Tymofiy Mylovanov Profile picture
Dec 2 12 tweets 7 min read
Good evening. Day 282 of the war. I am in Vinnitsa, Ukraine. This is an unmanned tractor. Local engineers developed it so it can de-mine agricultural fields without putting driver’s life at risk. We came to check it out and see how KSE Business School can help scale them up 1/
This is a large mine sensor that will be attached to the tractor. A team of engineers has worked in their spare time, during the breaks at their regular job, to develop a prototype. It uses a cheap tractor available at every village; it can be easily replaced if explodes. 2/
The tractor employs autopilot systems used in fancy agricultural equipment to control wheel angles. The engineers adapted it for this tractor and also added distance controller transmission, throttle, etc. They have assembled it from the spare parts they had. Pretty ingenious 3/
Now, they are looking for investment to create an MVP. They work at a high agro tech company Frendt. Here are pics of their director and faculties. They fix high tech equipment for farmers. During the war, I guess, the demand has dropped, but their company appears healthy 4/
They say they don’t want to wait until the end of the war for large scale demining. Instead, they have decided to find a solution that is cheap, effective, and scalable. Of course, in the middle of our conversation, electricity goes off. They have a cascade backup system that 5/
their employees can finish working on heat and electricity sensitive projects (e.g. repairing complex electronic systems). We cut the visit short b/c their Wi-Fi is weak and I have to find a place to connect for CNN interview. We did it at a gas station off the back of our car 6/
We visited a local university too to see how students cope with blackouts. Unlike at KSE, classes were online. Instead of students, we found entrepreneurs. Here are the pics of professors and PhD students creating stoves off empty gas cans. The most need input? Gas canisters! 7/ twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
We also found an entrepreneur who creates buggies off totaled Audis. They import them from Poland and take them apart to get the engine. The rest they manufacture themselves 8/
It takes a week or two to make one buggy, but they can do 3-5 a month. The ingredients have been getting 20-40% more expensive. After the Russians destroyed the metallurgy industry in the East, specifically, in Mariupol, they now have to buy metal pipes from China. 9/
They are trying to digitalization and automatics their production and have made quite a bit of progress, limiting manual labor to assembly. Here is my selfie with the owner / entrepreneur and a video of me driving one of the buggies 10/ twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The faculty and the rector of the university say that the students and entrepreneurs around the university have been very active. In the beginning of the war, they started by assembling Molotov cocktails, then produced traps for tanks, then telephones and comms for trenches, 11/
then a “panic button/device” that can help find you under the ruins of a building after a missile attack. We agreed to establish some joint projects between our and their students and entrepreneurs. If you want to support our students (and likely theirs too), you can donate 12/12

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More from @Mylovanov

Dec 4
Day 284 since the war and Day 365 since our wedding with Natalia. So, to celebrate we decided to take some time off and went to sauna (“banya”). It cost us 400UAH ($10) per person. And we were supposed to watch the fire furnace and add firewood. 1/
The furnace pipes and chimney go through the sauna room. It was 80 degrees C / 176 F. There was a cozy, but coldish resting room. While there was a teapot, it was not safe to use the water for drinking. A bummer. 2/ ImageImage
Outside of the sauna building, there were two tubs. The first had freezing water. The other one had a furnace under and was pretty hot. We first went to sauna. Later, we decided that it is more fun to be outside and used the hot tub. I went to the cold tub too, like 5 times. 3/ ImageImage
Read 8 tweets
Dec 4
Yesterday, on Day 283 of the war, my wife and I went for a quick dinner at a vegan restaurant. When we were leaving, we saw kids playing at a playground. The lights were off (no electricity) and it was very dark. One parent held a light so kids can run around and have fun 1/ Image
This is my wife Nataliia. We are in a vegan restaurant. I travelled for a couple of days and she decided to wear my sweater to feel closer to me. It had a hole in it so she fixed it. I tried to find the place where the hole used to be and couldn’t. She was cracking up. 2/ Image
At war you get used to almost everything. But I continue to be impressed by this little vegan restaurant Imbir. It was hard to run a vegan business before. But they go on now, including blackouts. Supply issues mean some items are not on the menu. But the food is very tasty. 3/ Image
Read 6 tweets
Dec 3
Good evening! It is Day 283 of the war in Ukraine. In the first months of the war, Russians surrounded Kyiv, but we forced them out. They left a lot of damage, we started rebuilding right away. Today I drove over a bridge, fully fixed now, which was blown up by Russians. 1/ Image
To get a sense of what happened there and how much fixing the bridge needed, look at the warehouse next to it. Completely bribed. 2/ Image
Here is a house several miles away on the highway. You can see the holes in the building from tank and artillery fire. You can also see how people fixed it from inside with birds and other materials. 3/ Image
Read 6 tweets
Dec 3
Good morning from Kyiv. Day 283 of the war. There missile warning today, but no attack. Good. Yesterday we were in Lviv. It was hit hard in the previous weeks. No water and electricity for days. But it appears to have recovered, with restaurants and social life buzzing around 1/ Image
We drove from Vinnytsya to Lviv. It takes five hours. Many check points, but no stops for us. The most striking view was unharvested fields of corn. It is wet and cold. 2/ Image
Lviv welcomed us with warmth and coziness. There are restaurants and coffee shops. There clothing stores of Ukrainian designers and open tourist attractions. 3/ ImageImageImage
Read 9 tweets
Dec 1
Today we drove from Kyiv to Vinnitsa, a regional center. This is my hotel room. Better than a hotel in New York ;). The surprise of the day: Vinnitsa has not had their water system hit yet and is oblivious to the consequences. So, no rush to stockpile water. 1/
CNN interviewed me. The set up: back of a car at a gas station; iPhone camera; a bottle of water and ice on the car to fix the phone. The city is dark; there is no alternative. Yes, we are debating Russia’s claim that they are bombing Nazis in Ukraine.2/
Dogs are friendly. Everywhere. In every village on the way and in the city. They run up to you and ask for attention and warmth. I think they are all traumatized even more@than people. Poor animals. We should do more for animal shelters. 3/ twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Read 7 tweets
Dec 1
Good morning. Day 281 of the war. There has not been an attack on Kyiv for 8 days. We now get electricity several times a day for several hours. It feels luxurious. My tweeter diary entry today is about the Ukrainian Railways. They are true heroes. @AKamyshin 1/
Alexander Kamyshin, CEO of UR, is a true leader and inspiration for me and many in Ukraine today. UR has not stopped working for an hour during the war. They evacuated millions of people under shelling, they kept trains on time and opened new connections, and turned train 2/
stations into centers of life that serve as places where people can shelter, shop, meet, eat, get medical help, and of course travel. This is a lifeline that connects Ukraine throughout and with the outside world. Alexander took me on a tour of the Kyiv main station 3/
Read 17 tweets

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