help you keep your focus. You need to keep moving forward as you handle life changes. Do not forget to celebrate your successes, big or small, as you are in a life journey, and change is part of this life journey.

Friday, 2 January 2015

Cybersecurity Prevention Tips


Looking back at the Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) attack, we must realize that now is the time, more than ever to take a more proactive approach to cybersecurity to prevent what happened to SPE from happening to your organization. If my analysis is correct then any organization could defend against this attack, in spite of the FBI’s statement that 90 percent of businesses would have been victimized (this is probably true, sadly). To defend against this attack, even though “Usernames & Passwords” was one of the files discovered, with plaintext passwords like the word “password”, that’s not what triggered the attack, changing those passwords would have made it a longer and harder RECON and pilfering period but it wouldn’t have stopped them. It’s very embarrassing for SPE to have used such foolish passwords and file names. But that’s not the heart of the problem—here’s my view:

  1. We’re all infected and don’t know it. Assuming you are infected positions you better to proactively harden your systems and remove zero-day infections. With this key assumption, you need to backup all your data files, wipe and reimage your computers and install only legally owned copies of software.
  2. You can’t let Smartphones and Tablets onto corporate networks (bring your own devices – BYOD dilemma) unless they can be managed. This also means deleting all apps and then starting to install trustworthy apps from sources you know and trust. How many apps do we have installed without knowing if they have backdoors or they, themselves, are not just tools and games but are also RATs in disguise?
  3. Employees at Sony are not trained like employees at Coca Cola. This company hasn’t had a breach or lost a secret formula in 100 years. Cyberarmies could attack Coke for the formula and most likely would never succeed in getting it, using the means they used on Sony. Why?  Because Coke practices Employee Training (for social engineering), has frequently tested and updated security policies (including physical security, people security and network security) and they don’t leave the secret formula out in the open – they practice COUNTERVEILLANCE
So if you want to avoid a major breach in your own organization, you might consider following these cybersecurity best practices tips:
  • Train Employees Better
  • Harden Systems  
  • Detect and Removing RATs
  • Deploy Full Disk Encryption and Real-time Backups
  • Defend Against Phishing Attacks
  • Manage the BYOD Dilemma
Of course it’s easier said than done. The biggest weakness at SPE was their employees and if you can’t train them to behave better and understand phishing attacks, proper password management and leverage full-device encryption, storing important information always encrypted and frequently backed up, then what can you expect but another successful breach from the inside out.
I would suggest we all start writing emails as if everyone in the world can see them. Sony Pictures executives have learned this lesson the hard way.  But, again, that’s not what caused the breach, that’s data that was stolen and used against them – that’s just throwing salt in the wound.  The real issue is that all employees need better security training.
How Do RATs Travel Behind Corporate Firewalls?
While most folks think it’s the phishing attack (through the email port – the front door) as the only and key point of entry, you need to start assuming that most of your smartphone or tablet apps are creepware – malware that spies on you and your online behavior – many free apps are RATs. Do you really need them? Delete all of the apps you aren’t using that often. Replace those apps that take advantage of too many of your privacy settings like GPS, phone & SMS logs, personal identity information, with similar apps that don’t. If you don’t manage this bring your own device (BYOD) dilemma then expect RATs on your portable devices to invade your corporate network.
Coca Cola Practices Counterveillance – You Should Too
How old is the Coca Cola recipe?  Has it been hacked or stolen in over 100 years? So what is Coca Cola doing better than everyone else? They are taking the above suggestions, and frequently checking and rechecking their security posture. If you don’t have a plan, expect to be a victim in the Year of the RAT.  If you can make the important information “invisible” to the malware – the RAT, then they can’t steal it.
Practicing Counterveillance, like Coca Cola could be the most important thing you do for privacy and security. Think about it. If you could be invisible, no one could see you. They wouldn’t know when you are browsing the web or using your smartphone.  If you could make all the private information about yourself become completely invisible, no one could every steal it.  That’s right – your personally identifiable information (PII) could not be stolen if no one could see you or your data.  It’s so simple – it sounds too good to be true. Right?  If you could make yourself invisible, if you could hide your PII from prying eyes, you would be practicing counterveillance. That’s right – you would be countering surveillance.
What makes the US B2 Stealth bomber so unique? 
It disperses its radar signature so that it becomes invisible to traditional radar – the design of the ‘skin’ of this aircraft is a counterveillance technology. It is possible to become nearly invisible but you’re right to think it’s very challenging – many would say nearly impossible. However, if you start out with this as a goal ‘how do I make my data invisible to criminals and hackers?’ then each day you should be working to reach this goal – to build your own B2 Steath bomber – a more secure and encrypted database, better password management, real-time backups, defense against RATs and phishing attacks and ultimately better trained employees who realize that ‘loose lips sink ships.’

