Category Archives: My Ideas for Making Nigeria Better

[DVAM] It’s Time to Acknowledge Male Victims of Domestic Violence – By Bari Zell Weinberger, Esq. – huffingtonpost.com

[TIP: Yesterday, I formally launched my new Facebook page named “Domestic Violence Against Men – Ideas for Identifying & Stopping It“. The page is dedicated to empowering men who find themselves, by some accident of fate on the receiving end of abuse from an intimate female partner. Click here to visit it].

The Huffington Post article previewed and linked below, is yet another (like this one from yesterday) in a series that I’m compiling to SHOW clearly that DVAM is a major reality that is being ignored by most stakeholders, especially those tasked with duty of providing support and protection to abused persons.

This neglect of male victims of domestic abuse by females, is being exploited by a growing number of manipulative females to visit serious physical, emotional and psychological abuse on their partners, knowing prevailing stereotypes about domestic violence will make it easy to later claim to be the victims!

I have seen this happen MANY times over the past decade. So I speak from a position of personal knowledge and experience when I make these assertions. My mission is to influence a positive and permanent change in THIS unsatisfactory situation for the better.

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It’s Time to Acknowledge Male Victims of Domestic Violence – By Bari Zell Weinberger, Esq. – huffingtonpost.com

When we discuss domestic violence, it is often assumed that the victims are women. And the statistics are truly traumatic. The less-told story is that a striking number of men are victims, too, suffering physical, mental and sexual abuse in both heterosexual and same-sex relationships.

According to the CDC, one in four adult men in the U.S. will become a victim of domestic violence during his lifetime. That’s upwards of three million male domestic violence victims every year, or one man in America abused by an intimate or domestic partner every 37.8 seconds.

Highlighting these statistics is not meant to downplay in any way domestic violence among women. It is, however, intended to add to the growing conversation that anyone can be the victim of domestic abuse and everyone who needs protection deserves access to it.

Continue…

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bari-zell-weinberger-esq/its-time-to-acknowledge-m_b_8292976.html

RELATED ARTICLES

 

[DVAM] Domestic Violence Against Men by Toyin Omoniyi (TyLegal) – NairaLand.com & PraiseWorldradio.com

[Starting yesterday Thursday 13th April 2017, I formally announced my public service initiative to research, investigate and publicize potentially useful information and education by competent expert authorities on Domestic Violence Against Men]

The article previewed below was published by a female Nigerian lawyer, I find its contents most accurate, and recommend it to members of both genders,
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Domestic Violence Against Men by TyLegal: 2:22pm On Nov 19, 2015

Other forms of abuse are where a woman manipulates her man into granting her wishes or goes about spreading negative rumours about him to his friends or even on social media.

She might insinuate that her man beats her or does not provide for the family or that he is a ‘two-minute man’. She might also threaten to take the kids and disappear so that the man will not have any access to his kids. Women have also been known to drug their men or attack them in their sleep. If as a man, you are experiencing any of these, please get help fast.

Other forms of domestic violence against men are:
· Constant accusations of infidelity.

· Putting him down or insulting him.

· Seizing his medications as a form of threat.

· Trying to control what he wears, eats or how he spends his money.

· Verbally abusing him, be it in the presence of friends, colleagues or even within closed doors.

· Blaming the man for her violent actions or making him feel that he deserves such treatment.

Towards the end she writes:

This is not to give women ideas on how to abuse their men o. It is to create awareness that men also get abused and they also need to be protected. Men should be on the lookout to ensure that they are not in such a relationship otherwise it would shatter the man’s ego and leave him a shadow of himself.

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What a wonderfully balanced mind this Nigerian Lady Lawyer has!

Read the full article at: http://www.nairaland.com/2748370/domestic-violence-against-men

Graduation Day at the 2 week Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying Workshop [Re: Empower Your Daughter to be Her Own Boss With Minimal Resources Via Vocation She Can Build on to Excel]

Yesterday was “graduation” day for my 8 and 11 year old daughters (and their much older fellow trainees) at the venue of the 2 week “Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying” workshop organized by the Lagos State Government.

I’m still suffering from cumulative fatigue: I’ve practically been out of circulation over the past 2.5 weeks taking them from home to the venue and STAYING with them till evening, to bring them back from Monday to Friday.

But it felt all worth it seeing them carryout their final assignments of doing makeup on the faces of the “clients” they were asked to bring along.

