Olamide Adedeji a.k. a Badoo sang in one of his song, “legendry hustler” I’m a story book, let the children read me,” and recently he proved that he meant those lyrics above as he offered his life for children of Ogun State origin to learn from when he honored an invitation to be a mentor at a summer camp organize for school pupils in Ogun State. Olamide used the opportunity to unveil the reason why he dropped out of Tai Solarin University Of Education in 2011. Many had speculated that he dropped out of school because he could not meet the mental academic demands, but Olamide put to rest all those rumors and speculations when he revealed that he left school because his father could not afford his fees. The hit maker how ever charged the pupils to take their studies seriously and be prayerful “I want to tell you that you must always put God first in everything you are doing. Be focused and there is nothing you cannot achieve, if you are discipline,” the Durosoke crooner said
The Federal Ministry of Education has debunked reports that Christian Religious Knowledge, CRK, has been removed as a subject of study from the curriculum of public secondary schools in Nigeria while Islamic Religious Studies, IRS, has been reintroduced. Debunking the report, Director of Press, Federal Ministry of Education, Mrs. Chinenye Ihuoma, pointed out that the ministry had designed a new subject which merged Civic Education, IRS, CRK and Social Studies into “Religion and National Values.” Mrs. Ihuoma told reporters that, “The alternation is not from the minister, this is purely from the National Council on Education. It is just as the council has said that History should be a subject of its own at the basic level in the first nine years. “Now, a new subject has been introduced, called Religion and National Values. It is a fusion of religion and civics. “I have not seen the details but in a case where you have subject combinations in the same period, everyone will attend lecture...
Silicon Valley-based Oshi Agabi has unveiled a computer based not on silicon but on mice neurons at the TEDGlobal conference in Tanzania. The system has been trained to recognise the smell of explosives and could be used to replace traditional airport security, he said. . Eventually the modem-sized device - dubbed Koniku Kore - could provide the brain for future robots. Agabi is attempting to reverse-engineer biology, which already accomplishes this function with a fraction of the power it would take a silicon-based processor. EYES OF LAGOS learnt that, He launched his start-up Koniku over a year ago, has raised $1m (£800,000) in funding and claims it is already making profits of $10m in deals with the security industry. Koniku Kore is an amalgam of living neurons and silicon, with olfactory capabilities — basically sensors that can detect and recognise smells. . "You can give the neurons instructions about what to do - in our case we tell it to provide a receptor that can de...
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