Thursday, 1 January 2015

Obasanjo is a career liar, says Soyinka

Former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has made a life-long career of compulsive lying, Nobel laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, claimed on Wednesday.
In an abridged response to the former president’s scathing delivery on the literary giant in his latest memoir “My Watch,” Soyinka went to town with his age-long social adversary, lampooning him as one bedeviled with the enigmatic spirit of legendary fable-teller, the late D.O Fagunwa.
He disclosed of peace efforts by unnamed peacemakers to smoothen sustained rough edges between him and Obasanjo, before the latest attack by the former president which, he noted, went well with him, as he was ready for the fresh ding-dong which would put every reconciliatory plan in abeyance, particularly a burgeoning collaborative plan with Obasanjo Centre.
Parodying Obasanjo as an over-grown child of circumstance, Soyinka described his fellow Egbaman as “an incorrigible addictive moralist, who lies through situations to put others down by playing the divinely-appointed watchman and trumps up his own importance and achievements by playing the unparalleled achiever.”
While promising a fuller version of his response, the literary giant asked the former president to remember the fictional character, Iku (Death) in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare, wondering Obasanjo’s knack for playing the Great Immortal and adding that were he to pursue every libelous statement of the former president against him, such would form an independent volume of the Nigerian Law Report.
The response entitled “WATCH AND PRAY, WATCH AND PREY!” read in part: “I had fully attuned myself to the fact that our Owu retiree soldier and prolific author is an infliction that those of us who share the same era and nation space must learn to endure.
“However, it does appear that there is no end to this individual’s capacity for infantile mischief, and for needless, mind-boggling provocations, such as his recent ‘literary’ intrusion on my peace.
“Perhaps I ought to interrupt myself here with an apology to some mutual acquaintances – ‘blessed peacemakers’ and all - especially in this season of ‘peace and goodwill to all men’. Please know that your efforts have not been entirely in vain.
“I had a cordial exchange with Obasanjo over the phone recently – engineered by himself, his ground staff and/or a chance visitor – when I had cause to visit his Presidential Laundromat for the first time ever. During that exchange, I complemented him on making some quite positive use of landed property that was acquired under morally dubious circumstances, and blatantly developed through a process that I denounced as ‘executive extortionism’.
“To return to our main man, and friendly interventionists, you may like to note that I went so far as to engage him in light banter, stating that some of his lesser sins would be forgiven him for that creative conversion of the landscape – a conversation that he shortly afterwards delightedly shared with at least three mutual acquaintances.
“I promised a follow-up visit to view some mysterious rock script whose existence, he informed me, was uncovered by workers during ground clearing. The exchange was, in short, as good as ‘malice towards none’ that any polemicist could hope to contribute to the ongoing season of peace and goodwill. Obviously that visit will not now take place, any more than the pursuit of vague notions of some creative collaboration with his Centre that began to play around my mind...
“D.O. Fagunwa, the pioneer Yoruba novelist, was a compulsive moralist. I suspect that he may have exerted some influence on our garrulous general, resulting in his pupil’s tedious, misapplied and self-serving deluge of moralising. It seems quite likely indeed that the ghostly, moralistic hand of Fagunwa reached out from the Great Beyond, sat his would-be competitor forcefully before a mirror and bade him write what he saw in that image. I invoke Fagunwa because, at his commemorative colloquium in Akure in August last year, I drew my audience’s attention to a remarkable passage in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare.”
Read the full text below
I had fully attuned myself to the fact that our Owu retiree soldier and prolific author is an infliction that those of us who share the same era and nation space must learn to endure. However, it does appear that there is no end to this individual’s capacity for infantile mischief, and for needless, mind-boggling provocations, such as his recent ‘literary’ intrusion on my peace. Perhaps I ought to interrupt myself here with an apology to some mutual acquaintances – ‘blessed peacemakers’ and all - especially in this season of ‘peace and goodwill to all men’. Please know that your efforts have not been entirely in vain.
I had a cordial exchange with Obasanjo over the phone recently – engineered by himself, his ground staff and/or a chance visitor – when I had cause to visit his Presidential Laundromat for the first time ever. During that exchange, I complemented him on making some quite positive use of landed property that was acquired under morally dubious circumstances, and blatantly developed through a process that I denounced as ‘executive extortionism’. That obscene proceeding has certainly set a competitive precedent for impunity in President Jonathan’s recent fund-raising shindig, editorialised in THE PUNCH (Dec. 23, 2014) as “Impunity Taken too Far”. So much for the latest from that directions - we mustn’t allow Handing-Over notes between presidents to distract us for too long.
To return to our main man, and friendly interventionists, you may like to note that I went so far as to engage him in light banter, stating that some of his lesser sins would be forgiven him for that creative conversion of the landscape – a conversation that he shortly afterwards delightedly shared with at least three mutual acquaintances. I promised a follow-up visit to view some mysterious rock script whose existence, he informed me, was uncovered by workers during ground clearing. The exchange was, in short, as good as ‘malice towards none’ that any polemicist could hope to contribute to the ongoing season of peace and goodwill. Obviously that visit will not now take place, any more than the pursuit of vague notions of some creative collaboration with his Centre that began to play around my mind. That much I do owe you from my report card.
Perhaps you will now accept that there are individuals who are born incorrigible but, more importantly, that some issues transcend one’s personal preferences for harmonious human relationships even in a season of traditional good will. The change in weather conditions sits quite well with me however, since we are both acquainted with the Yoruba proverb that goes: the child that swears his mother will not sleep must also prepare for a prolonged, sleepless infancy. So let it be with Okikiola, the overgrown child of circumstance.