I took the photo below, outside the event hall about 30 minutes after the presentation ceremony had ended and item 7 (chop-chop) was ongoing.

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My 2 daughters are dressed in the Ankara worn by all the other trainees.

The girl to the right is the daughter to the wonderful hairdresser lady who plaited their hairs. My 11 year old daughter did the makeup on her face as part of her final “practical”.

Then each girl had to do makeup on her own face – with no assistance from anyone. That was fun to watch – as it was a strange experience for both of them.

My (soon-to-be) 8 year old girl initially protested that she could not do it!

But she was told that was the requirement for completion. So she had to focus and do it.

What you see in the above photo is the result of her first ever attempt at applying makeup on her own face, instead of someone else’s lol

Note that they wore “Gele” during the ceremony, but which they took off right after the event – that’s indicated by the dark band along their hair lines in the other photo.

Sadly, some glitch caused most of the photos taken by the 11 year old’s Smartphone to render in relatively small 320 x 240 pixel sizes – like the 2 below!

a. The 11 year old inside the event hall

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b. The 8 year old inside the taxi I hired so  we could get there on time, AFTER we discovered we’d lost my ATM card and wasted valuable time trying to find it (details in the full post to come later)!

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We still do not know what went wrong.

The other photos that are larger were taken by me using my Blackberry. But I was too busy guarding their makeup kit/tools which were scattered all over the floor, as they worked, to take as many photos as I would have loved.

Luckily, the organizers hired photographers, who took several photos of them that I’m hopeful we’ll be able to get copies of for whatever price they command.

As I noted earlier, my girls were the youngest participants at the event – in which we had attendees my age – and even older!

The 8 year old in particular, got LOTS of attention from guests (and the instructors) who came to record videos of her as she worked on her own client’s face.

So many commented on the fact that she was not intimidated/was confident and actually knew what to do and how.

Compared to her older sister, however, her “makeup” work was not so well finished.

But the instructors say she’s headed in the right direction and that with practice, she’ll get much better.

When she was called out to receive her certificate from the Guest of Honour (a “Honourable” from the Lagos State Government”), the MC introduced her saying “Ah, yes, this is our youngest participant!”

That caused the audience to exclaim even more than they had when the first saw her tiny figure walking up to collect the certificate!

It was VERY important to me that she (and her sister) have THAT experience of going out to shake hands as she did, with a VIP – who bent down to speak words of encouragement to her.

When she returned, the glow in her face told me all I needed to know: She LOVED the feeling of a sense of accomplishment it had given her.

I was therefore not surprised that she eagerly continued repairing the makeup on the face of her client, who had accidentally rubbed off some of the makeup.

Her 11 year old sister was also keen to preserve the work she’d done. So much so, that when she noticed her own client trying to use a facial wipe on her cheeks, she playfully patted her hand away saying:

“Ah, don’t spoil all my hard work O!”

This post is meant to just give a few highlights. The full story – ending with my admonition on Best Practice Parenting will come later.

I have a back log of work to dig into right now, so I’m not sure when I’ll be able to get it published, but photos etc will appear in the piece I will be writing on this wonderful journey to vocational skills empowerment my girls have commenced!

[RECOMMENDED] My Lord, Tell Me Where To Keep Your Bribe? – By Niyi Osundare (Renowned Nigerian poet)

The good Professor Niyi Osundare wrote the poem below quite a while back about Nigeria’s Judiciary and Legal Profession.

Sadly, his words remain ever so relevant today.

This is one of many reasons I argue that most conventional “schools” offer limited real world relevant preparation – especially in a society like Nigeria.

We are supposed to be trained in learning and character, when we pass through school. Character is so important for long term success achievement in adult life.

What we see in today’s Nigeria indicates very little of character building happens in the schooling majority of our population gets.

If that was not the case, we would not have such a dominant majority eagerly engaging in and supporting blatant wrong doing for personal gain. Societies where schools work are not like that!

The Professor eloquently describes the sad state of affairs in our country today, in the following words:
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My Lord, Tell Me Where To Keep Your Bribe? – By Niyi Osundare (Renowned Nigerian poet)

My Lord

Please tell me where to keep your bribe?

