Babacele's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Babacele's Profile › Babacele's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 (of 228 pages)
but your number no dey go ogbonge |
oluwajjayfabric:baby trust me this PDP induced hate strategy to win at all dirty cost won't work again. The APC who dislodged PDP all over d country are no fools. You just watch whether this intertribal hate generating would take PDP anywhere. Time shall tell. |
liar,liar, liest! |
Estharfabian:im happy u are catching d positive energy . lolz. |
Estharfabian:u ain't seeing well dearie, clear yestertears n see fine Adams all around you. you get what you really want. me I meet beautiful wife materials everywhere ,everyday. The world is a beautiful place filled beautiful people. cheers. |
Adaure4ever:I tire o ,babe. |
IbokUtoroh:yea I agree to some degrees but not when the new philosophy n philosopher king do not condone trash. |
KashyBaby:hahahaha My Kashbaby, u rock, what an answer! |
which fake Jega? mcheeeew! |
KashyBaby:But I ain't complaining. So what d hoopla is all about? |
Beremx:miss u big , Jack. |
simplycarro:Carro tell them o! shameless PDP! we are about how they squandered the security budget n they are planning to distract us with arrangee assassination on ikwerewetin- self! we go shock una! |
if una PDP n wailing wailers shameless liars n theives like make una kill ekweramadu n try to pin it on APC, we go expose una. shameless wailing wailers! |
Areaboy2:WWW.daily telegraph.co.uk Nigerian professor solves 156 year old maths problem to win $ 1m prize Dr Opeyemi Enoch solved one of the seven millennium problems in mathemati The Riemann Hypothesis solution found by Dr Opeyemi Enoc A Nigerian professor has received a $1 million (£660,000) prize for solving a maths conundrum that had stumped scholars for more than 150 years. Dr Opeyemi Enoch, from the Federal University in the ancient city of Oye Ekiti, solved one of the seven millennium problems in mathematics. The professor was able to finally provide a solution to the Riemann Hypothesis first proposed by German mathematician Bernhard Riemann in 1859, earning him the $1m prize. Nigerian academic solves 150-year old math problem https:///6KYj4wtc2i pic.twitter.com/ZrIOaiQ40F — This Is Africa (@ ThisIsAfricaTIA) November 17, 2015 He announced his findings at the International Conference of Mathematics and Computer Science in Austria, Vienna, exactly 156 years to the day it had been put forward by Riemann. "Dr Enoch first investigated and then established the claims of Riemann," said a statement from the university where he teaches. "He went on to consider and to correct the misconceptions that were communicated by mathematicians in the past generations, thus paving way for his solutions and proofs to be established. "He also showed how other problems of this kind can be formulated and obtained the matrix that Hilbert and Poly predicted will give these undiscovered solutions. He revealed how these solutions are applicable in cryptography, quantum information science and in quantum computers." via GIPHY Dr Enoch has previously worked on mathematical models for generating electricity from sound, thunder and ocean bodies. According to software engineer Robert Elder, the complex Riemann conundrum "is based on an observation Riemann made about the equation: Every value of the equation that makes it go to zero seems to lie on the exact same line." The seven millennium problems are set out by the Massachusetts- based Clay Mathematical Institute as being the "most difficult" to solve . Explaining the hypothesis they state: "The prime number theorem determines the average distribution of the primes. "The Riemann Hypothesis tells us about the deviation from the average. Formulated in Riemann's 1859 paper, it asserts that all the 'non-obvious' zeros of the zeta function are complex numbers with real part 1/2." The Clay Mathematical Institute says its aim is to increase mathematical knowledge, encourage gifted student to pursue maths careers and recognise extraordinary maths achievements. |
EZEIGBO1OFIMO:WWW.daily telegraph.co.uk Nigerian professor solves 156 year old maths problem to win $ 1m prize Dr Opeyemi Enoch solved one of the seven millennium problems in mathemati The Riemann Hypothesis solution found by Dr Opeyemi Enoc A Nigerian professor has received a $1 million (£660,000) prize for solving a maths conundrum that had stumped scholars for more than 150 years. Dr Opeyemi Enoch, from the Federal University in the ancient city of Oye Ekiti, solved one of the seven millennium problems in mathematics. The professor was able to finally provide a solution to the Riemann Hypothesis first proposed by German mathematician Bernhard Riemann in 1859, earning him the $1m prize. Nigerian academic solves 150-year old math problem https:///6KYj4wtc2i pic.twitter.com/ZrIOaiQ40F — This Is Africa (@ ThisIsAfricaTIA) November 17, 2015 He announced his findings at the International Conference of Mathematics and Computer Science in Austria, Vienna, exactly 156 years to the day it had been put forward by Riemann. "Dr Enoch first investigated and then