One of the incessant ironies that leapt up at me as I read Obasanjo’s magnum opus was that we are both victims of a number of distasteful impositions - such as being compelled again and again to seek justice against libel in the law courts. I felt genuine empathy to read that he still has a pending thirty-year case instituted by him against his alleged libelers! Judgment was delivered in my favour regarding one of the most nauseating only this year, after surviving technical and other procrastinations, defendant evasions and other legalistic impediments for nearly as long as his. That leaves only a veritable Methuselah on the court list still awaiting re-listing under the resurrection ritual language known as de novo. Unfortunately, not all acts of defamation or willful misrepresentation are actionable, otherwise, my personal list against this newly revealed fellow-sufferer would have counted for an independent volume of the Nigerian Law Report since our paths first crossed during the Civil War. My commitment to the belief in the fundamental right of all human beings NOT TO BE LIED AGAINST remains a life obsession, and thus demands, at the very least, an obligation of non-commission among fellow victims.
I must, therefore, reserve a full, frontal dissection of Obasanjo’s “My Watch” for later, most especially since the work itself is currently under legal restraint and is not readily accessible to a general readership. So, for now, let me single out just one of the most glaring instances of this man’s compulsive career of lying, one sample that the media can readily check upon and use as a touchstone – if they do need one - in assessing our author’s multifaceted claims and commentaries on people and events.
I refer here to the grotesque and personally insulting statement that he has attributed to me for some inscrutable but obviously diversionary reasons. In the process, this past Master of Mendacity brazenly implicates an innocent young man, Akin Osuntokun, who once served him as a Special Adviser. Instead of conferring dignity on a direct rebuttal of an ignoble fabrication, I shall simply make a personal, all-embracing attestation: I despise that species of humanity whose stock-in-trade is to concoct lies simply to score a point, win an argument, puff up his or her own ego, denigrate or attempt to destroy a fellow being. However, even within such deplorable species, a special pit of universal opprobrium is surely reserved for those who even lack the courage of their own lies, but must foist them on others. When an old man stuffs a lie into the throat of an age-mate of his own children - omo inu e! - we can only pity an irredeemable egomaniac whose dotage is headed for twilight disgrace. D.O. Fagunwa, the pioneer Yoruba novelist, was a compulsive moralist. I suspect that he may have exerted some influence on our garrulous general, resulting in his pupil’s tedious, misapplied and self-serving deluge of moralizing. It seems quite likely indeed that the ghostly, moralistic hand of Fagunwa reached out from the Great Beyond, sat his would-be competitor forcefully before a mirror and bade him write what he saw in that image.
I invoke Fagunwa because, at his commemorative colloquium in Akure in August last year, I drew my audience’s attention to a remarkable passage in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare. The passage had struck me during translation and stuck to my mind. I found it uncanny that the original creative moralist, Fagunwa, had captured the psychological profile of a being whom I have been compelled by circumstances to study as an eerie creation, yet this was a character Fagunwa was unlikely to have encountered in real life at the time that he produced that work.
The section comes from an account of a visit to the abode of Iku, Death, the terrifying host to Olowo-aiye, the narrative voice of the adventure. Iku, the host, had been admonishing his guests through the histories of seven creatures who were not permitted a straightforward passage to Heaven or Hell, but were subjected to admonitory punishment at the halfway house to the abode of the dead. The most horrendous tortures were reserved, it would seem, for the last of the seven such ‘detainees’, and I invited my audience to ponder if they could identify any prominent individual, a public figure whose life conduct seamlessly fitted into Fagunwa’s portrayal, which went thus:
“The seventh…. is not among those who set out to improve the world but rather to cause distress to its inhabitants. It was through manipulations that he attained a high position. Having achieved this however, he constantly blocked the progress of those behind him, this being a most deplorable act in the eyes of God, and rank behaviour in the judgment of the dwellers of heaven – that anyone who has enjoyed upliftment in life should seek to be an obstacle for those who follow him. This man forgot the beings of earth, forgot the beings of heaven, in turn, he forgot the presence of God.
The worst kind of behaviour agitated his hands – greed occupied the centre of his heart, and he was a creature that walked in darkness. This man wallowed in bribery, he was chairman of the circle of scheming, head of the gang of double-dealing, field-marshal of those who crept about in the dark of night. With his mouth, he ruined the work of others, while he used a big potsherd to cover the good works of some, that others might not see their attainments. He nosed around for secrets that would entrap his companions, and blew them up into monumental crimes in the eyes of the world. He who turns the world upside down, places the deceitful on the throne, casts the truthful down – because such is a being of base earth, he will never stand as equal among the uplifted.”
My co-occupants of the High Table, in side remarks, and those who came up from the audience afterwards to volunteer their answer to the riddle, without exception named one individual and one individual only, even as I remained non-committal. Indeed, one or two tried to put up a defence of that nominee, and I had to remind them that I had named no one! Fagunwa wrote largely of the world of mongrelized creatures but, as I remarked, his fiction remains a prescient and cautionary mirror of the society we inhabit, where beasts of the forest appear to have a greater moral integrity than those who claim to be leading lights of society.               In this season of goodwill, we owe a duty to our immediate and distant neighbours: CAVEAT EMPTOR! Let all beware, who try to buy a Rolex from this indefatigable watch peddler.
His own hand-crafted, uniquely personalized timepiece has been temporarily confiscated by NDLEA and other guardians of public health but, there is no cause for despair. Such has been the fate of the misunderstood and the envied, avatars descended from the heavens before their time, the seers, and all who crave recognition. Our author invokes God tirelessly, without provocation, without necessity and without justification, perhaps preemptively, but does he really believe in such an entity? Does our home-bred Double-O-Seven believe in anything outside his own Omnipotency? Could he possibly have mistaken the Christian exhortation – ‘Watch and Pray’ for his private inclination to “Watch and Prey? This is a seasoned predator on others’ achievements – he preys on their names, their characters, their motivations, their true lives, preys on gossip and preys on facts, preys on contributions to collective undertakings…..even preys on their identities, substituting his own where possible.
Well, hopefully he may actually believe in the inevitable End to all vanities? So, let our Great Immortal, the Unparalleled Achiever, Di

