NYSC › Re: Men And Women Boxer Business With Just N5000, NYSC Member Only by frankdudus(m): 12:22pm On May 30, 2018 |
Really much interested , Frankdudus@gmail.com |
Pets › Re: What Could One Possibly Get From These Combo? by frankdudus(m): 12:12pm On May 04, 2018 |
henrydan: Eagle Island, Port Harcourt. But they still have 6 weeks more to go, cos i’m willing to “let them go” at exactly 8weeks old. Am currently in Ilorin observing My Nysc service.. I have lots of time and financially buoyant to take good care of it.. Am ready to pay for the way bill and anyother charges you dim fit for given out a pup.. I already sent you a Pm |
Pets › Re: What Could One Possibly Get From These Combo? by frankdudus(m): 2:03pm On May 03, 2018 |
I Hope to be the lucky one to get the Female pup.. You are doing are great job sir |
Pets › Re: Ilorin Dog Sales Group by frankdudus(m): 5:24am On Apr 17, 2018*. Modified: 7:26am On Nov 29, 2021 |
0 |
NYSC › Re: NYSC Batch A 2018 Printing Of Call Up Letter. by frankdudus(m): 6:07am On Apr 16, 2018 |
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NYSC › Re: Join 2018 Nysc Batch A (pcm) Whatsapp Group by frankdudus(m): 8:22am On Apr 07, 2018*. Modified: 7:23am On Nov 29, 2021 |
Add up.. Thanks |
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Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Professional CV and Cover Letter Templates For Job Seekers by frankdudus(m): 8:16am On Jan 19, 2018 |
Interested,
Frankdudus@gmail.com |
|
Pets › Re: Dreamsnest Harmony,0ur Solid Black Czech Bloodline by frankdudus(m): 11:42am On Nov 05, 2017 |
Beautiful Oga Household |
Agriculture › Re: Free Agric Training And Empowerment by frankdudus(m): 9:08am On Sep 29, 2017*. Modified: 7:24am On Nov 29, 2021 |
Am very much interested... |
Pets › Re: Sango Ota Dog lovers and Breeders, We need you here by frankdudus(m): 8:21am On Sep 29, 2017*. Modified: 7:25am On Nov 29, 2021 |
JADO93: Thank you al for this initiative! Sango ota axis dog Group exist nd several dog walk as been organised like my Chief said earlier. You can either drop ur numbers or send me a message on whatsapp to join us. Jado: 08065425620!!!! Thank you all once again. Pls add me |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: I Finally Got A Job Through Nairaland by frankdudus(m): 4:16pm On Apr 28, 2017 |
So what's so funny about the application letter, because u had an opportunity to pass through school does not give you the right to mock those who don't. If u can't help then keep this to urself. ikemesit4477: I receive these application letter today from a mature lady, in fact I can't laugh alone! |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Updated-New Job Vacancies by frankdudus(m): 12:26am On Apr 25, 2017 |
Thank you so much. gergemam: From Oshodi::::: Board a Bus to Ojuelegba/Barracks, Rate= #150/#200,
Barracks:::::: Board a Bus to Aguda/Masha Kilo, #50/#100 Alight @ Onilegogoro Bus-Stop before the bridge and Ogunlana Drive and Nagivate through Ayinde Giwa or Oyekan street to locate Sholeye Crescent or Ask from Onilegogoro
Have a Fulfilled One... |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Updated-New Job Vacancies by frankdudus(m): 10:01pm On Apr 24, 2017 |
Please house how can I get to the following address from oshodi....
4 sholeye crescent, off ayinde giwa street, masha road surulere, Lagos.
Thanks |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Receptionist Needed by frankdudus(m): 8:05pm On Apr 24, 2017 |
Good day, I sent my CV already |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: Updated-New Job Vacancies by frankdudus(m): 7:19am On Apr 23, 2017 |
Morning, please I need ur help in confirming how true this is, anyone else receive an invite?
Congrats as you are being called up for an interview in Aiico Insurance Plc. On Tuesday 25th of April at 203 / 205 Oshodi-Apapa Expressway, Iyana Isolo, Lagos by 8.00am. Ask of Mr Oshineye, |
Jobs/Vacancies › Re: List Of Fake Employment Companies. Stay Off Them. by frankdudus(m): 7:00am On Apr 23, 2017 |
I got this mail yesterday, please I need your help, are they real?