established the claims of Riemann," said a statement from the university where he teaches. "He went on to consider and to correct the misconceptions that were communicated by mathematicians in the past generations, thus paving way for his solutions and proofs to be established. "He also showed how other problems of this kind can be formulated and obtained the matrix that Hilbert and Poly predicted will give these undiscovered solutions. He revealed how these solutions are applicable in cryptography, quantum information science and in quantum computers." via GIPHY Dr Enoch has previously worked on mathematical models for generating electricity from sound, thunder and ocean bodies. According to software engineer Robert Elder, the complex Riemann conundrum "is based on an observation Riemann made about the equation: Every value of the equation that makes it go to zero seems to lie on the exact same line." The seven millennium problems are set out by the Massachusetts- based Clay Mathematical Institute as being the "most difficult" to solve . Explaining the hypothesis they state: "The prime number theorem determines the average distribution of the primes. "The Riemann Hypothesis tells us about the deviation from the average. Formulated in Riemann's 1859 paper, it asserts that all the 'non-obvious' zeros of the zeta function are complex numbers with real part 1/2." The Clay Mathematical Institute says its aim is to increase mathematical knowledge, encourage gifted student to pursue maths careers and recognise extraordinary maths achievements. |
EZEIGBO1OFIMO:WWW.daily telegraph.co.uk Nigerian professor solves 156 year old maths problem to win $ 1m prize Dr Opeyemi Enoch solved one of the seven millennium problems in mathemati The Riemann Hypothesis solution found by Dr Opeyemi Enoc A Nigerian professor has received a $1 million (£660,000) prize for solving a maths conundrum that had stumped scholars for more than 150 years. Dr Opeyemi Enoch, from the Federal University in the ancient city of Oye Ekiti, solved one of the seven millennium problems in mathematics. The professor was able to finally provide a solution to the Riemann Hypothesis first proposed by German mathematician Bernhard Riemann in 1859, earning him the $1m prize. Nigerian academic solves 150-year old math problem https:///6KYj4wtc2i pic.twitter.com/ZrIOaiQ40F — This Is Africa (@ ThisIsAfricaTIA) November 17, 2015 He announced his findings at the International Conference of Mathematics and Computer Science in Austria, Vienna, exactly 156 years to the day it had been put forward by Riemann. "Dr Enoch first investigated and then established the claims of Riemann," said a statement from the university where he teaches. "He went on to consider and to correct the misconceptions that were communicated by mathematicians in the past generations, thus paving way for his solutions and proofs to be established. "He also showed how other problems of this kind can be formulated and obtained the matrix that Hilbert and Poly predicted will give these undiscovered solutions. He revealed how these solutions are applicable in cryptography, quantum information science and in quantum computers." via GIPHY Dr Enoch has previously worked on mathematical models for generating electricity from sound, thunder and ocean bodies. According to software engineer Robert Elder, the complex Riemann conundrum "is based on an observation Riemann made about the equation: Every value of the equation that makes it go to zero seems to lie on the exact same line." The seven millennium problems are set out by the Massachusetts- based Clay Mathematical Institute as being the "most difficult" to solve . Explaining the hypothesis they state: "The prime number theorem determines the average distribution of the primes. "The Riemann Hypothesis tells us about the deviation from the average. Formulated in Riemann's 1859 paper, it asserts that all the 'non-obvious' zeros of the zeta function are complex numbers with real part 1/2." The Clay Mathematical Institute says its aim is to increase mathematical knowledge, encourage gifted student to pursue maths careers and recognise extraordinary maths achievements. |
Opinedecandid:and with all your schooling you believe such trash? Where did Buhari say so? was the OP the only pressman present at the event? you make me laugh. |
hmmmmm. God have mercy. |
Take note we are taking serious notes cos that was how you folks said Abuja would b bombed n less than 48 hours ,Kuje n Nyanyan were bombed. |
jusRadical:who heads d petroleum ministry now, d labour n employment, Trade n investment, Transport ,science n Technology, etc ? in d past when we had wonderful posts of what benefit? At least we literarily owned GEJ's government so how come we are still complaining? |
christinie:my unreserved apologies . I blame my too cosmopolitan exposure. Regards. |
bugzbunny:if u don't wanna read then why comment ? |
FreeGlobe:which Nigeria? |
FreeGlobe:read d whole interview n be educated. at least d Op is fair to present d whole interview for us to assess. |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 (of 228 pages)


Where the good guys At!?