Do I drop it in your venerable chambers

Or carry the heavy booty to your immaculate mansion

Shall I bury it in the capacious water tank

In your well laundered backyard

Or will it breathe better in the septic tank

Since money can deodorize the smelliest crime

Shall I haul it up the attic

Between the ceiling and your lofty roof

Or shall I conjure the walls to open up

And swallow this sudden bounty from your honest labour

Shall I give a billion to each of your paramours

The black, the light, the Fanta-yellow

They will surely know how to keep the loot

In places too remote for the sniffing dog

Or shall I use the particulars

Of your anonymous maidservants and manservants

With their names on overflowing bank accounts

While they famish like ownerless dogs

Shall I haul it all to your village

In the valley behind seven mountains

Where potholes swallow up the hugest jeep

And Penury leaves a scar on every house

My Lord

It will take the fastest machine

Many, many days to count this booty; and lucky bank bosses

May help themselves to a fraction of the loot

My Lord

Tell me where to keep your bribe?

My Lord

Tell me where to keep your bribe?

The “last hope of the common man”

Has become the last bastion of the criminally rich

A terrible plague bestrides the land

Besieged by rapacious judges and venal lawyers

Behind the antiquated wig

And the slavish glove

The penguin gown and the obfuscating jargon

Is a rot and riot whose stench is choking the land

Behind the rituals and roted rigmaroles

Old antics connive with new tricks

Behind the prim-and-proper costumes of masquerades

Corruption stands, naked, in its insolent impunity

For sale to the highest bidder

Interlocutory and perpetual injunctions

Opulent criminals shop for pliant judges

Protect the criminal, enshrine the crime

And Election Petition Tribunals

Ah, bless those goldmines and bottomless booties!

Scoundrel vote-riggers romp to electoral victory

All hail our buyable Bench and conniving Bar

A million dollars in Their Lordship’s bedroom

A million euros in the parlor closet

Countless naira beneath the kitchen sink

Our courts are fast running out of Ghana-must-go’s*

The “Temple of Justice”

Is broken in every brick

The roof is roundly perforated

By termites of graft

My Lord

Tell me where to keep your bribe?

Judges doze in the courtroom

Having spent all night, counting money and various “gifts”

And the Chief Justice looks on with tired eyes

As Corruption usurps his gavel.

Crime pays in this country

Corruption has its handsome rewards

Just one judgement sold to the richest bidder

Will catapult Judge & Lawyer to the Billionaires’ Club

The Law, they say, is an ass

Sometimes fast, sometimes slow

But the Law in Nigeria is a vulture

Fat on the cash-and-carry carrion of murdered Conscience

Won gb’ebi f’alare

Won gb’are f’elebi**

They kill our trust in the common good

These Monsters of Mammon in their garish gowns

Unhappy the land

Where jobbers are judges

Where Impunity walks the streets

Like a large, invincible Demon

Come Sunday, they troop to the church

Friday, they mouth their mantra in pious mosques

But they pervert Justice all week long

And dig us deeper into the hellish hole

Nigeria is a huge corpse

With milling maggots on its wretched hulk

They prey every day, they prey every night

For the endless decomposition of our common soul

My Most Honourable Lord

Just tell me where to keep your bribe.

*   Large, extremely tough bags used for carrying heavy cash in Nigeria

** They declare the innocent guilty

They pronounce the guilty innocent

Prof. Niyi Osundare

Empower Your Daughter to be Her Own Boss With Minimal Resources Via Vocation She Can Build on to Excel [Case Study: Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying]

Last Sunday (26th March 2017), I sent a Power Point slide show with the photos shown below, to the facilitator of the “Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying” training workshop being attended by my daughters – with the following message:

Hi Madam,

Photos of (the girls’) Makeup Practice On Each Other – Sun 26th March 2017

Please let’s have your feedback.

Yesterday’s attempts were not so good. They kept fighting each other. But today, went better :-)

They will work on each other’s faces early tomorrow morning, before the class begins – as you have advised on Friday.

Below: Eye brows and eye shadow makeup done by the 8 year old, on her 11 year old sister.

The instructor later noted to me, when we met on Monday, that the 2 girls needed to better draw the brows to include a distinct “arch” and “tail”. They have since gotten much better at doing that – but have been told to do lots more practice at home this weekend.

makeup-done-by-oluoma-ontemi

makeup-done-by-oluoma-ontemi1

makeup-done-by-oluoma-on-temi2

makeup-done-by-oluoma-ontemi3

makeup-done-by-oluoma-ontemi4

Below: Eye brows and eye shadow makeup done by the 11 year old, on her 8 year old sister.

makeup-done-by-temi-onoluoma1

makeup-done-by-temi-onoluoma2

makeup-done-by-temi-onoluoma3

makeup-done-by-temi-onoluoma4

Below: Before and After photos of the 8 year old’s eye lids as the 11 year old worked on her

The instructor noted that they had yet to grasp the “blending” of the colours used, as reflected in the distinctly visible line between the 2 colours used.

shadow-before

shadow-after

Today was the 2nd day of “Gele Tying” in the Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying Workshop they’ve been attending

They were taught to use  a very challenging multiple pleating technique made popular by the wife of a top Nigerian politician in the South West region of Nigeria.

