Thursday, 24 December 2015

Oil Mogul Gives His Employees N25 Million Christmas Bonus Each


holiday_bonus_NSH-750
A Texas oil mogul is giving his 1300 plus employees $100,000 Christmas Bonus.
As the Houston Chronicle reported in their annual Top Workplaces in November, Jeffrey Hildebrand, owner and CEO of oil and gas company Hilcorp, issued every one of his 1,399 employees bonus checks in April after the company met their annual goals with eight months ahead of schedule.
From the Chronicle:
Hilcorp CFO Shelbie Dezell said it was no easy task, but the employees did everything in their power to make it happen.
“It was a stretch goal to meet that,” she said. “We looked at it every month and talked about it every month. Then we had a huge celebration in the corporate office and in the field after we made it.”
Dezell said receiving a $100,000 bonus check was a “life-changing” event for many of the company’s employees. She said some used the money to pay off debt, others to fund college for their children, and still others to purchase new homes.
The goals met by the company included doubling its oil field production rate, net oil and gas reserves and equity value over five years.
More than 400 of the company’s employees are based in Houston and it operates oil and gas exploration properties across Texas, Louisiana, Alaska and the Northeast, according to the Chronicle.
image: http://i1.wp.com/herald365.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/24095526/920x920.jpg?resize=920%2C610
Hildebrand is full of Christmas cheer
Hildebrand is full of Christmas cheer
This isn’t Hildebrand’s first time to reward his employees with something out of the ordinary.
In 2010, Hildebrand offered each of his employees a choice of $35,000 cash of $50,000 toward a new car, according to Forbes, who asked the question “What oil bust?” in response to Hildebrand’s latest bonus.

Wednesday, 23 December 2015

2016 Could See Google Challenge WhatsApp With Chat Bots


Google co-founder and Alphabet CEO Larry Page. Google is reportedly working on a messaging service largely powered by chat bots.
When history looks back at the evolution of messaging apps like WhatsApp, it’ll point to our present time as when the definition of “messaging” changed. WhatsApp used it to connect people with other people. Now Google , which tried to buy WhatsApp early last year before Facebook swooped in and picked it up for $19 billion instead, wants to build its own messaging service that connects people with computers.
Google is working on a secret messaging service that will deliver services through chat bots, similar to those already found in popular chat networks like Kik and WeChat, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal that cites people familiar with the matter.
The company’s vice president of communications products, Nick Fox, is reportedly leading a team that for the last year, has been working on a messaging service that will be powered by artificial intelligence. The division is taking advantage of Google’s deep expertise in A.I. and machine learning to create bots that can understand conversational commands and respond in kind.
The service will be similar to Luka.ai, a SIRI-like app that you can hold a basic conversation with about local restaurant recommendations, according to the Journal. Another comparable example is Facebook M, a virtual assistant service similar to Siri that runs on Facebook Messenger Powered by both artificial intelligence and a team of human beings, its being trialled by beta testers in the Bay Area, California and can book travel, find products or suggest a good gift. You can ask M to order Star Wars tickets, draw you a picture, even write you a song. In such cases it can be hard to distinguish if you’re chatting with a bot or a human.
While the world’s biggest messaging app, WhatsApp, hasn’t introduced chat bots on its own network, Google’s project validates a strategy that other big messaging services have been chasing for some time. As inane and spammy as they might seem today, chat bots really are the future.
Recommended by Forbes
Chat bots have been around for decades, but their integration into messaging apps is only a few years old. Early versions, ironically, came not from the messaging apps themselves but spammers. So called spam bots and porn bots in particular ravaged networks like that of Kik, a popular chat app for teens, before security professionals scrambled to find ways to keep them out.
Since then Kik and others have put out their own versions of bots, no longer “spam” (though that’s arguable) because they’re sanctioned by the network’s creator. On Kik, you can chat with bots that are managed by brands like Funny or Die or the popular accessories maker Skull Candy and in effect become sucked into a newfangled form of advertising.
For example, earlier this year the advertisers behind horror movie Insidious 3 programmed a bot named Quinn Brenner, with a name and profile photo that matched the main character from the film, to hold creepy conversations with the app’s users as a means to promote the movie:


In August 2015 Kik sold a $50 million stake to Tencent, the web giant that owns China’s most popular chat app, WeChat. This is meaningful because WeChat not only helped pioneer chat bots, but helped popularise them to its users base of more 600 million active users. Millions of companies now use WeChat as their main route to advertise to customers and communicate with them. Kik CEO Ted Livingston has said more “official accounts” are created on WeChat everyday in China than Chinese sites are created on the web.
Traditionally we interact with a company’s website by “navigating” through a visual smorgasbord of buttons, but WeChat takes that to the next level thanks to bots, which cut to the chase by answering  your texted questions.
Slack CEO Stewart Butterfield has has called this a “conversational user interface,” (and chat bots are an increasingly important feature in Slack too).
The growth of chat bots makes perfect sense when you think about it. As technology has gone mobile and our desire for more content has exploded, screens have got smaller. Something has got to give. The future will see funkily designed mobile sites trashed in favour of clever A.I. that talks to you from your phone or the wearable on your wrist.
For Google to maintain its position as King of Search in that kind of world, it’s crucial that it also becomes one of the first popular services that we chat to, rather than passively read as a list of search results.
The Journal’s report didn’t indicate when Google might launch its messaging service, and it notes that Google has a spotty history of launching communication apps, with Google Hangouts and its own Messenger far behind the likes of Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp in terms of users. It will have to move quickly to avoid being left behind by competitors like Kik, WeChat and WhatsApp, which, separately, is thought to be preparing a video calling service while its own plans for “bots” are still very much unknown.
In October Google tried giving this project a leg up by acquiring 200 Labs, a startup that specializes in building chat bots for messaging platforms like Telegram, the Journal added, but 200 Labs declined.
If more people turn to chat bots to answer questions about restaurants or products, they’ll spend less time typing search queries into Google’s search bar. Google’s very livelihood could depend on this going well.

Nnamdi Kanu: Judge excuses self from Radio Biafra director's case


The judge was said to have stepped aside after Kanu objected to the trial due to the Federal Government’s repeated disobedience of court orders relating to the case.

Federal High Court judge, Justice Ahmed Mohammed has excused himself from hearing the treason case against Radio Biafra Director, Nnamdi Kanu, reports say.
Justice Mohammed reached the decision today, December 23, 2015, in Abuja, according to Premium Times.
The judge was said to have stepped aside after Kanu objected to the trial due to the Federal Government’s repeated disobedience of court orders relating to the case.
“If any of the parties has no confidence in the court, he has the right to say so. Assuming it was the prosecution, if they had no confidence in the court of jurisdiction; would they not have done so?” Mohammed said.
“I hereby remit the case file to the honourable Chief Judge of this court to reassign it,” he added.
The FG had filed a fresh charge of treason against Kanu on December 22 despite a court order instructing the Department of State Services (DSS) to release him unconditionally.
The decision was reached by Justice Adeniyi Ademola, also of the FHC, who held that the DSS’ continued detention of Kanu was unlawful.
The Radio Biafra boss was arrested in October and supposedly granted bail but he was never freed.
Kanu's continued detention has led his followers to launch protests in various part of the country to demand his freedom.

Monday, 7 December 2015

A Review of Chinua Achebe’s 'The Trouble with Nigeria'


