Oluwamorewa Omolabi

About Me

My name is Oluwamorewa Omolabi — but you'll probably just call me Morewa. I’m 19, I’m curious, and I don’t sleep much (because I’m usually building or learning something). I study Computer Science, but that doesn’t even cover half of what I do.

I build systems that solve real problems — not just assignments or “cool” apps. I love tech that touches real people. I like breaking things to understand them, and then making them better. I’ve spent nights debugging broken backend servers and early mornings designing clean, thoughtful user interfaces.

If you asked me what excites me, I’d say three things: innovation, efficiency, and people. I want to help Africa rise using tech and truth. I'm building for the future — not just mine, but for the continent and everyone trying to get ahead.

Also, I enjoy rap, strategy games, and thinking about things most people ignore. This site is a portfolio, a journal, and a message to the world that we're coming strong.

My Projects

Here are a few of the most important things I’ve built or I’m building. Every one of these projects is deeply personal — they solve problems I’ve faced, or that my people face every day.

RS Insights: Imagine a platform that thinks like a hedge fund manager, but talks to you like a friend. RS Insights is my AI-powered market prediction and intelligence dashboard. It uses LLMs and real-time financial data to help regular people invest smarter. It’s clean, fast, and tells you exactly what to do: buy, sell, hold — and why.

EduNav: I built EduNav to help students and job seekers get real guidance. Upload your resume, we tell you what jobs fit, what schools match, and even what scholarships you're eligible for. It’s powered by machine learning and backed by government datasets. It’s what every guidance counselor in Africa should have.

RS Finances: This is a sleek financial tracker made for real people. You log your income, your expenses, and boom — graphs, trends, and habit warnings. No MBA or accountant needed. It’s secure, fast, and built with your life in mind.

Intel Site (this site): What you’re on right now. More than just a portfolio, this is my digital headquarters — where I break down ideas, drop code, and tell stories that actually matter.

I Think...

Innovation & AI: Bridging the Gap Between Poverty and Prosperity

Technology has always shaped the world. But today, it's moving faster than ever — and those who can’t keep up risk being left behind.

⚠️ The Global Problem

Over 700 million people still live in extreme poverty. And while countries like the U.S., China, and Germany are using AI to increase productivity, cut costs, and create wealth — millions of families in places like Nigeria, Kenya, and Bangladesh are still struggling to access clean water, stable power, and decent jobs.

Graph showing innovation vs. poverty gap
Source: World Bank, 2023. Higher tech adoption strongly correlates with income rise.

💻 Why AI & Innovation Matter

AI can automate boring, repetitive tasks. It can detect fraud, improve farming, translate languages, diagnose diseases, and even personalize education. That means less stress, more money, and better lives — if used right.

Here’s what AI is doing in richer countries:

  • Doctors use AI to catch cancer early
  • Farmers use drones to boost crop yield
  • Companies save millions by using AI to automate logistics

But what about Nigeria?

🇳🇬 The Nigerian Reality

Most Nigerian SMEs (Small & Medium Enterprises) still don’t use data tools or digital systems. Over 70% of schools lack access to computer labs. And while there are sparks of brilliance — like Paystack, Flutterwave, and RiseVest — many startups die because of poor infrastructure, weak funding, or lack of technical talent.

Chart of Nigerian startup survival rate
Source: Disrupt Africa, 2024. 57% of startups in Nigeria fail within 3 years.

📉 What Happens If We Don’t Act

If we ignore this gap, three things will happen:

  1. The poverty divide between nations will grow wider
  2. Younger generations will fall behind in a digital-first world
  3. Our economies will stay dependent instead of building global giants

💡 What Can Be Done — By Anyone

You don’t need to be a president to make change. Here’s what different people and groups can do:

  • Government: Fund computer labs in every public school. Cut internet costs. Support local AI research.
  • Teachers: Show students how to build and code — not just memorize theory.
  • Startups: Use real data. Build things that solve local problems. Don’t chase only hype.
  • You: Learn skills. Teach others. Share free tools. Push your leaders to do more.
Education level vs income level in Africa
Source: UNESCO, 2023. Higher tech access in school directly improves household income.

✅ What We Must Build

We need tools for farmers, not just crypto. Software that helps teachers teach better. Systems that let traders track profit. Platforms that simplify taxes. Dashboards that guide students. Healthcare systems that don’t rely on paper.

And we need them made by us — with care, culture, and understanding.

🔥 My Belief

I believe in innovation that lifts people. Not just billionaires. Not just tech bros. Everyone. I believe a teenager in Ogun can build a better app than someone at Meta — if they have the chance.

Map showing AI readiness by African country
Source: Oxford Insights AI Readiness Index, 2024

We can use tech to free people from suffering — if we stop copying and start creating. That’s why I build.

— Oluwamorewa Omolabi, 2025

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— Written by RS