It was however noted that the ease of reproduction of this style depends on the fabric from which the Gele itself is made – with Aso Oke, being the recommended, and which gives the best look.

In the photo below, my 11 year old daughter has her Gele done that way, using a fabric different from the recommended Aso Oke

gele-tying

Believe me when I say this entire experience has been, for me, MOST enlightening and inspiring.

This business of Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Typing requires application of major creativity and ingenuity by practitioners.

It’s been so exciting watching the instructors demonstrate how to mix colours to create amazing eye shadow effects, for instance.

The trainees also got told how to use various kinds of brushes to achieve different looks in the course of making up a client’s face.

Very little is left to guessing or trial and error – and that’s why it’s a vocation that commands enduring interest and respect!

This makeup business is both a science and an art: That’s why I am certain it’s a viable vocation to venture into – and the long term success reported for many practitioners confirms  it.

What’s more, it has few entry limitations, making it open to anyone willing to do the work required to learn and to create.

Little wonder that the 2 week workshop has on attendance females of virtually all ages (including several older than myself) and backgrounds.

All worked together in what was mostly a cordial atmosphere, to learn from the very helpful instructors, and also to share with one another, what each person knew.

Some had been in the business already and only attended the training to brush up and learn new tricks of the trade.

Others, like my girls, were complete novices – so they got lots of coaching attention from the older ladies, which was pleasing to see.

It goes without saying that I’ve resolved they will be taking the formal 1 month training on offer, from the course facilitator, at her studio. 

Yep. This is the kind of EDUCATION that I consider most valuable as a foundation for success in life.

One can build on it to acquire all other forms as one goes along, but it will provide a valuable means of income earning to do all other stuff, without needed too much help (if at all any) from others.

This Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying business is one that can empower ANY female of any age to be her own boss with minimal resources.

It’s VERY scientific  in nature – requiring a willingness to learn how things work and practice till mastery is attained.

You simply cannot cut corners, because your client will always demand value for her money.

So, if the finished makeup you do on her face, or the Gele you tie on her head, fails to meet the standard you promised, your brand will suffer.

She will protest, and most likely tell others, or at least refuse to give you referrals.

None of that will serve your needs. That’s why those who succeed in this business tend to be disciplined and serious minded.

I believe this is why the ladies I observed all through the 2 week period were so serious in their disposition to doing what they were being taught.

They knew it was not a matter of writing some paper exam, but of being able to DEMONSTRATE mastery of the art of makeup – repeatedly, and consistently.

Here’s the best part: You can start out with a budget that is comfortable for you, and scale up as you succeed with client jobs you get.

This is because there will always be clients willing to pay you at your level of competence.

I have been told of locations in Lagos where young girls do Gele tying for only N500.00, and others where the lowest rate you can get the same service is N5,000.00!

Some of the ladies at the training explained that they can do full facial makeup for N2,500.00, because they are not so well established – noting that there are places where the lowest rate you can get the same service is N5,000.00!

All one needs to do is simply start with what one has and gradually work towards serving the market that pays more of what one wants, over time. If you work is good, the clients will hire you. People LOVE to look good!

In essence, the demand is there – Nigeria being a market in which females constantly demand for makeup services in various areas.

Smart ladies attending university would find acquiring this kind of skill useful in resisting peer pressures to fool around with Sugar Daddies to survive on campus etc.

And those ladies not on campus would be equally empowered to resist attempts by men or any other persons to control or manipulate them. This kind of business will make any female an empowered, independent woman in her own right!

That’s what I want my girls to become.

What about you?

Empower Your Child to Develop Market Relevant Income Generating Competencies [True Story]

[Photo below is of my 8 year old daughter with made up eye brows on Friday, at a practical cosmetic makeup training workshop venue for youths that she and her 11 year old sister 11 have been attending since the start of the past week ending Fri 24th March 2017]

olu-friday-makeup-thb.

