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Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

I’m Philip Emeagwali. The computer is the greatest invention, since fire. The modern supercomputer is the greatest invention in modern physics. I believe that we are witnessing a technological change of tectonic proportion. Each generation redefined the word “computer.” Our descendants’ definition of the computer will perhaps become synonymous and correspond to our phrase “planetary-sized super-brain that enshrouds our Earth.” In Year Million, I foresee each post-human person as a super-intelligent cyborg that is part human, part machine, and part computer and that has a great sense of humor. I foresee their super-brains as enshrouding even the Solar System and as one super being
that can live forever.

When parallel supercomputing
meets the biggest questions
in computational science,
the impossible-to-solve becomes possible-to-solve.
Parallel supercomputing
is the vital technology
that enables us to ask
the biggest questions
and then find new answers
to those previously unanswered questions.
I’m Philip Emeagwali.
Back on February 1, 1922,
a science-fiction story was published
in the book titled: “Weather Prediction
by Numerical Process.”
That science-fiction story
described how, in theory,
64,000 human computers
could be employed and used to solve the
partial differential equations
that must be used
to predict the weather
for the whole Earth.
Back on June 20, 1974,
in Corvallis, Oregon, United States,
the day I began programming supercomputers,
I set my mind on programming
the fastest supercomputer.
A decade later,
my supercomputer-hopeful
became a new internet
that is a new global network of
64 binary thousand processors.
On July 4, 1989, I figured out
how to hindcast the weather
and do so one mile deep
inside an oilfield
that is the size of a town.
That massively parallel supercomputer
that is a new internet de facto
that I set my mind on
ultimately became my
signature invention
that became the subject
of school reports.
My contribution
to the development of the computer
is this:
I was the first person to figure out
how to turn the science fiction
of parallel processing across
millions of processors
into the non-fiction
that is today’s supercomputer
that occupies the space of a soccer field.
The reason I remember the date
I discovered
practical parallel supercomputing
was that it was the U.S.
Independence Day.

[The First Supercomputer Scientist]

You cannot study to become
the first parallel supercomputer scientist.
You can study to become
an aerospace engineer.
But you cannot study
to become the first astronaut
or to travel to the planet Mars.
You become a pioneer astronaut
by becoming the first person
to travel to Mars.
Similarly, you cannot study
to become the first person
to figure out how to harness
practical parallel supercomputing
and do so to solve real-world problems.
I’m Philip Emeagwali.
I became the first parallel supercomputer scientist
because I was the first person
that performed the world’s fastest parallel processed calculations
that solved real-world problems
and because I was the only person
to accomplish that alone,
as opposed to team research.

[What is the World’s Fastest Computer?]

What is the world’s fastest computer?
Speed is the core essence
of the supercomputer.
The first newspaper article
on the supercomputer
was dated February 15, 1946
and appeared on page one
of The New York Times.
That first newspaper article was titled:
[quote]
“Electronic Computer Flashes Answers, May Speed Engineering.”
[unquote]
Airplanes fly at about the same speed they flew in the 1950s.
If today’s parallel supercomputer speed
of a thousand million billion calculations per second
was discovered in the 1950s
that decade’s supercomputer
could compute three million billion
times faster.
That first supercomputer of 1946
could only perform
385 multiplications per second
or 40 divisions per second
or three square root calculations
per second.

TAGS:
Philip Emeagwali Supercomputer, Supercomputer description, supercomputer design, supercomputer development, supercomputer architecture, supercomputer uses, supercomputer definition, supercomputer costs, supercomputer specs, supercomputer applications, supercomputer how to build, supercomputer iq, world’s fastest supercomputer