Chinua Achebe


The need to discuss the problem of Nigeria; the reason for its perceived failure prompted Achebe to put his wit and wisdom into work.
                The book The Trouble with Nigeria, first published in 1983 by Fourth Dimension Publishing co., Ltd, Enugu, focuses on the issue around the failure of the contemporary Nigerian state – perhaps at the time of writing. The text advances to list what it views as the problems of the country: tribalism, false image of ourselves, patriotism, social injustice and the cult of mediocrity, indiscipline, corruption etc. These problems, according to it, have made Nigeria one of the most corrupt, insensitive, inefficient places under the sun. More so, the text is targeted at making Nigerians know their problems and that the trouble which has pillaged their country is simply and squarely a failure of leadership.
                The book explains these troubles in ten chapters: chapter one discusses where the problem lies: simply and squarely a failure of leadership; that there is nothing basically wrong with the Nigerian land or climate or water or air or anything else. This chapter argues that the Nigerian problem is the unwillingness or inability of its leaders to rise to the responsibility and challenge of personal example which are the main characteristics of leadership; chapter two identifies tribalism as one of the problems Nigeria has – that it is discrimination against a citizen because of his place of birth, and that this discrimination has dominated in the Nigerian society; chapter three views false images of ourselves as a trouble with Nigeria, that Nigeria has lived on imaginary self-concept of itself; chapter five discusses the problem of leadership – leadership in Nigerian style. The text says in chapter five that we deceive ourselves in professing our patriotism, that a patriot is a person who loves his country, not a person who says he loves his country; chapter six captures social injustice and the cult of mediocrity; chapter seven, indiscipline; chapter eight, corruption – that Nigerians are corrupt because the system is corrupt; chapter nine discusses the Igbo problem – that Nigeria see the Igbo as aggressive, arrogant, and clannish. The last chapter describes the death of Mallam Aminu Kano, of which the text ends in pessimism that Nigeria cannot be the same again because Aminu Kano lived here. However, this chapter reminds us that it is used in the manner of Aminu Kano himself to ask the crucial question: ‘What is the purpose of political power? Why do you seek political office? Why do you want to rule? Every politician, of course, gives us an answer to these questions, but unfortunately their answers are alike that they leave us totally unenlightened.
                The author employs a simple but offensive language in analyzing the theme of his work. The language is too hard, concrete and exposing that the writer would have murdered the country if, in the course of writing this piece, he had been given a weapon and asked to do so.
                 As an experienced writer, the author uses an original thought to pass his message across. He moves his idea in a way that captures a wild reading audience. The form he has used to meet his audience looks to be what they need. The audience is encapsulated with the idea that they would love to read another similar work by the author.
                The Trouble with Nigeria succeeds in revealing the weaknesses of the Nigerian state, and contributes in making the audience reason critically in finding the solution to the problems that have engulfed and subjugated the country in a string of backwardness. The text exposes Nigerian peoples into the reality of the bad things that happen around us and within our societies. The text maps a horizon of readership, that Nigerians who love their country and are willing to save it should no longer stand idle and complain, rather they should move into vibrant and rigorous action, if that happens to be the solution.
                However, insomuch as the text employs wit, wisdom, and experience in exploring the varieties of the trouble with Nigeria, it has also given space for criticism, in that it has limitations of material. The text lists what it sees as the problems of Nigeria, but has failed convincingly and specifically to list and discuss the solution(s) to the problems. The text, perhaps, with its lack of tact, corrupts the mind of an average citizen in thinking that the country is the worst place under the sun. Like I said, the author uses language as though he was ready to murder the country if given the opportunity.
                Nonetheless, it’s acceptable that attacking a system is another way to correcting its faults, but the rigidity of the text’s language is too condemning. Hence, it says:
‘Nigeria is not a great country. It is one of the most corrupt, insensitive, inefficient places under the sun. It is one of the most expensive countries and one of those that give least value for money. It is dirty, callous, noisy, ostentatious, dishonest and vulgar. In short, it is among the most unpleasant places on earth.’ (11)
In comparison with the little, calm solution it gives, it says:
‘I am not here recommending ruthlessness as a necessary qualification for Nigerian leadership. Quite on the contrary. What I am saying is that Nigeria is not beyond change. I am saying that Nigeria can change today if she discovers leaders who have the will, the ability and the vision. Such people are rare in any time or place. But it is the duty of enlightened citizens to lead the way in their discovery and to create an atmosphere conducive to their emergence. If this conscious effort is not made, good leaders, like good money, will be driven out by bad.’ (2)
In contrast, the solution is rather too common and menial to compare to the harsh and hostile way it puts the Nigerian problems. The text presents a rather complicated conundrum when it suggests that the nation can change when it discovers leaders with certain qualities – such leaders however, are ‘rare’ to find in any time and place. The text gives a solution without an assurance of its certainty. It succeeds in making average minds view the nation on one-sided platform – negativity.
                The Trouble with Nigeria seems to attack the government more personally, because it is rather impersonal to say that the trouble with the nation is squarely a failure of leadership and that nothing else is wrong with the country but that. One would be equally right to argue that the trouble is both leadership and individualism. It is true that the one per cent people who are at the helm of affairs, people who have control of power, can change the country to a great extent, but this cannot be complete if individuals in their minds fail to reform themselves and think better. When they are convinced to believe totally that the trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership, it means that they can no longer look at themselves and see the fault in them. And with this, they can’t contribute in bringing the change that is required.
                In conclusion, the text ends with tension and hopelessness on the audience. Hence, ‘Nigeria cannot be the same again because Aminu Kano lived here.’ What this means, I do not know. Perhaps, that Nigeria cannot be the same geographically or that Nigeria had been in good governance and in commitment, and cannot be the same again in post-colonial era – just perhaps.