To make this possible for them, I’ve (VERY gladly) given up my normal work-from-home routine to take them down DAILY to attend what has been the first week of a 2 week long practical training workshop in Cosmetic Makeup and Gele Tying, here in Lagos.

They bought their own makeup tool kit on their very first day, and we’ve since connected with some “vendor” outlet to replenish their “stocks”.

It’s been so fulfilling to see my girls work closely with much older females from all walks of life, as they learnt to “draw” brows, using eye liner pencil, then apply eye shadow with contouring etc.

The excitement in their eyes all through the event each day, and when they eagerly, continue practising on themselevs HOURS after we return home in the evening/night makes me feel so fulfilled.

It’s obvious that their hearts are in it – just like they have demonstrated unending passion for baking all sorts of lovely stuff (e.g Pizza, Bread, Cakes, Chin-Chin, Cookies etc) using their trademark No-OVen Charcoal Stove method! (See photos of their baking projects at https://web.facebook.com/TemiandOluomasCharcoalStoveBaking/)

Next week, they will be learning how to apply lipstick, and other remaining aspects of cosmetic makeup. Then they’ll end with the last few day learning hoe to tie some exciting styles of Gele lol!

Suggestion to Parents: I’ve said it before,and I’ll say it again – Find out what your kid’s passion(s) is (are), and WORK with him/her to develop it (them) to income generating proficiency level. It’s the best gift you can give your child!!!!!

PS: Photos and videos coming soon.

ON-DEMAND WORKSHOP: One VERY LOW COST Way to Make Drinks You Can Sell, Using Fruit Peels – Right From Your Home…1n Less Than 2 Hours [Case Study: Tayo Solagbade’s Specialty Pineapple Peel-based Drinks & Cakes!]

[Photo] The cakes shown next to the short drinks bottles were made from Pineapple Peels by me (Tayo K. Solagbade) – just like the drinks in the bottles themselves.

Yes, the PEELS.

What’s more, the cakes were baked without using an oven.  I first began making the drinks in Calavi, Benin Republic. When I moved to Cotonou, I continued.

It all began in 2014, when I discovered a way to use pineapple peels in making drinks (fermented and non-fermented). Later I began using the peels in baking the cakes, I was making without using an oven.

As I noted in an article written back then, my first pineapple peel based cakes were far from pretty, but those made by my kids (also without an oven), with input from their mother, look much prettier (see below).

Continue reading…

http://tayosolagbade.com/index.php/others/order-tayo-s-drinks-cakes

We Make Our Own Things™ [Hint: Why You Should Too!]

Today, I took my 8 and 11 year old daughters to attend the 1st day in 10 day training on “Gele Tying and Cosmetic Makeup”.

The older girl was made to use the younger to practice what they were taught by the instructor.  As I type these, the 8 year old is in a room at their grandparents’ taking her turn to practice on her elder sister.

This is another chapter in their Vocational Skills Based Education.

Before today, for about 9 months now, they have worked together (with support from their brothers) to use their No-Oven Charcoal Stove to bake Pizza, Cakes, Bread, Chin-Chin, etc.

Read PII 041: Avoid Intellectual Laziness, Learn How Things Work…to Achieve Success [Hint: A Culture of Making Your Own Things is Key to Individual/National Development – See Photos of Home Made Ankara Slippers and Shoes Inside]

Below: This pair of ankara slippers were made from scratch by me and my 7 (now 8) year old daughter for her to wear casually to visit relatives, neighbours etc. Read more about it here.

ankara2

In late December 2016, they were introduced to the use of leather sheets and Ankara fabrics for repairs and restoration of shoes and palm slippers.

See photos of the many real life practicals they’ve done on their Facebook page at https://web.facebook.com/TemiandOluomasCharcoalStoveBaking/

My purpose has always been to teach them to THINK of making their own things, customized to meet their own needs, and using their skills to make money as the opportunity arises.

Below: This pair of ankara shoes were made by me and my 10 year old daughter using an old pair of worn out shoes she was planning to dump. We basically resurrected those shoes with Ankara material using ideas we got from a Youtube video by a creative Nigerian custom shoe making expert

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That’s what I do (and have been doing successfully for YEARS) – via www.tayosolagbade.com, www.excelheaven.biz and www.thefarmceo.net – selling my custom Excel-VB Software and Web Marketing/Freelance Writing Skills internationally using the web.

