 Are you also watching Waze? Programmers Day is a professional holiday celebrated in many countries around the world to recognize the work of computer programmers. It is celebrated on different dates in different countries, but the most common dates are January 7th and September 13th. So today is all about programming. I don't know. Do you have any computer programming knowledge at all? A bit. But I never practiced, never did anything. I think I'm still very, very much a beginner in anything programming. But computer-wise, I can troubleshoot a lot, but programming is not my strength. But it was the time you did the codecams for children? Yeah, the summer camp. Yeah, for coding. For coding, yeah, that was a good experience. But it wasn't involved. You were just coding it? Yeah, we were coding it. It was something that we wanted to do regularly and all that. And yeah, it was a good shot at doing that, because the kids had the opportunity. I think we had a lot of people. At the end of the day, we had everyone built a website. So they had different websites. Some people had restaurant kind of websites. Some people had games. Some people had some other services. So it was really nice seeing kids of that age being able to. And the way they talk about it, I'm just looking like, because I have no clue what they're discussing. But yeah, I think it's very, very important to start them up quite early. And yeah, they start making money quite early. Absolutely. So what do you define a person? Well, my story in the news is an unfortunate story. So one of the ladies I respect in the tennis world, Simona Halep, she had some doping. Yeah, so there was that accusation. And then recently, I heard that another one. So there were two accusations leveled against her, which was the half failing the anti-doping test that they always do before the US Open. I think that was in 2022. And so unfortunately, the tribunal has sat and they've listened to all the weaknesses and they've also looked through all the documentation that was handed over to them. And they came to the conclusion. And they've currently, as of today, they've handed Simona Halep a four-year suspension because she, the major accusation is because she tested positive for Rosadoster. Maybe I got that wrong. But yes, it's so currently it's a drug that has been banned. And I think some years ago, the same something similar happened to Mariah Sharapova. And that was something that brought her close to the end of her career. Because after she came back after, I think she went for about two or three years, by the time she came back, the world of tennis had moved very far. And there were so many more younger people who were quite vibrant and vast style in their style of play. So that kind of knocked her right off the top of where she used to be. And for people as great as them who have been in the world for a long time, it takes a lot of getting used to when you have this 19-year-old and 16-year-old beating your ass when you have them handing you your ass right in front of everyone. Because for them, it now became it was past the career. It was now a thing of relevance and all that because they used to have people like the Royals and all that and high-class celebrities. Come watch just because of that. So it's quite a sad story because I really loved her play and her energy on court. She was very, and she was always, she was someone who spoke up against doping in sports. So to find yourself in this kind of situation, and I know that sometimes this thing is a mistake because sometimes their coaches and trainers introduce them to some drugs that you wouldn't know. They will tell you, oh, take this, you need this. And then at the end of the day, you find yourself here and now she's four years. So she has still, she's suspended till 2026. Even though she has the right to appeal and I hope she can appeal. Is it 2027? Four years. No, 2026. 2026 October. So she has time to appeal and I hope something comes up because really this is one way of really killing great players. Yeah. First of all, the Minister of Aviation, the Ministry of the Aviation and Aerospace has said that to attract foreign investors, the federal government is looking at setting up an aircraft leasing company and maintenance organization and making foreign exchange available. He said that most of these projects which is already on its roadmap will help current administration in its vision of making Nigeria the aviation hub of Africa. So he said this during the Seventh Africa Aviation Summit an exhibition that happened in Abuja. He assured that the government will ensure enforcement of contract agreement and the rights of investors and all parties are protected. He says Nigeria being a signatory to Cape Town Convention will uphold international obligation. And he also said that maintenance, repair and overhaul facility is another critical aspect that can make the Nigerian aviation industry a hub on the continent. Adding that with the shortage of qualified engineers, the current administration is willing to provide all necessary support for the establishment of world class. That's the maintenance repair overhaul, that's MROs and the training organization. The minister assured that the current administration is committed to ensuring that forex is readily available. He said that the president has directed the CBN, that the president directed CBN to hold quarterly reconciliation meetings to resolve all the issues and they're open to providing tax holidays to encourage existing and new entries into the Nigerian aviation sector. He says they would upgrade the CART-3 landing system at Major Airport, construct a second runway in Abuja and improve airport programs through concessions and government willingness to partner with companies to turn Major Airport into Aerotropolis. The minister added. Nice, nice, nice interesting times. You know, for you to make bold to say that you want to be the aviation hub of Africa, that's the third order. Have you been to Kenya? Have you been to, you know, I think even Rwanda, I've not been to Rwanda, but I hear that the airports are really amazing, but Kenya that I've been to, it's like a hub of like transit and all of that. It's a major aviation hub and if you enter the airport, like literally every time you go there, it's almost like you do by airport. You're seeing something new, something new. So it's not enough for us to just have these lofty conversations. Literally Nigerians have, well, which is good, which is one of the things that's pointed out maintenance because our problem is a huge maintenance problem. Like you literally come down from international airport, the first slap that slaps your nose is the smell of very stenched, like, you know, stale urine that slaps you first. When you land at the international airport, and the heat that slaps you and follows it, you know, like literally, I don't understand whether, like I've been trying to understand this. So the last time I landed in Nigeria and the AC was walking, I was looking, I was looking suspicious, but even at that, it was not as cool. So see, I think that the attitude to public facility beyond the airport in Nigeria, that attitude to public facility, it has to be changed in the minds of a lot of people. Go to small businesses, for instance. You go and say you want to use your restroom. You enter the toilet. You almost want to throw up. People don't understand that the toilet is part of your business. You have all these nice, you know, aesthetics and all of that. Just stroll into the restroom, or stroll into those hidden areas and it is a complete mess, a complete, you know, a flip from what you see. So it's the same culture that has grown into major public facilities that we just feel like no sense of ownership, no sense of anything. So I would really, really love to see this improvement and I'm really hoping he succeeds because really it's an, it's an, it's an embarrassment. Our airport is an embarrassment. We cannot, I don't even understand how Nigeria, Afghanistan has as big as wealthy as we are as a country. We can't even boast of a very standardized airport. Do you understand? So it's a big embarrassment. So I'm praying that he succeeds because if he succeeds, it's going to be a good thing for us because that is the first point of respect. That is the first point of course. So anybody that enters your airport, they already know they're okay. And so Nigeria, like it just completely embarrasses you when you land in our international airports. So I'm hoping that it's, I hope so too. I really hope that he succeeds. I really hope that we see. It's easier for us to see a lot of things. I'm not even about to dissing, let us pray that these things actually work so that we can, we can actually move on. Yeah. Because our airports are an embarrassment. Yeah, that's true. On that note, let's take a break. When we come back from that break, let's discuss the, of skilling ourselves.