Philip Emeagwali 190929 2

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

I'm Philip Emeagwali at http://emeagwali.com. I am often asked: “Who is Philip Emeagwali?”
“I’m not exactly sure,”
I answered.
Then someone wrote that:
“Philip Emeagwali
is a polymath
that was trained for sixteen years
and, therefore, he can solve
interdisciplinary scientific problems
that a mathematician
that was trained for only eight years
in mathematics alone
could not solve.”
It’s not arrogance for me to say that
my scientific lectures
posted online at emeagwali dot com
demonstrated my command of materials.
You don’t see a surgeon
going into the surgery room
with a book titled
“How to do surgery.”
Yet, every speaker
in every scientific conference
cling on to his power points
as if it was a matter of life and death.
The reason they must use power points
is that they lack
the command of their materials.
In contrast, I have never used power points
in my scientific lectures.
And at the end of each lecture,
the audience stand as one
to give me a standing ovation
and did so because I have
the command of my materials
that, in turn, could only come
from a deep bench of ideas and knowledge.
To be the lone wolf, in the 1980s,
and at the farthest frontier
of supercomputing
demanded a command of materials
and, in particular, a command of
65,536 processors
that were needed to discover
the fastest supercomputer.
I commanded materials
across the branch of physics
called fluid dynamics.
I commanded materials
across the branch of calculus
called partial differential equations.
I commanded materials
across the branch of algebra
called numerical linear algebra.
I commanded materials
across the branch of computing
called massively parallel processing.
You can verify my command of materials by doing a one-by-one, side-by-side,
and videotape-by-videotape comparisons
of Philip Emeagwali
with the videotapes of the likes of
Albert Einstein,
including Albert Einstein himself.
My supreme confidence
that seems like arrogance
arose because
the likes of Albert Einstein
don’t have the aura of invincibility
that they had
when I was trained for only eight years
like they were.
I’m confident
because I’m eight years ahead
of the likes of theoretical physicists,
such as Albert Einstein.
I’m confident
because I’m eight years ahead
of computational physicists.
I was confident
because I was the only person
in the decade of the 1980s
that was at the farthest frontier
of supercomputing.
Only one lone wolf
could be at that farthest frontier
and I was that programmer, period.
My confidence against the likes of
Albert Einstein
was the confidence
a sixteen-year-old boy has
when challenged to wrestle against
an eight-year-old girl.
Who is Philip Emeagwali?
I’m four in ten parts
a mathematician.
I’m three in ten parts
a physicist.
I’m three in ten parts
a supercomputer scientist.
Who is Philip Emeagwali?
I’m a scientist
that is the subject of school reports.
I was an astronomer
who declined an astronomer position
in Washington, D.C.
I was an astronaut candidate hopeful
who was declined by NASA.
I was an engineer
that worked on nine US government dams
and their reservoirs and powerplants
that were along the North Platte River
in the State of Wyoming, United States.
I was a geologist
that pushed the frontiers
of extreme-scale computations
in sub-surface flow modeling.
Yet, I don’t have a deep yearning
for engineering or geology or astronomy.
I have given up on my 1970s and ‘80s ambition to fly into outer space.
The reason I discovered how to solve
that grand challenge problem
of supercomputing
and solved it alone
was that I was trained
in the United States
for the sixteen years
onward of March 24, 1974.
I experimentally programmed supercomputers,
and did so continuously
and onward
of June 20, 1974.

For information about Philip Emeagwali,

http://emeagwali.com

https://facebook.com/emeagwali
https://twitter.com/emeagwali
https://instagram.com/philipemeagwali
https://flickr.com/philipemeagwali
https://linkedin.com/in/emeagwali
https://soundcloud.com/emeagwali
https://youtube.com/emeagwali

TOPICS
Keynote speakers, Conference Keynote Speakers, Technology Keynote Speakers, Futurist Keynote Speakers, Technology Futurist, Educator, philip emeagwali father of the internet, philip emeagwali and the internet, Philip Emeagwali Father of the Internet, Philip Emeagwali Biography, Who invented the Internet first?, Who created the Internet and why?, A Father of the Internet, Nigerian Scientist, African Inventors, black inventors, black inventions that changed the world, black inventions we use everyday, black African inventions, black inventions and discoveries, famous black American inventions, black inventions of the 21st century, inventions for black history month,


Philip Emeagwali 180123 1 4 of 9

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

Click Here To Watch Full Video: http://www.cheapohippo.com/?p=14399

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Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

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Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

South African Inventions (looking into some of the local inventions and discoveries) with Prof Mike Bruton.