Jonathan, Buhari can’t end Nigeria’s woes

Jonathan and Buhari
The Chairman, South-West, Nigeria Advance Party, Mr. Tosin Odeyemi, has said that neither President Goodluck Jonathan nor the Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Maj.Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (retd.) can end the challenges confronting the country if any of them wins the presidential election holding in February.
Odeyemi said this in an interview with our correspondent in Osogbo on Thursday.
He said that the insurgency in the North would likely continue if Jonathan, who is from the Niger Delta, should win a second term while Niger Delta militants might resurface to resume economic sabotage if Buhari, who is from the North, should defeat Jonathan.
He stated that the NAP was not in a hurry to win the next presidential election but added that the party would eventually win and offer good governance to Nigerians.
He said, “If Jonathan wins, then Boko Haram will not stop and if Buhari should win, the Niger Delta militants will likely resume to trouble the nation.
“Then if care is not taken, Nigerians may unconsciously work towards fulfilling the prediction of the break-up in 2015. But we don’t want that to happen because we need one another.”
The NAP chieftain said that the general election would not hold in some places, especially in the north-eastern part of the country due to the activities of the terrorists.
Based on this, Odeyemi suggested that the general election should be postponed until a time when security situation would improve. He explained that millions might be disenfranchised if the poll should be conducted next month.

