the difficulty of making ballpoint pens | Only 3 countries in the world can make ball pen heads

apparently balls points are too complex for most steel industries to manufacture, China Couldn’t Make a Ballpoint Pen Until 2017. steel industry za vumbistan ni za panjeets, wakitoka you’ll go back to the stone age.

http://www.jingdapen.com/en/news/396.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYcWALNpKj8

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One need only realise that Panjeets make up less than 1% of the population but 80% of Kenya National Chess Champions with a few Ojingas thrown in the mix to come to the conclusion that negroes are seriously mentally incapacitated

Chris kirubi alikua anaunda bic, pale haco industries

Kirubu alikuwa marketer tu, kalamu ziliundwa na company ya France. Kirubi alikuwa marketer wa zile multinationals zinataka kufanya biashara kenya, hakuwa manufacturer

Just a question, not sure how things go in manufacturing, but do guys hide the process of making things… like the process of making ball point pens, do you need to tell your scientists to find out for themselves or there is a tutorial/book describing the process.

Ile upuzi mnawatch kwa internet inafanya mkue wajinga sana…

mbwa wewe this is a chinese factory: http://www.jingdapen.com/en/news/396.html

I doubt that. I think negroes do not have enough exposure. I wouldn’t consider lack of exposure as mental incapacitation. I have seen some incredibly intelligent Africans. Kuna watu kadhaa werevu sana hii Kenya (Blacks) - borderline geniuses ni vile hawana exposure.

There’s nothing you can’t find on google or YouTube nowadays. And even then, there are books on how to manufacture. Also with experienced scientists/engineers, you can come up with any design. I worked for a couple of startups, one of them we made stuff for customers using college textbooks for reference. The other relied on experience.

True, I actually just made up those figures based on my own personal experience and beliefs and not on any factual stats or information hehe

process wanajua, lakini unafaa kuiperfect hadi product yako iwe superior kuliko ya competitor.

Ingredients kila mtu anajua, lakini what temperature to heat them, for how long? At what temperature do you add the other ingredient, ukoroge dakika ngapi? hapo ndo difference hutokea.

Kenyans we are smart and intelligent. Ni vile huwa tunajidharau sisi wenyewe. I have certain Chineses machines I use in my workshop and for 7 years they have never had any massive downtime. The guy who does the servicing and maintenance ni mse amesome Mombasa polytechnic, I gave him a chance and he has never disappointed. My competitors who use European machines ni watoe mtu Germany ama Turkey to come and check on the machines, before they know it mtu ako na downtime ya one month plus a very hefty bill cause mtu umetoa nje analala Panari, private car from Hotel to work and bado anakula kwa bill yako. Worse part of it is the guy will be second guessing by removing parts, testing and sending them abroad before he finally gets to know where the problem is. Finally waitishe part from abroad it takes 1 week to arrive and its locally available either industrial area ama nyamakima. Alafu competitor anipigie aniambie kumeumana if i can sort him out na technician, when you send the technician kitu ya kwanza aliulizwa ni qualifications technician akamwambia hiyo job sio qualification but experience. Technician alitoka na akaenda

Then hii ujinga ya watu kudharau mwafrika mwenzako can be costly. Kuna time nilikula 1m safi; I noticed supplier yangu mmoja ako na generator ya 100KVA imelala tu hapo imechapwa na jua na kunyeshewa. Upon asking, he told me he imported it na hata haijafanya 100hrs. So kupigia supplier wake wa genset amekuwa akimpa local contacts za franchise but local franchise hawataki kuguza cause sio hao waliuza. So supplier akaniuliza how much i can offer him for the generator nikamwambia i need to come with an expert to advice. Hapo nilienda na Benja, my technician trained from Mombasa poly. Benja kucheki generator aliniambia hiyo tusiwache. The problem with the generator was that diesel filter had blocked and kuna panya ziliingia huko ndani zikatafuna some wires, kama unajua panya za inda zinatoshana na fully grown rabbit na hazina huruma when they decide to strike. Bought the generator for 500k, repairs cost like 15k and sold it for 1.75m through Benja; alikuwa na mse ako Maasai mara who was shopping for a second hand genset of around the same size. Sasa mwenye kuniuzia aliniuliza juzi what i did with it nikamwambia i cannibalised it and sold parts then whatever couldnt be sold as parts niliuza kama scrap.

@DicksonFromVagina Colonisation has 5 main elements:

  1. Making the colonised believe in the inferiority of his culture (and skills)

  2. Gradual culture replacement

  3. Creating factions & divisions among the colonised, based on existing weaknesses

  4. Use of violence

  5. Identification with the coloniser

This has worked super perfectly in Kenya. I hear parents teaching their babies english.

There was a time I thought English language was a sign of high intelligence

I met a Kenyan guy in Kampala who used to work on lifts. The guy couldn’t even construct an sms but he was a genius. His boss was from SA and he knew nothing, he was living off the kenyan’s knowledge but since he was white he got off with alot. One day the Kenyan guy really thumped the white man.

Your point?

Give the credit where it’s due. If most birrioneas (genuine and thieves) invest in manufacturing instead of malls, Kenya will be highly developed