Baaj Adebule

Baaj Adebule is a Nigerian actor, model and a film maker. He hails from Ogun State in South Western Nigeria and is the youngest child of his parents. A graduate of economics from Covenant University, he has appeared in several Nollywood films since 2012 when he started his career.[1] He began his career on Mnet's soap opera Tinsel, and has continued in movies and TV series such as Hush [2] The Men’s Club, Payday, Zena, Uncloaked, The Governor, The Missing (Anthology Series), A Soldier’s Story 1 & 2, Omo Wa, Beast Within, The Moles and a host of others. [3]

He trained himself after appearing in Tinsel, by watching, acting and training himself with videos and articles on the internet.[4]

Appearances

  • Road To Yesterday
  • [[The Men’s Club (TV Series)
  • Tinsel
  • Hush As Adze
  • Payday With Meg Ottanwa ,Zack Orji, Victor Ebeye
gollark: Oh, so you mean this `hdr` goes at the start and the `dofs` thing tells you where the bit appended to the end is?
gollark: Perhaps the headers should also store the location of the last header, in case of [DATA EXPUNGED].
gollark: There are some important considerations here: it should be able to deal with damaged/partial files, encryption would be nice to have (it would probably work to just run it through authenticated AES-whatever when writing), adding new files shouldn't require tons of seeking, and it might be necessary to store backups on FAT32 disks so maybe it needs to be able of using multiple files somehow.
gollark: Hmm, so, designoidal idea:- files have the following metadata: filename, last modified time, maybe permissions (I may not actually need this), size, checksum, flags (in case I need this later; probably just compression format?)- each version of a file in an archive has this metadata in front of it- when all the files in some set of data are archived, a header gets written to the end with all the file metadata plus positions- when backup is rerun, the system™ just checks the last modified time of everything and sees if its local copies are newer, and if so appends them to the end; when it is done a new header is added containing all the files- when a backup needs to be extracted, it just reads the end and decompresses stuff at the right offset
gollark: I don't know what you mean "dofs", data offsets?

References

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