Gov’s wife welcomes first 2015 baby in LIMH

Baby of the Year 2015,  Baby Ogechukwu, weighing 2.5kg, was born at 12.01am at the Isolo General Hospital, Isolo, Lagos... on Thursday
The wife of Lagos State Governor, Mrs. Abimbola Fashola, has welcomed the first baby born in the Lagos Island Maternity Hospital, in 2015.
Fashola presented to the child a wooden cot, a mattress and pillows donated by Vitafoam at the LIMH on Thursday.
The baby, a female, was born to Mrs. Sherifat Ogunnoiki at 12.01 am with a birth weight of 2.3 kilogrammes.
She, however, narrowly missed being named the first baby of the year in the state, as another baby was born at 12.01 to Mrs. Ogechukwu Onyejiekwe at the Isolo General Hospital.
While baby Ogunnoiki was born through caesarian section, baby Onyejiekwe was delivered through virginal delivery, which made baby Onyejiekwe an automatic winner.
While thanking Vitafoam and other corporate organisations, who had contributed to the annual event and the renovation of the lounge as well as the A4 private ward in the hospital, Fashola called on more individuals and organisations to complement the effort of the state government in the health sector.
She said, “I commend all the individuals and organisations that have partnered with the hospital and the state government to bring about this impressive transformation.”
The Chief Medical Director of the LIMH, Dr. Donald Imosemi, urged the government to build an Intensive Care Unit for critically ill patients and overhaul the sewage system in the hospital.
“In 2014, we recorded only two booked maternal deaths. A good number of our 48 unbooked deaths would have possibly survived if we had an ICU. This is our major agenda for 2015,” he said.
According to Imosemi, a total of 74,733 patients visited the LIMH in 2014, a decrease from the 81,605 patients recorded in 2013.
Imosemi, however, attributed the reduction to the outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease and the protracted industrial strike in the health sector.
He added that a total deliveries of 2,890 were recorded out of which 1,349 were carried out by caesarian section.
The Group Managing Director, Vitafoam, Joel Ajiga, said, “This is our first social assignment this year at Vitafoam. We want to celebrate motherhood and we have been doing this for the past 20 years in various ways across the country. We are bringing together first babies of the year in Lagos State since 2008 as our ambassadors.”
Presentations were also made to the second babies of the year at the hospital, a set of twins born to Mrs. Omoshalewa Agbetoba at 2.39am and 2.41am respectively.
The third babies of the year at the hospital, also a set of twins, were born to Mrs. Mutiat Oyedeji at 7.47am and 7.48am respectively.

Akpom: Sanchez Nicknamed Me After Henry

Alexis Sanchez
Akpom who has expressed his interest to play for Nigeria rather than England for whom he has played for as a youth international is a promising young striker still waiting for his chance to shine at the Emirates, making only his second appearance for the first team as a substitute in the League Cup clash with Southampton earlier this season.
Sanchez has seen the youngster at close quarters over the last five months and clearly thinks the 19-year-old has a very bright future, with his affectionate moniker made public knowledge by Akpom himself on Instagram earlier on New Year’s day.
Akpom trained with the first-team squad at London Colney on Wednesday ahead of today’s (Thursday) clash with Southampton and seems to have struck up something of an unlikely friendship with Sanchez, judging from his social media activity.
The England youth international posted a picture of the pair with the caption: “Training this morning with Lexis! he calls me ” Titi ” ( Thierry), funny guy lol.”
Arsenal would almost certainly be receptive to a loan offer for their academy standout when the transfer window opens from New Year’s day.
Akpom spent time with Bradford City and Coventry City last season without success, but has returned to Arsenal and scored goals for fun at under-21 level, nine in as many matches this term.
Akpom was named for the Arsenal side that faced Southampton on Thursday.

Tuesday, 30 December 2014

Wenger Rejects £62m Cavani Rumours

Cavani

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has rubbished claims he’s lodged a £62m bid for PSG striker Edinson Cavani.
Wenger said: “I don’t give any importance to rumours.
“There was a rumour two days ago in France that I offered £62 million for Cavani from Paris Saint-Germain. Everyday there is a different rumour so I don’t give importance to that.”
The news comes hours after reports suggested Arsenal are set to beat Chelsea and United to Sporting star William Carvalho.
The Portuguese side are prepared to cash in on the combative midfielder and Arsenal are ready to make their move.

Arsenal Make £4m Reid Move

Winston Reid

Arsenal are planning a cut-price £4million January move for West Ham defender Winston Reid.
Arsenal have identified the centre half because they believe West Ham can be persuaded to sell next month rather than lose Reid for nothing in the summer.
Arsenal have watched Reid in every game he has played since November and are ready to make their move.
West Ham are trying to get the 26-year-old to sign a new deal but Reid wants more than £60,000 per week, in addition to a £1million signing-on fee.
The Gunners are also keen on Ipswich left back Tyrone Mings, but his £10m asking price is proving prohibitive, while Celtic’s Virgil van Dijk has also been on the radar since last summer.