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

I'm Philip Emeagwali at http://emeagwali.com. The late 20th century African history
shifted from exploits in battlefields
to the fight against apartheid
in South Africa
that was led by Nelson Mandela. I believe that by the mid-21st century African history
will shift towards contributions
made by Africans—in the continent
and in the diaspora—and made to
human progress.
The most important contributions
that Africans can make
include discoveries and inventions
that will expand
the body of human knowledge
and that will make planet Earth
a better place for all beings.
I am the subject of
school inventor reports
because I contributed to the development
of the massively parallel supercomputer.
The parallel supercomputer
demanded more from its inventors.
I had to have
an intimate understanding
of the locations of every processor
that outlined and defined
my ensemble of
64 binary thousand processors.
I had to have
a deep understanding
in sixteen-dimensional hyperspace
of how to message-pass
my two-raised-to-power sixteen
initial-boundary value problems
of mathematical physics
and how to email
the associated codes across
my sixteen times
two-raised-to-power sixteen,
or 1,048,576, bi-directional
email pathways, and how to route
my 64 binary thousand emails
to my sixteen bit long email addresses.
Each email address
had no @ sign
or dot com suffix.
In June 1974, I was programming
a conventional supercomputer
and using the machinery
to sequentially solve
a system of linear equations of algebra.
Fast forward fifteen years,
to the Fourth of July 1989,
I became the first person
to figure out
how to harness a new internet
that is a new global network of
64 binary processors
and how to use those processors
to cooperatively and simultaneously
solve
a grand challenge problem
that is otherwise impossible to solve.

An invention only occurs
when its inventor crossed a boundary of human knowledge
that had never been crossed before.

For me, Philip Emeagwali,
I crossed into
the never-before-understood
frontier of knowledge
of the parallel supercomputer
that is the world’s fastest computer.
I was the first person
to cross that frontier
and I crossed it
at 8:15 in the morning of July 4, 1989
in Los Alamos, New Mexico,
United States.
Shortly after my parallel supercomputing discovery,
the news headlines became:
“African Supercomputer Genius
Wins Top U.S. Prize.”
Without parallel processing,
the supercomputer of today
will not exist.
I was in the news headlines because
I discovered
how to solve the toughest problems arising in STEM fields.
I discovered
how to solve real world problems
and how to solve them
across a new internet
that is de facto
one seamless, cohesive machinery
that is a virtual supercomputer.
My quest for the fastest supercomputer
that will compute across a new internet
that is a new global network
of 64 binary thousand processors
began on June 20, 1974
and began as science fiction
and as a theory,
or an idea that is not positively true.

My Origin as a Supercomputer Scientist

My supercomputer quest
began in a singular
central processing unit
that was my metaphor
for the computer
and that was a mere acorn
(or the seed of an oak tree).
By the summer of 1974
and at age nineteen,
I was only mentioned twice
in newspapers,
first in a newspaper in Nigeria
and then in the United States.
The name of a 17-year-old
Philip Emeagwali
first appeared in 1972
in the Science Column
of the Daily Times newspaper of Nigeria.
The photograph
of a 19-year-old Philip Emeagwali
appeared on the cover
of a local newspaper
that circulated in the cities of Monmouth
and Independence
(Oregon, United States).
That Oregonian newspaper article
was published
within six days after my interview
that occurred on August 9, 1974.



For information about Philip Emeagwali,
http://emeagwali.com

https://facebook.com/emeagwali

https://twitter.com/emeagwali

https://instagram.com/philipemeagwali

https://flickr.com/philipemeagwali

https://linkedin.com/in/emeagwali

https://soundcloud.com/emeagwali

https://youtube.com/emeagwali


TOPICS
Philip Emeagwali, supercomputer, father of the modern supercomputer, Philip Emeagwali Computer, world's fastest supercomputer, parallel processing, high performance computing, parallel computing, massively parallel supercomputers, Philip Emeagwali Supercomputer, Philip Emeagwali Machine


Philip Emeagwali 191004 4 4 of 7

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

Are you ready to upgrade your life with some of the coolest tech you’ve ever seen? Hold on to your hats, because we are about to blow your mind with these amazing new pieces of tech. This new boating device will let you sail the seas like never before. A new safety device will let you escape your vehicle in the event of an emergency. This e-scooter can traverse any terrain you can imagine, and this helmet will help you stay focused even during difficult work days.