©Stanley Chuck

When a woman's heart is broken



Behind the wheel of a blue Toyota Corolla hatchback, Victoria Ige sat rigid and waited. She had vowed to see through her mission that day – what-ever it’d cost and however long she had to wait. She looked at her mobile phone and saw the time was 6:14pm.
It was summer in September.
                Victoria, in this course of action, had lost all sense of civility and every modest conscience she ever had. She was determined to do what she knew was fatal, but justified. Barely a month after the crushing heartbreak she went through with her fiancĂ©, he, whom she had given everything to, was set to wed another woman in a week. Breaking up with her in so devastatingly unprecedented a manner was one crime she was not willing to forgive easily, but going ahead to print a wedding card a week after that, and throwing it around town in her face was another crime she needed to respond immediately.
                Victoria had been in a relationship with Bayo for six years. She had set her mind on marriage and never saw what was coming. She had been with him when he was trying to be rich through to when he bought his Range Rover Sports car. Then it all happened.
He started by giving gauche excuses each time he refused to return her calls. And then he would be out of town without informing her of it. It was after taking her for a surprise shopping that he told her it was over. What a hell of a break-up. Just when she thought he was going to propose. She had waited for him and had been lugged all along and left on a crag. She felt used, betrayed, and abandoned. He used her susceptibility against her. Her life had collapsed like a pack of cards. She became a mocking example for backstabbers who knew both of them well.
Now this evening, she wanted to turn the table around. She wanted him to become an example to all men in the world who would hear of their story.
                Parking under a shade, she would look through the rear-view mirror, occasionally, hoping to see his car pull up just in time. She had waited for over 2hours. It was Friday and he never stayed at work that long. She looked at the small-sized bottle on the passenger’s seat, and examining the content once more, felt no pity for her lost love.
                What it contained was her weapon.
                Just as she was about to drop her head on the headrest, she saw a black Range Rover pull up outside Bayo’s apartment. Victoria sighed a relief of near accomplishment. On the driver’s seat was her ex-fiancĂ© and now her target. She slipped her hands into a pair of black gloves, took the bottle in the car and stepped out. She looked murderous in the black overcoat she had on.
                With a bottle of acid cupped in her hand, she crossed the high street and went through a landscape of flowers to the front door of her ex-boyfriend’s apartment.
                Without a second thought, she knocked.

Bayo was totally occupied with anything but Victoria. In fact, this moment was a world she was not living in. While at the office, he had made arrangement for a date at a city park club with his woman – the one he was to marry. The moment had presented a very unfortunate coincidence. On his way, he had talked with her and she had told him she would soon be with him. She had a knack for appearing unannounced.
                As he entered his apartment, he removed his jacket and then opened the refrigerator for a glass of AndrĂ©a Wine. He poured a half-full and paused.
                It was then that he heard the knock.
                He gulped the wine and waited. Motionless. The knock came again. He smiled.
                Without thinking, Bayo crossed over to open the door.

Photos: Tchidi Chikere and Nuella Njubigbo celebrates daughter's birthday

 
The film Director and actress threw a party to celebrate their daughter,Tess one year birthday. The party was attended by friends and family.


Source: LIB














Man kills homeless cyclist while receiving Oral sex from female passenger

According to 10 News, a man named Randy Joe Allen killed Terry Lamunt Ross, 49, who was riding his bicycle on the hard shoulder of a main road, in Florida. 
Allen told police in Florida he had struck a stop road sign while driving on Highway 92 with a female passenger who was giving him oral sex while he was driving.

The female passenger was interviewed and told officers that she had just met Allen at a bar and after taking a few drinks, left with him.
The female passenger then told astonished police officers that she was performing oral sex on Allen while he was driving and heard a loud bump. Allen then told her that he hit a road sign and continued driving, and she continued the sex act unaware Allen had just hit a cyclist as he was so overcome with ecstasy.
Police officials said that the passenger did not see what Allen hit and believed his story, reports 10 News. Allen was taken to Polk County Jail and charged with one count of Leaving the Scene of a Crash with Death.. 

He has had seven prior arrests in Polk. He was arrested for DUI back in December 2008.
 