Monday, 29 December 2014

What financial freedom looks like

Have you ever seen people who have financial freedom and thought to yourself, “I want to be able to live like that, too”? For most of us, the
mental picture of financial freedom looks like someone who spends what they want when they want to, without concern about whether they will be able to afford it.
While having more than enough income and control of your expenses are definitely worthy financial goals, how do you define the point at which you’ve “achieved financial freedom”? Are you chasing after an elusive dollar amount in your bank account, online savings account, investments, or retirement fund?
What does financial freedom look like for you? I ask this because it seems that os many people list this as a goal every year (New Year’s Eve, usually) and yet fail to achieve it because they don’t understand what it really means. What’s your definition of
financial freedom? Here’s mine:
Freedom from stress
Money concerns are one of the most common causes of stress, and stress can lead to physical symptoms such as ulcers, high blood pressure,
and sleeplessness.
Do you think having an overflowing bank account and certain possessions will free you from stressing out about money? Think again. Some research suggests that the wealthiest countries in the world are also the most depressed.
And studies have shown that making $75,000 a year is the tipping point for happiness — anything above that adds to stress.
Why is this? I think the more some people have, the more they want, and then they realise that’s not what they really wanted. This vicious cycle can be pretty depressing. The old saying that money can’t buy happiness rings true.
Freedom from fear
Throughout my life I’ve been fearful of not having enough money to pay my bills or buy groceries. Going broke is not fun, and for those who are looming dangerously near the edge, it can seem pretty scary. Again, you might think that having a better income, getting your debts paid off, or controlling your spending will eliminate this fear. But then you might carry the fear of losing it, or of someone stealing it from you.
Financial security can bring you freedom from fearing not having enough.
Freedom from greed
Let’s face it, most of us view financial freedom as the ability to spend a lot of money…on ourselves. No one wants to think of themselves as greedy, but if you were to list the top ten things you’d buy if you had the money, most of them would be selffulfilling.

Thursday, 25 December 2014

Love Story Of A Unilag Babe And Bus Conductor

Love Story Of A Unilag Babe And Bus Conductor.
Something interesting happened on my way to Oshodi this
morning. At the park this rough mean-looking conductor also
known as “agbero” in Yoruba was screaming for passengers,
his vernacular oscillating between Yoruba and pidgin English.
“Oshod! Oshod!” He shouted angrily as I along with some
other passengers scuttled for seats. There was this beautiful
young lady who couldn’t throw caution and decorum to the
wind but waited patiently until the bus was almost filled. Then
she pleaded to sit by the agbero until somebody came down
then she would pay for a proper seat.
The agbero didn’t even look at her pretty face, he hissed and
shouted to the driver to move that why didn’t she rush when
others were rushing. The girl started pleading in Yoruba and
clean ‘oyinbo’ english; “please, ejó, help me out sir, I know you
are a good man, never mind all this shout you have been
shouting (people burst into laughter). Let me sit by your side
please”.
Finally with much squeezing of face the agbero relented and
she sat beside him. It was a tight squeeze but she didn’t
complain but rather started praising the agbero. He in turn
started teasing her, speaking (and sometimes spitting by
mistake) into her face but the girl never looked away, she never
let the smile leave her face. He asked her where she worked
and she replied that she was a student in the University of
Lagos (UNILAG) studying accounting. He teased her in Yoruba
about her boyfriend and car (maybe asking why her boyfriend
didn’t drop her at her destination…she laughed it off and
continued to gist with the guy in Yoruba.
When she reached her junction the agbero alighted the bus for
her to come down. She did and paid her transport fare, then
the agbero told her to give him a peck on the cheek for being
so ‘gentlemanly’. At this point some of us became indignant,
haba! He had been teasing her since, he should let her go.
Another argument almost ensued between the agbero and the
passengers although it was not as if the agbero was really
serious, he told her to go. Then it happened! She jumped
forward and gave him a peck on the cheek! We all shouted, the
agbero was quiet out of surprise. She then waved bye and ran
down to her street.
The driver and other people started to hail the agbero, see
hailing! The guy was just forming boss, saying he knew he was
irresistible etc and others were yabbing (taunting) him, some
were yabbing the girl and we moved on and suddenly the bus
was quiet, show over. Then the agbero put his head down and
became uncharacteristically quiet. The driver soon asked the
guy why he wasn’t calling out bus-stop abi the girl don do am
jazz (cast a spell on him). The agbero said something in Yoruba
I didn’t get and then his voice became emotional and believe it
or not HE STARTED CRYING. Others were now consoling him in
Yoruba. When I asked what the problem was, the lady beside
me explained that the agbero said he just realised he would
never be able to get a girl like that in his life because he’s an
uneducated bus conductor and she was going to be a
graduate. He was weeping because he knew no girl of her class
might ever do to him what that girl just did, to touch a dirty
person like himself; that the girl is nice and well brought-up
and if he had money he would have chased after her. So the
passengers were consoling him in Yoruba that he would go
higher in life and be able to marry a girl like that. He should not
cry because itwas not the end of the road for him.
That really touched me.
For a moment in that agbero’s life, his facade of a street thug
fell away and he was a vulnerable emotional aspiring young
man, just like everybody else.