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Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

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Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

About Pre-Colonial African Inventions. Part of the series: History Questions. Pre-colonial African inventions include papyrus paper, mummification and various musical instruments. Find out how these items developed out of Africa with answers from an experienced teacher in this free video on world history.

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

#countries #maps #history #europe #africa #shorts #empire #stats #usa
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Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

Super Cool Inventions From Africa!

Learn about amazing inventions made in Africa. Join us to learn about fun African inventions from African inventors.

And so much more!!...

Visit: www.kidsblackhistory.com to get access to learning resources, buy a KBH T-shirt and lots more....

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The videos on KidsBlackHistory are designed for Early Years/Foundation Stage and Key Stage One. This would typically be ideal for children between the ages of 2 - 7.

We are providing a catalogue of videos weekly to teach your children positive black history and give them a sense of representation that they are not currently receiving in their school curriculum or in the media.

Length of videos are suited to engage children with shorter attention spans yet keep them entertained throughout.

Repetition is what helps our little ones learn so please replay videos to your children to consolidate learning .

Subscribe to stay informed on more fun, engaging KidsBlackHistory:
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We are excited to deliver the content you have all been waiting for. We will not wait for Black History Month because our history represents 90% of the world's history and it is important that our children grow up feeling proud and represented in society.

As an educator in secondary school and Head of Year I am aware of the gaps in our curriculum and what our children crave for in their own black history.
Please spread the word across all platforms and let's make KidsBlackHistory everyone's history!

Video features the talented @raiyahfunplay as the host and presenter of KidsBlackHistory

The videos on KidsBlackHistory are designed for Early Years/Foundation Stage and Key Stage One. This would typically be ideal for children between the ages of 2 - 7 however our videos are teaching many children and Adults of all ages!

We are providing a catalogue of videos weekly to teach your children positive black history and give them a sense of representation that they are not currently receiving in their school curriculum or in the media.

Length of videos are suited to engage children with shorter attention spans yet keep them entertained throughout.

Repetition is what helps our little ones learn so please replay videos to your children to consolidate learning .

Subscribe to stay informed on more fun, engaging KidsBlackHistory:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPMt...

We are excited to deliver the content you have all been waiting for. We will not wait for Black History Month because our history represents 90% of the world's history and it is important that our children grow up feeling proud and represented in society.

As an educator in secondary school and Head of Year I am aware of the gaps in our curriculum and what our children crave for in their own black history.
Please spread the word across all platforms and let's make KidsBlackHistory everyone's history!



Video features the talented @raiyahfunplay as the host and presenter of KidsBlackHistory

*All links to books are part of an affiliate program. This means we may receive a small profit from our link

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

This video script is about the top 10 most ingenious inventions in Africa. It is written in a friendly and engaging style that is suitable for a YouTube video. The script introduces each invention in a clear and concise way, and it provides some interesting facts about each invention. The script also includes some humor to keep the audience entertained. Overall, this is a well-written script that would make for an informative and entertaining YouTube video.
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Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