It’s a culture I’m trying to entrench in the family. The 11 year old girl got a Smartphone for her birthday last month, but we failed to find a good fitting pouch for it from vendors we visited. So, I proposed that we make her one that would even be personalized.

phone-pouch

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Using a video I’d downloaded from the web, on making of leather wallets, I made the above shown pouch. I did not get it right the first time. And even now, it’s far from perfect.

But it fit quite nicely, and protects the phone even when it falls. What’s more, the young lady says she LOVES it – especially because her name is on it.

She watched me make it. Soon I’ll be teaching her to make it by herself…

phone-pouch2

My challenge to other parents is that they let their kids START acquiring income earning vocational skills alongside the academic education most push their kids into.

The reality of today’s world is that persons with marketable skills fare better when jobs are hard to find, because they can use their skills to get paid by those who need their services.

In my latest PDF Educational Commercial, going LIVE soon, I use a special mind map to explain the complementary alternative strategy I recommend smart parents adopt to give their kids balanced education that WORKS by empowering them to be financially independent. Click here to be notified when it goes LIVE.

 

Related: Order Our No-Oven Charcoal Stove Baked Cakes

In 2014, I discovered a way to use pineapple peels in baking cakes, without using an oven. My first cakes were far from pretty, but those made by my kids (also without an oven), with input from their mother, look much prettier (see below).

Title: One VERY LOW COST Way to Make Drinks You Can Sell, Using Fruit Peels – Right From Your Home…1n Less Than 2 Hours. Click to learn more.

In mid 2013, I wrote a special PDF report that is available as a free download. It’s titled:

Click here to learn more about my free talk…and also how you can get a copy of the above mentioned free PDF paper.

Create a Splashscreen for Your Custom Spreadsheet Application [Part 2 of 2] – Step by Step Video Demonstration

There are 2 videos to watch below, in this non-password-protected post for members of my Excel Heaven Visual Basic Automation Club:

Video 1: What a Splash Screen looks like – real life demonstration using Tayo Solagbade’s Poultry Farm Manager Excel-VB Spreadsheet app

splashscreen1

Click here to watch the video

Video 2: Step-by-Step demonstration of how to build a Splash Screen for your Workbook application

Explanatory Overview

As your skills in Excel-VB programming improve, your confidence will grow, and you will begin to identify enhancements you can add to your workbook applications that go beyond conventional worksheet and coding needs.

A good example is the use of workbook splash screens.

They are typically used to offer some quick information (name of app etc) and sometimes brief entertainment or distraction to users – when an application is being launched.

Excel-VB coding can be used to create a splash screen – from simple to fairly sophisticated levels in terms of behavior and aesthetics.

The first video I share in this tutorial shows the custom designed splash screen I built into my Excel-VB Poultry Farm Manager to give it a fairly professional appearance/feel.

It took the use of enhanced graphic design with Photoshop, coupled with creative placement of various images using Active-X controls to achieve the visual design effect that the user of the PFM is presented with.

 

The step-by-step tutorial video I offer below it uses a more basic approach to the creation of a splash screen.

Below: Writing the code to define the time duration the Splash Screen will appear for, and then close

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Below: The simple splash screen that results

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Click here to watch the video

In a future tutorial I will show how to create something with a more refined Graphic User Interface (GUI).

For now, what matters is that you learn and understand how to write the needed bits of code to make your simply splash screen work as expected.

I explain in full detail just how to make that happen in this straight forward, easy to understand 8 minute tutorial.

RELATED ARTICLE

What You Need to Create a Splashscreen for Your Custom Spreadsheet Application [Part 1 of 2]

[FREE] POWERFUL TRUTHS ABOUT REAL BLACK HISTORY, NOT TAUGHT IN SCHOOLS, BUT WHICH YOU (AND YOUR KIDS) NEED TO KNOW

Why do black people – and their nations – often lag behind others? I have argued for years that the reason is NOT genetic. Instead it is the mental attitude of majority of us.

No one can under develop us. We have the power to develop and advance ourselves. I am doing that for myself and my family. No one can stop me. I do NOT need the government to do it for me.

If more of us would adopt a similar mindset, we would transform our individual lives, and the fortunes of our respective families and societies.

My accomplishments over the past 2 decades prove that my sentiments are accurate. But the 2 books and a movie that I feature in this report offer incontrovertible proof that we, as a people have what it takes to excel on this planet.

I recommend you read this report and follow the URLs provided to learn more, so you (and your kids) can be empowered!

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