Obasanjo is a career liar, says Soyinka

Former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has made a life-long career of compulsive lying, Nobel laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, claimed on Wednesday.
In an abridged response to the former president’s scathing delivery on the literary giant in his latest memoir “My Watch,” Soyinka went to town with his age-long social adversary, lampooning him as one bedeviled with the enigmatic spirit of legendary fable-teller, the late D.O Fagunwa.
He disclosed of peace efforts by unnamed peacemakers to smoothen sustained rough edges between him and Obasanjo, before the latest attack by the former president which, he noted, went well with him, as he was ready for the fresh ding-dong which would put every reconciliatory plan in abeyance, particularly a burgeoning collaborative plan with Obasanjo Centre.
Parodying Obasanjo as an over-grown child of circumstance, Soyinka described his fellow Egbaman as “an incorrigible addictive moralist, who lies through situations to put others down by playing the divinely-appointed watchman and trumps up his own importance and achievements by playing the unparalleled achiever.”
While promising a fuller version of his response, the literary giant asked the former president to remember the fictional character, Iku (Death) in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare, wondering Obasanjo’s knack for playing the Great Immortal and adding that were he to pursue every libelous statement of the former president against him, such would form an independent volume of the Nigerian Law Report.
The response entitled “WATCH AND PRAY, WATCH AND PREY!” read in part: “I had fully attuned myself to the fact that our Owu retiree soldier and prolific author is an infliction that those of us who share the same era and nation space must learn to endure.
“However, it does appear that there is no end to this individual’s capacity for infantile mischief, and for needless, mind-boggling provocations, such as his recent ‘literary’ intrusion on my peace.
“Perhaps I ought to interrupt myself here with an apology to some mutual acquaintances – ‘blessed peacemakers’ and all - especially in this season of ‘peace and goodwill to all men’. Please know that your efforts have not been entirely in vain.
“I had a cordial exchange with Obasanjo over the phone recently – engineered by himself, his ground staff and/or a chance visitor – when I had cause to visit his Presidential Laundromat for the first time ever. During that exchange, I complemented him on making some quite positive use of landed property that was acquired under morally dubious circumstances, and blatantly developed through a process that I denounced as ‘executive extortionism’.
“To return to our main man, and friendly interventionists, you may like to note that I went so far as to engage him in light banter, stating that some of his lesser sins would be forgiven him for that creative conversion of the landscape – a conversation that he shortly afterwards delightedly shared with at least three mutual acquaintances.
“I promised a follow-up visit to view some mysterious rock script whose existence, he informed me, was uncovered by workers during ground clearing. The exchange was, in short, as good as ‘malice towards none’ that any polemicist could hope to contribute to the ongoing season of peace and goodwill. Obviously that visit will not now take place, any more than the pursuit of vague notions of some creative collaboration with his Centre that began to play around my mind...
“D.O. Fagunwa, the pioneer Yoruba novelist, was a compulsive moralist. I suspect that he may have exerted some influence on our garrulous general, resulting in his pupil’s tedious, misapplied and self-serving deluge of moralising. It seems quite likely indeed that the ghostly, moralistic hand of Fagunwa reached out from the Great Beyond, sat his would-be competitor forcefully before a mirror and bade him write what he saw in that image. I invoke Fagunwa because, at his commemorative colloquium in Akure in August last year, I drew my audience’s attention to a remarkable passage in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare.”
Read the full text below
I had fully attuned myself to the fact that our Owu retiree soldier and prolific author is an infliction that those of us who share the same era and nation space must learn to endure. However, it does appear that there is no end to this individual’s capacity for infantile mischief, and for needless, mind-boggling provocations, such as his recent ‘literary’ intrusion on my peace. Perhaps I ought to interrupt myself here with an apology to some mutual acquaintances – ‘blessed peacemakers’ and all - especially in this season of ‘peace and goodwill to all men’. Please know that your efforts have not been entirely in vain.
I had a cordial exchange with Obasanjo over the phone recently – engineered by himself, his ground staff and/or a chance visitor – when I had cause to visit his Presidential Laundromat for the first time ever. During that exchange, I complemented him on making some quite positive use of landed property that was acquired under morally dubious circumstances, and blatantly developed through a process that I denounced as ‘executive extortionism’. That obscene proceeding has certainly set a competitive precedent for impunity in President Jonathan’s recent fund-raising shindig, editorialised in THE PUNCH (Dec. 23, 2014) as “Impunity Taken too Far”. So much for the latest from that directions - we mustn’t allow Handing-Over notes between presidents to distract us for too long.
To return to our main man, and friendly interventionists, you may like to note that I went so far as to engage him in light banter, stating that some of his lesser sins would be forgiven him for that creative conversion of the landscape – a conversation that he shortly afterwards delightedly shared with at least three mutual acquaintances. I promised a follow-up visit to view some mysterious rock script whose existence, he informed me, was uncovered by workers during ground clearing. The exchange was, in short, as good as ‘malice towards none’ that any polemicist could hope to contribute to the ongoing season of peace and goodwill. Obviously that visit will not now take place, any more than the pursuit of vague notions of some creative collaboration with his Centre that began to play around my mind. That much I do owe you from my report card.
Perhaps you will now accept that there are individuals who are born incorrigible but, more importantly, that some issues transcend one’s personal preferences for harmonious human relationships even in a season of traditional good will. The change in weather conditions sits quite well with me however, since we are both acquainted with the Yoruba proverb that goes: the child that swears his mother will not sleep must also prepare for a prolonged, sleepless infancy. So let it be with Okikiola, the overgrown child of circumstance.
One of the incessant ironies that leapt up at me as I read Obasanjo’s magnum opus was that we are both victims of a number of distasteful impositions - such as being compelled again and again to seek justice against libel in the law courts. I felt genuine empathy to read that he still has a pending thirty-year case instituted by him against his alleged libelers! Judgment was delivered in my favour regarding one of the most nauseating only this year, after surviving technical and other procrastinations, defendant evasions and other legalistic impediments for nearly as long as his. That leaves only a veritable Methuselah on the court list still awaiting re-listing under the resurrection ritual language known as de novo. Unfortunately, not all acts of defamation or willful misrepresentation are actionable, otherwise, my personal list against this newly revealed fellow-sufferer would have counted for an independent volume of the Nigerian Law Report since our paths first crossed during the Civil War. My commitment to the belief in the fundamental right of all human beings NOT TO BE LIED AGAINST remains a life obsession, and thus demands, at the very least, an obligation of non-commission among fellow victims.
I must, therefore, reserve a full, frontal dissection of Obasanjo’s “My Watch” for later, most especially since the work itself is currently under legal restraint and is not readily accessible to a general readership. So, for now, let me single out just one of the most glaring instances of this man’s compulsive career of lying, one sample that the media can readily check upon and use as a touchstone – if they do need one - in assessing our author’s multifaceted claims and commentaries on people and events.
I refer here to the grotesque and personally insulting statement that he has attributed to me for some inscrutable but obviously diversionary reasons. In the process, this past Master of Mendacity brazenly implicates an innocent young man, Akin Osuntokun, who once served him as a Special Adviser. Instead of conferring dignity on a direct rebuttal of an ignoble fabrication, I shall simply make a personal, all-embracing attestation: I despise that species of humanity whose stock-in-trade is to concoct lies simply to score a point, win an argument, puff up his or her own ego, denigrate or attempt to destroy a fellow being. However, even within such deplorable species, a special pit of universal opprobrium is surely reserved for those who even lack the courage of their own lies, but must foist them on others. When an old man stuffs a lie into the throat of an age-mate of his own children - omo inu e! - we can only pity an irredeemable egomaniac whose dotage is headed for twilight disgrace. D.O. Fagunwa, the pioneer Yoruba novelist, was a compulsive moralist. I suspect that he may have exerted some influence on our garrulous general, resulting in his pupil’s tedious, misapplied and self-serving deluge of moralizing. It seems quite likely indeed that the ghostly, moralistic hand of Fagunwa reached out from the Great Beyond, sat his would-be competitor forcefully before a mirror and bade him write what he saw in that image.
I invoke Fagunwa because, at his commemorative colloquium in Akure in August last year, I drew my audience’s attention to a remarkable passage in Fagunwa’s Igbo Olodumare. The passage had struck me during translation and stuck to my mind. I found it uncanny that the original creative moralist, Fagunwa, had captured the psychological profile of a being whom I have been compelled by circumstances to study as an eerie creation, yet this was a character Fagunwa was unlikely to have encountered in real life at the time that he produced that work.
The section comes from an account of a visit to the abode of Iku, Death, the terrifying host to Olowo-aiye, the narrative voice of the adventure. Iku, the host, had been admonishing his guests through the histories of seven creatures who were not permitted a straightforward passage to Heaven or Hell, but were subjected to admonitory punishment at the halfway house to the abode of the dead. The most horrendous tortures were reserved, it would seem, for the last of the seven such ‘detainees’, and I invited my audience to ponder if they could identify any prominent individual, a public figure whose life conduct seamlessly fitted into Fagunwa’s portrayal, which went thus:
“The seventh…. is not among those who set out to improve the world but rather to cause distress to its inhabitants. It was through manipulations that he attained a high position. Having achieved this however, he constantly blocked the progress of those behind him, this being a most deplorable act in the eyes of God, and rank behaviour in the judgment of the dwellers of heaven – that anyone who has enjoyed upliftment in life should seek to be an obstacle for those who follow him. This man forgot the beings of earth, forgot the beings of heaven, in turn, he forgot the presence of God.
The worst kind of behaviour agitated his hands – greed occupied the centre of his heart, and he was a creature that walked in darkness. This man wallowed in bribery, he was chairman of the circle of scheming, head of the gang of double-dealing, field-marshal of those who crept about in the dark of night. With his mouth, he ruined the work of others, while he used a big potsherd to cover the good works of some, that others might not see their attainments. He nosed around for secrets that would entrap his companions, and blew them up into monumental crimes in the eyes of the world. He who turns the world upside down, places the deceitful on the throne, casts the truthful down – because such is a being of base earth, he will never stand as equal among the uplifted.”
My co-occupants of the High Table, in side remarks, and those who came up from the audience afterwards to volunteer their answer to the riddle, without exception named one individual and one individual only, even as I remained non-committal. Indeed, one or two tried to put up a defence of that nominee, and I had to remind them that I had named no one! Fagunwa wrote largely of the world of mongrelized creatures but, as I remarked, his fiction remains a prescient and cautionary mirror of the society we inhabit, where beasts of the forest appear to have a greater moral integrity than those who claim to be leading lights of society.               In this season of goodwill, we owe a duty to our immediate and distant neighbours: CAVEAT EMPTOR! Let all beware, who try to buy a Rolex from this indefatigable watch peddler.
His own hand-crafted, uniquely personalized timepiece has been temporarily confiscated by NDLEA and other guardians of public health but, there is no cause for despair. Such has been the fate of the misunderstood and the envied, avatars descended from the heavens before their time, the seers, and all who crave recognition. Our author invokes God tirelessly, without provocation, without necessity and without justification, perhaps preemptively, but does he really believe in such an entity? Does our home-bred Double-O-Seven believe in anything outside his own Omnipotency? Could he possibly have mistaken the Christian exhortation – ‘Watch and Pray’ for his private inclination to “Watch and Prey? This is a seasoned predator on others’ achievements – he preys on their names, their characters, their motivations, their true lives, preys on gossip and preys on facts, preys on contributions to collective undertakings…..even preys on their identities, substituting his own where possible.
Well, hopefully he may actually believe in the inevitable End to all vanities? 