I'm Philip Emeagwali. I’m often asked: “What’s the one thing supercomputers can do now that they couldn't do 30 years ago?” My answer was this: The fastest supercomputer of today is one hundred million times faster than the fastest supercomputer of 30 years ago. That fastest supercomputer is powered by ten million six hundred and forty-nine thousand six hundred [10,649,600] commodity-off-the-shelf processors. Each of those ten million processors is proof that parallel computing is not a huge waste of everybody’s time, as was alleged in the June 14, 1976 issue
of the Computer World magazine.
Thirteen years after that negative article
in the Computer World,
I saved everybody’s time by
experimentally discovering
—on the Fourth of July 1989—
how to reduce 180 computer-years
of time-to-solution
to only one supercomputer-day
of time-to-solution.
I experimentally discovered
how to put
65,536 processors, or as many computers, inside one supercomputer
That is, I experimentally discovered
a new internet.
My experimental discovery
was the new knowledge
of how computers can compute faster
and how supercomputers
can compute fastest.
I experimentally discovered
how to compute faster
and how to do so by a factor of 65,536.
That experimental discovery
of the massively parallel processing supercomputer
made the news headlines.
That experimental discovery
was reported in the June 20, 1990 issue
of The Wall Street Journal.
That experimental discovery
is the reason American students
are writing school reports
on the contributions of

Philip Emeagwali
to the development of the computer.


Who Stole My New Supercomputer?

Back in 1974, parallel processing
was a future computer industry.
For that reason,
my parallel processing
supercomputer research
was largely ignored and I worked alone
for the subsequent sixteen years.
The inventor
hid the struggles and obstacles
he overcame
and hid them
to make his invention appear
as if it was invented
in one brilliant Eureka Moment!
It took me fifteen years
to invent the new supercomputer
that was read in fifteen minutes.
During those fifteen years,
I was ridiculed, rejected, and mocked
as the bush fowl
that crowed
in the language of another village.
For me, Philip Emeagwali,
I defined massively parallel processing
as my technological quest
for the speed of now
from the supercomputer of tomorrow.
I did so because
the supercomputer of today
will become the computer of tomorrow.
In my quest
for the fastest supercomputer,
the details did not matter
as long as the ending is happy.
After 1989, my massively parallel processing supercomputer discovery
became politicized.
The obsession of haters
was to knock me off my perch.
After 1989,
a team of American supercomputer scientists
tried to steal the credit
for the new supercomputer
that I invented alone.
For the four decades onward of 1974,
I held those new supercomputer thieves
at bay.
After forty-four years
of their rampant criticisms and derisions
and mockeries
of the new supercomputer
that I invented alone,
that team of thieves
started claiming the credit
for the new supercomputer
that I invented alone.
Those thieves told everybody
that they invented the new supercomputer
that encircled the globe
in the way the internet does.
They stole my original drawings
and renamed my new supercomputer
from [quote unquote]
“Philip Emeagwali Supercomputer.”
They put their names on my invention.
My name was completely erased
as the sole inventor
of my new supercomputer.
My invention of a new supercomputer
that was comprised of
an ensemble of commodity processors
that were connected
and that were connected
as a new internet
was stolen by supercomputer scientists
who publicly condemned my new internet
and mocked it since 1974.
To avoid legal prosecution
and public shaming,
they stole my new supercomputer
under a pseudonym, or false name.
That was the most audacious theft
in the history of the computer.
That theft
brings into question
their honesty
and moral character.
They stole the credit
for the invention
of my new supercomputer
that was a new internet
and stole my new technology
under a number of false identities
and fluid pseudonyms
and stole my new computer
under a number of throw-away
email addresses
and throw-away
mobile telephone numbers.

TAGS:
black physicists, African American physicists, African American Inventors, black inventors, black history month, black scientist, famous black inventors,African American Inventors and their Inventions

Philip Emeagwali 180125 1 7+8 of 8

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

From whirlpool turbines to edible cutlery, water blobs, and package-free shampoo and toothpaste, we've compiled a list of 22 inventions that could help us cut back on plastic, reduce garbage in the sea, and make the Earth a better place.

Editor's Note: This video has been re-uploaded due to a disputed fact in the original video.

