Sunday, January 5, 2025
Introducing 6'5 Freshman Tashawn Fambro Jr
Check out 14 year old Tashawn Fambro Jr from Warren, Ohio. This 6'5' emerging freshman has been creating a buzz. Since the season started, the Howland Tigers have started the new power forward. One of the highlights is his 22 point, 11 rebound, 10 assists game against the Boardman Spartans, the young power has begun to gain the attention from teams across the state of Ohio. Looking up to star players like Lebron James, Anthony Edwards, Kyrie Irving, and Kevin Durant you can see how they have inspired his game. In his spare time Tashawn likes to play video games, some of his favorite games are NBA 2K, Madden, and Rainbow Six Siege. In the next 5 years he would like to play college basketball for some of his favorite schools like Ohio State, Duke, North Carolina, and Michigan . Growing up playing in the Boys and Girls Club Fambro Jr has a giving heart so it's important for him to always give back to his community.
Saturday, January 4, 2025
Toyz Electronic's Wole Idowu featured in Swartz Center Success Stories at Carnegie Mellon University
Our CTO, Obawole (Wole) Idowu, was honored by Carnegie Mellon’s Swartz Center for Entrepreneurship for his innovative gamified learning platform. Developed alongside his father, this platform integrates STEAM concepts into interactive experiences, equipping Gen Z learners with resources, mentorship, and tools to thrive in today’s workforce.
Wole Idowu Talks Entrepreneurship
Generation Z has recently joined the workforce, marking a new era of growth and challenges. Employers have already identified a generational skill gap that could potentially result in trillions in lost revenue. The tech industry already suffers from a lack of diversity that may be exacerbated by this expanding gap. To ensure that no one is left behind in the Intelligence Age, Toyz Electronics is gamifying STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math) education.
Founded in 2014, Toyz Electronics combines gaming, a marketplace and online learning platforms all into one immersive platform. By gamifying learning, upskilling diverse prospects, and offering mentoring relationships and career opportunities, Toyz teaches students how to start their journey and to also tell their story in the process. The company has received several accolades, such as being a MIT Solve finalist for Anti-Racist Technology and runner-up in the Richard King Mellon Foundation pitch competition. In 2022, the company raised a $500,000 seed round.
The father and son duo behind Toyz, Damola and Wole Idowu, are both highly educated engineers, creatives and entrepreneurs who believe that a lack of diversity in the talent pipeline is a primary concern within the generational skill gap.
“We’re multigenerational black engineers who both got our starts at elite universities — me at Syracuse, and Wole at Carnegie Mellon,” Damola said. “I studied mechanical engineering and economics; he studied electrical and computer engineering. What we’re doing with Toyz is democratizing what I did for Wole.”
As Wole grew up, Damola took great care to diversify his education and life experiences. Wole started learning Mandarin at the age of 4, and was raised in Washington, D.C., as well as Appalachia.
Wole said, “I always tell people, ‘How did you get a kid from inner city D.C. to Carnegie Mellon at 15?’ He’s pitching his ideas on CNBC, FFT and a 20-under-20 competition with the PayPal Mafia; then he’s working at EA and multiple Fortune 500 companies; then he gets a degree in Electrical Computer Engineering, with two business minors. He gets venture-backed and has a startup [Toyz] at the Carnegie Mellon Swartz Center for Entrepreneurship.’ I’m like, ‘That’s me! And my dad!’”
As seen on CNBC 20 under 20 Obawole Idowu lightning round pitch. A15 year old, Wole graduates High School and pitches invention idea to Peter Thiel Foundation as a finalist for the 20 most gifted under the age of 20. This pitch is for his vision to make smartphone devices available to the 1.5 billion people without electricity via using sustainable technology and energy-efficient components.
Toyz envisions a future where this digital divide no longer exists. Bridging the gap is no easy feat – fittingly, Toyz is using superheroes on its mission to achieve this. With the Superhero Rap platform, students can create their own personas, superheroes with powers related to their potential interests within the tech world. Wole explained that Superhero Rap is based on Idealism, asking students what it is that they want beyond themselves.
Hyundai factory in the Dah-Varsity Game.
Hyundai factory in the Dah-Varsity Game.
The Superhero Rap concept has already demonstrated success in helping entire communities tell their stories through the Dah-Varsity Game. Students have utilized this platform to showcase their skills, improve their articulation, and gain better opportunities for college pathways and employment. Through user-generated, content-based portfolios and application supplements, Toyz highlights the skills and achievements of these students. Notably, the recent pilots have resulted in young Black women being accepted into prestigious engineering and game design programs at universities like Michigan, Georgia Tech and USC.
In 2025, Toyz continues to look forward and is excited to collaborate with other companies. Toyz is working with Epic Games to create educational opportunities for educators and students. The intent is to participate in events at Duke that support the efforts of Toyz as well as the upcoming Game Development program at Duke University. This will involve presentations by the education team at Epic around preparing students for careers in Interactive 3D using tools like Unreal Engine and Unreal Editor for Fortnite. There will be a distinct opportunity for students from HBCUs to participate as well through events including conferences and game jams geared toward students. These opportunities will span skills around game development, Interactive 3D and entrepreneurship.
While Toyz is based at Carnegie Mellon’s Swartz Center, they are also part of the Project Olympus incubator and MIT Solve incubator. These resources enable Toyz to leverage high-quality entrepreneurship and educational support to refine their approach and AI model. Collaboration with prestigious institutions like Howard University, Texas Southern University and Syracuse University ensures an equity-focused lens on their AI and Data Science projects.
Toyz Electronics not only envisions a future where the digital divide no longer exists, but also a future where inclusivity and innovation in tech can bring humanity to its full potential.
“The more people you include, the more rapidly humanity accelerates to adoption. So, it’s not just altruistic. The more inclusive you are with innovation technology-wise, the better the adoption will be. The better the utilization, the better the monetization, the better the profitability, and the better the sustainability. In the future, you must include everybody in innovation so it can be widely deployed.”
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