Source: LIB

How Fashola Can Solve Nigeria’s Housing Shortage


Shipping Container Home

The task before the newly-inaugurated Minister for Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, is indeed a daunting one. While Fashola is known to be a performer, judging by the transformation he was able to engineer in his capacity as Governor of Lagos between 2007 and 2015, the exigencies of manning three federal ministries as broad as those combined into one under his care will surely take its toll. Some pundits are already saying they expect his hair to be as steely grey as Nobel Laureate, Wole Soyinka’s at the end of his tenure as the Minister of Power, Works and Housing. The focus of this piece is to help him along the way, if his plan is to leave enviable marks behind at the end.
The problem of inadequate housing for the teeming population of approximately 180 million is getting even more complicated. As at 1991, Nigeria had a housing deficit of 7 million units. But a mere 24 years down the line, the deficit is standing at nearly 250 per cent increase. The housing deficit at the moment stands at 17 million units.
Available information shows that 80 per cent of Nigerians live in rented apartment compared to 19 per cent in South Africa and 22 per cent in Ghana. This is directly tied to statistics that show that the low and medium income families represent about 65 per cent of the Nigerian population which also represent 85 per cent of the housing demand for the nation.
To put this in perspective, it is important to note that the low and medium income earners are the most likely to live in rented apartments. According to a 2014 paper written by Roland Igbinoba, MD/CEO of FHA Mortgage Bank, most members of the low and medium income classes earn $4 (app. N1000 – emphasis mine) or less daily. What this means is that these income classes earn around N30,000 or less monthly. Really, to buy a home that costs N5 million, for how long will a N30,000-income earner save? I leave the calculation to you guys…
The World Bank has estimated the cost of bridging Nigeria’s 17 million housing deficit at N59.5 trillion. Nigeria’s entire budget for 2015 is N4.452 trillion. So, the country will need to set aside its entire budgetary provision for at least 10 years to be spent exclusively on housing before it can bridge the deficit! How is that even possible you might ask? The truth is that it is impossible.
How then can the government go about bridging this lacuna that exists between the people’s expectation for adequate housing and this present, debilitating reality? The answer seems to be in Costa Rica! Well, in case you are thinking that is an idiomatic expression, it is not. Some architects and engineers in the Central American country of Costa Rica have developed a way to provide affordable and decent accommodation using shipping containers.
According to Interesting Engineering, the small shipping container is proof that you can “pack great things into small spaces.”
The shipping container is capable of sleeping four individuals comfortably. It also has a toilet/ bathroom, kitchen and a dining area which can be converted into an office.
Shipping Container Home
The shipping container house is a wonderful piece of engineering that has been designed with many space-saving ideas in mind

Shipping Container Home 4
The kitchen can be fitted with a medium-size refrigerator, two burner cookers, a sink and microwave oven just above it. Just outside the kitchen is a dining room that can sit four persons

Shipping Container Home 3
The bedroom can sleep four persons comfortably


Shipping Container Home 2
The designers recognised that it would sometimes be necessary to organise a small party or a dinner. They have made provision for such on the roof of the home, which can be accessed via a  ladder attached to the house


Shipping Container Home 1
The four bed spaces fitted into the house have been equipped with window spaces to let in fresh air to the occupants


Shipping Container Home 5

While the cost of constructing a home of this nature is not readily available, it is an option that should be considered if the housing deficit in the country is to be remedied. This is even more so considering that many of this housing units can be fitted into a relatively small piece of land.

Stanbic IBTC expands retail network


stanbic
Stanbic IBTC Bank has opened a new branch at Satellite Town in Lagos to serve the financial needs of individuals and businesses in its environs, in fulfillment of the bank’s promise to bring banking closer to the people.
The commissioning of the branch also demonstrates the bank’s commitment to strengthening its business-banking portfolio and adds value to businesses.
Recently, the bank commissioned two cash offices at Orile-Coker and Computer Village, Ikeja, both in Lagos.
The Executive Director, Personal and Business Banking, Stanbic IBTC Bank, Obinna Abajue, said: “The new branch reinforces the bank’s promise to bring banking services closer to the people for convenience and accessibility. It ties in with our brand proposition and focus to add value to the small and medium enterprises sector in Nigeria.
“Our target is to ensure a wide network of access points where quality and efficient service delivery is available to our clientele as well as prospects,” he said.
According to Abajue, the bank invested significant resources into establishing the Satellite Town branch because of its strategic importance as a centre of commerce.
He said the new branch will accommodate traditional as well as electronic banking services and will render full banking services to meet the growing financial needs of individuals and businesses in the area.
However, a Lagos State House of Assembly member, representing Amuwo-Odofin Constituency 1, Dipo Olorunrinnu, who commissioned the new branch, said that he was particularly pleased and honoured to be commissioning the new branch of Stanbic IBTC Bank, one of the leading banks’ in the country, in his constituency.
He said the new branch would further consolidate the level of business activity in Satellite Town and its environs. The lawmaker assured the bank of government’s support as it continues to contribute to the developmental aspirations of Lagos State.
The Regional Head, Personal and Business Banking, Standard Bank, Western Africa, Lincoln Mali, thanked residents of Satellite Town for receiving the bank and enjoined them to avail themselves of the unique solutions offered by Stanbic IBTC.