StarTimes drives digital migration with free decoder initiative

Nigeria’s foremost Pay TV service provider, NTA-Star Network StarTimes, has said that its recently launched free decoder offer to all Nigerians is aimed at driving the country’s transition from analogue to full digital television transmission.
The Public Relations Manager StarTimes, Israel Bolaji made this known at the company’s office in Lagos while commenting on the recently launched “StarTimes Seasons Jolly and StarSat Family Fiesta’ promos. He emphasized that the initiative was borne out of the company’s mission and desire to ensure that Nigerians key in to the global direction and mandate for digital television experience for all and with the free decoders initiative every Nigerian gets to access favourite local and international TV contents and more on a more quality audio-visual platform for maximum entertainment and comfort
Bolaji said “StarTimes is bringing its rich digital broadcast capacity, experience and structure to support the federal government and the industry in facilitating and ensuring smooth switch over process.
“Our vision is to support Nigerians migrate successfully from analogue to digital television transmission, and to revolutionise the digital broadcasting industry by providing digital pay-tv service that is quality but affordable for all Nigerians.
Recently, StarTimes announced its ‘Season’s jolly’ promo, where it is giving away one free StarTimes decoder to everyone who subscribes for 1 month unique bouquet or for 2 months classic subscription. In the StarSat Family Fiesta’ promo, a free StarSat HD satellite decoder plus dish is being given out to everyone who recharges for 3 months Smart bouquet on StarSat from November 18, 2014 to January 31, 2015”. Interestingly, everyone will get to win something during the programme as there are the star prizes of 6 luxury sofas, LED TV and other gift items for customers. StarTimes existing subscribers would automatically be entered into a raffle draw upon the renewal of their subscription for 2 months through any of these methods: promo cards, online recharge and non-promo cards. New customers would also automatically qualify for the draws upon the payment for any of the classic, unique or the StarSat smart bouquet which comes with a free decoder. He said, during the promo period, there would be a 50 percent discount in the second month of subscription every time our subscribers recharge their decoder for the ‘Season’s Jolly Promo and also stand the chance of carting away other mouthwatering instant prizes”, Bolaji Said.
He reiterated that “since this year, StarTimes has introduced various free and affordable initiatives in other to meet the yearning needs of Nigerians, adding that the company has given away fabulous gift like LED TVs, Phones, Decoders and other mouthwatering prizes like brand new 2014 Toyota Yaris cars to ensure TV viewers continue to have and enjoy even better and more affordable TV experience.
It will be recalled that StarTimes recently announced the launch of nine new channels that were thrown open through the StarTimes free viewing open week programme, an initiative that gave both active and non-active StarTimes subscribers access to their favourite channels for free for seven days.

Wednesday, 24 December 2014

10 Startup lessons you won’t learn in School

It’s incredibly tough to get accepted to a top business school. But that’s okay, since the best startup school is the School of Hard Knocks, the institution where every applicant gets accepted (and no one ever truly graduates because there are always more lessons to be learned.)
1. Tell everyone about your idea. Entrepreneurs are notoriously paranoid. You may think that talking about your business idea on social networks will result in your competitors stealing your idea, but that won’t happen. Work on something that isn’t easy to replicate and ensure you have the right team to build it. Value is in the execution, not the idea.
2. Ignore advice. The number of people who talk about starting a business far outweighs the number who actually start a business. That’s because somewhere along the line they get their high energy optimism knocked out of them by a so-called reality check from well-meaning friends, family and colleagues: “You’re too young/old,” “You have no experience,” “You have no capital…”
The truth is no one understands your business or drive better than you. Go with your gut. Trust your instinct and start something.
You’ll soon find out whether your business is viable.
3. Go with an early launch date. There is nothing that gets a team working better or harder than facing an urgent deadline. If you have too long to prepare your product you will find endless reasons to delay getting it out there. No product is perfect, but every product can be refined with time and use and feedback.
4. Choose co-founders the way you would choose a spouse. The reality is that you will, at least in the early days, spend far more time with your co-founders than your partner which is probably why such a high number of entrepreneurs end up divorced (here’s to keep that from happening to you.) Ensure you pick co-founders who not only complement your skills, experience, andpersonality but who you will also enjoy spending huge amounts of time with.
A great founding team is the single most important factor in ensuring your business succeeds. It will take all your team has in order to get there.
5. Be annoying. The key ingredient to making any business work is loving it so passionately that it consumes your every breathing moment. You will talk about it all day and dream about making it better at night. Nothing else will matter. It’s that annoyingly determined drive that will get through the tough times, of which there will be plenty.
Chris Barton, co-founder of Shazam, sums it up well when he says, “The number one determinant of entrepreneurial success is persistence. If you are not prepared to go to super human levels that are beyond rationality to realize your dream, then your chance of finding success is virtually zero.”
6. It’s not about the money. Of all the entrepreneurs I have met, not one built their company in order to sell it. That doesn’t mean they didn’t sell; selling just wasn’t their goal. If your eyes are on the exit you will never find it. Build the kind of company where you would be happy to work for many years
to come. In the process you will build a team of loyal and passionate team players that will help you achieve success because they will all be on your side, rooting for you.
7. Don’t simply hire the smartest kid in the room. Recruiting is one of the most difficult, time consuming and costly parts of running a startup. What you need is a team of entrepreneur-like minds who will work with you to achieve your vision, even if it means working long hours for less pay.
While you might think you need the genius that graduated top of her class, you actually need the kid who has an abnormal amount of drive, is willing to take risks, and has a hunger to help you succeed–so they can too.
8. Every employee is replaceable. You need to be able to do the job of every member of staff. You should know every aspect of what is required to run your business. Never be left vulnerable if the finance guy decides to jack it in, or your co-founder has a hissy fit and decides to walk out one day.
Start your business by doing every job yourself. It’s the only way to learn what you need and who will then be best able to do it for you.
9. Failure is good. American culture is far better at embracing failure compared to Europe, where a business going under is seen as an embarrassment. The fact is that if you try you will sometimes fail. It’s the nature of the beast. However, if you never try, you will undoubtedly kick yourself when you see your company built by someone else. In order to succeed, you should make mistakes–failing is a great way to learn how to succeed.
10. You only get one chance. Most entrepreneurs find that building a great business takes an extraordinary amount of skill and team effort, and finding the right ingredients again isn’t always possible.
Of course there are some who seem to get it right time and time again, but still, make sure you enjoy the startup journey. Take time out once in a while to smile at the company you built from nothing but an idea.