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How One Group Is Restoring Thousands Of Oysters To The New York Harbor
https://youtu.be/Vau_CD8NmUY

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22 Inventions That Are Saving The Earth

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

Africa has the world's most established record of human innovative accomplishment: the most established ancient instruments on the planet have been found in eastern Africa, and later proof for device creation by our progenitors has been found across Sub-Saharan Africa. The historical backdrop of science and innovation in Africa from that point forward has, be that as it may, got generally little consideration contrasted with different districts of the world, regardless of remarkable African improvements in engineering, medicine, architecture, arithmetic, metallurgy, and different fields.
I hope my video will be informative. Please subscribe to my channel

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

I'm Philip Emeagwali. In 1989, I was in the news
as the African Supercomputer Genius
that won top U.S. Prize.
I was in the news because I discovered
how to produce
the world’s fastest supercomputers
and how to manufacture them
from a large ensemble
of the world’s slowest processors
that were identical to each other
that were equal distances apart
from each other
and that shared nothing
between each other.
That discovery
from my parallel supercomputing experiment of July 4, 1989
is the foundation
of the modern supercomputer
that now computes and communicates
in parallel.
That discovery
of practical parallel supercomputing
added a new pillar
for the never-ending quest
for faster and fastest supercomputers.
I discovered practical parallel supercomputing
as the new technology
that will underpin
future computers and supercomputers.

To stand at the farthest frontier
of supercomputer knowledge
was a surreal feeling
that gave me goosebumps.

On my Eureka moment
of 8:15 in the morning
of the Fourth of July 1989
in Los Alamos, New Mexico,
United States,
I saw for the first time
a never-before-seen supercomputer.
That virtual supercomputer
was beyond the computer
and is not a computer per se.
It is a new internet de facto.


Why is Philip Emeagwali important
to the world of mathematics?

Studying mathematics
and understanding
the partial differential equation
will not make the cover story
of the top mathematics publications.
I invented a new system of
partial differential equations
that was the cover story
of the May 1990 issue
of the SIAM News,
the top publication
in research mathematics.
Abstract calculus and large-scale algebra
were at the mathematical physics core
of my supercomputer invention.
My contribution
to modern mathematical knowledge
and extreme-scale computational physics is this:

I constructed algebraic algorithms
that I used to derive
a new system
of finite difference equations
of algebra
that approximated, at finite places,
my new partial differential equations
of calculus
that were defined at infinite places
and, therefore, required
infinite calculations
to solve it’s associated
initial-boundary value problem exactly.

What made the news headlines
was that I—Philip Emeagwali—discovered
how to crank up my computations
and email communications
and do so by sixteen levels
and by computing and communicating their answers
across a new internet
and doing so simultaneously within
two-raised-to-power sixteen,
or 64 binary thousand,
central processing units,
or within as many computers.
My quest was to discover
how to topple those ducks over
and like a domino.
Because I did not invent
practical parallel supercomputing
in prose,
some knowledge of that technology
is lost as I translated
my new knowledge
into a scientific report
that is further reduced to
a school inventor report
of the 12-year-old.

In retrospect, the laws of motion
of physics
were discovered three centuries
and three decades ago.
The technique of calculus
was also invented three centuries
and three decades ago.
The partial differential equation
of calculus was invented
a century and half ago.
The partial differential equation
is the recurring decimal
in computational physics,
such as extreme-scale, high-fidelity petroleum reservoir simulation
that is used to extract crude oil
and natural gas
and such as long-term
general circulation modeling
that is used to predict global warming.


For information about Philip Emeagwali,

http://emeagwali.com

https://facebook.com/emeagwali
https://twitter.com/emeagwali
https://instagram.com/philipemeagwali
https://flickr.com/philipemeagwali
https://linkedin.com/in/emeagwali
https://soundcloud.com/emeagwali
https://youtube.com/emeagwali


TOPICS
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Philip Emeagwali 191004 3 4 of 5

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

#shorts #fact #interesting #crazy
This guy accidentally invented one of the world's greatest inventions! Interesting story about a great invention that changed the world.

Thanks for watching! Hoped you liked my video
Subscribe to my channel for more.
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Edited by MarKBBQ

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Invention crazy fact interesting story stuff you should know story history education money today I learned matches inventions finance smart with money motivation inventor

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 12 months ago

Its not being talked about enough, this is a potential game changer that many South Africana don't know about.


A clip from First Last #1




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