@mr_kwabla
The talent is there for you to see we just need to nurture and develop it
Video: Ghanaian maker builds a voice-controlled AI standing fan, showcasing local smart-home innovation and creativity. Sentiment: 69% support, 17% confront.
Innovative Ghanaian tech enthusiast showcases his self-developed AI Fan, a voice-controlled standing fan designed to respond to spoken commands, highlighting local creativity as the world moves to smart home innovations. [đ„: emmanuelkyei925] https://t.co/Ny7CfvhWM7
Real-time analysis of public opinion and engagement
What the community is saying â both sides
multiple replies call the work âimpressiveâ and insist âthe talent is there,â urging that it just needs nurturing.
several people demand financial support and government investment to scale the innovation (âFund him,â âthe government should be investing in these peopleâ).
calls to invite, interview or promote him (mentions of public figures and offers to connect or escort him) so the project gains exposure.
repeated comparisons claim this is âbetter than Aku AIâ (and nicknames like âKwaku AIâ), framing it as a superior homegrown alternative.
replies celebrate the achievement as a point of pride (âKantanka must be proud,â âI love this countryâ) and a reason to support local talent.
a few replies ask to be connected or to have the device delivered to Ghana, showing immediate, practical demand.
at least one reply questions the use of foreign language/branding (âBut why the nĂź hĂąo?â), signaling sensitivity to cultural presentation.
humorous and casual replies (memes, excited exclamations, offbeat comments) amplify reach and make the thread shareable.
Several replies claim a figure âwho sees himself all knowingâ has collaborated with his bosses to steal from Ghanaians and warn he will be exposed to the public.
People are puzzled and suspicious that a âmade in Ghanaâ offering is being presented in Chinese, suggesting foreign influence or outsourcing and that Ghanaians are being taken for a ride.
Multiple comments call out an apparently invented product called âAku,â saying nobody knows what Aku even is or why it exists.
Several replies accuse the project of âslapping AI on everythingâ â implying trend-chasing and superficial use of technology labels.
Respondents mock the presentation and hype (e.g., the âspeed speed speedâ joke), using ridicule to signal they find the whole thing laughable or embarrassing.
Some voices predict that Ghana wonât support this talent, expressing pessimism about local acceptance or uptake.
Most popular replies, ranked by engagement
The talent is there for you to see we just need to nurture and develop it
Please Iâm Spain and I need one Can someone connect me to him He just needs to deliver it in Ghana
This is better than the so called AKU AIđ. These are the people the government should be investing in.
Ghanaian innovation speaking Chinese. Looks like some idiots are being taken for a ride.
Greeting a made in Ghana fan with Chinese, make it make sense
This will cost him less than 10k but one man who sees himself all knowing has collaborated with his bosses to steal from Ghanaians to invent some Aku that we all donât know what this Aku is about. For God and country you will be expose for the Ghanaian people to see.
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