"Congrats as you are being called up for an interview in Aiico Insurance Plc. On Tuesday 25th of April at 203 / 205 Oshodi-Apapa Expressway, Iyana Isolo, Lagos by 8.00am. Ask of Mr Oshineye, 08023134744" |
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Agriculture › Re: Cost Analysis/How To Setup Plantain Plantation In Nigeria With Pictures by frankdudus(m): 7:02am On Apr 19, 2017 |
frankdudus: Good morning sir, I just finished my degree, am very much interested in the boot camp. I have been looking for a place where I can gather practical knowledge, I want to get involved sir b4 NYSC by Nov. How can I be part of this great opportunity sir and how can I get your contact Cc: world1 |
Agriculture › Re: Cost Analysis/How To Setup Plantain Plantation In Nigeria With Pictures by frankdudus(m): 6:58am On Apr 19, 2017 |
Good morning sir, I just finished my degree, am very much interested in the boot camp. I have been looking for a place where I can gather practical knowledge, I want to get involved sir b4 NYSC by Nov. How can I be part of this great opportunity sir and how can I get your contact world1: Contact me. We are currently preparing to train and accomodate 70 youths for 1 month free the bootcamp will start on the 20th of April to 20th of May. |
Agriculture › Re: Cost Implication For The Cultivativation Of 1 Hectare Of Cassava Production. by frankdudus(m): 7:31am On Apr 01, 2017 |
Good day Sir, i have always been on this section of nairaland to read various comments. Am a student and will be rounding up my Bsc program this month.. i have passion and desire to go into plantain and cassava farming, i have gathered pretty knowledge about this two farming both on nairaland and other forums. i want to have a real life experience about them at least to know what am diving into.. i like working with my hands... i want to learn from experience and see things myself, i need ur contact Sir. Thanks TokyoBulls: Good stuff. We need to put caveat on these cassava posts so people understand each of us is speaking from our experiences and each farmer's experience is different. I am currently planting cassava and maize on 164 acres in Kobape on Abeokuta-Sagamu Express and will like to share my experience based on the topic being discussed. One, do not go into farming as a part-time, passive income investment. It is not possible to monitor, supervise, manage a farm on Skype or via an Excel sheet. You must be personally involved. Two, LISTEN. ASK QUESTIONS. BE HUMBLE. Do not take what you read online or in textbooks without cross checking them with on-the-farm reality. Most of the farmers in the village are deeply knowledgeable and will gladly and freely share decades of experience with you. Three, choose your battles and FOCUS. There will be many attractions and distractions. People will bring suggestions. You cannot do all. Pick some of their ideas and drop others. You will use them later.
Now to specific questions. I will not advise a farmer cross-plants cassava and plantains for three reasons: Spacing - Both cassava and plantain stretch their stems and leaves and need fresh air. Land utilization: The farmer will be required to make ridges that are at a good distance apart hence leaving gaps on the land. Yield: In case the first two are not looked at very cautiously, yield for both plants will be poor.
Concerning profitability, the main gaps I see with farmers are knowledge and patience. Most farmers plant the wrong variety vs their desire. Some want to sell to companies, others want to sell to fufu/start local buyers. Some want to sell to big companies that process them into flakes, chips, start, syrup etc. Others want to process to garri and sell as finished product. Each farmer must choose the variety they need to plant. Second is patience. The farmer needs to know the number of months it takes for the cassava to mature. I have seen farmers harvest cassava that should last for 18 months in their 7th month hence the yield is good but way below expectations. The tubers are there, sometimes as many as 10 to 15 but are not big enough so this affects the revenue. We need patience.
Cassava is a defence crop for the farmer. Sometimes we get it all wrong and lose a lot of money on tomatoes, pepper, vegetables, etc but it is not common to get it wrong with cassava. Natural rain is sufficient. Cassava diseases are not as common as before as we now have resistant stems etc. |
Investment › Re: The GHWW Crash: A Prophecy Fufilled by frankdudus(m): 7:40am On Mar 25, 2017 |
Nice one Hypocrites: HOW TO USE GOOGLE Google is the most popular search engine in the world. But while so many people use it, few actually get formal instructions on how to search with Google. Below, tips on how to search on Google.
Step 1: Go To Google (But Which Google?) Obviously, to search Google, you have to go to Google. But did you know there are various ways to reach the site? In fact, that there are even different Google web sites? There are!
You can go directly to Google.com by typing in http://google.com into your web browser. That will take you to the main Google web site, which is designed to serve the United States plus the world in general.
If you are outside the United States, you may prefer to go to the version of Google designed for your own country. You’ll find a list of country-specific versions of Google shown on this page.
Google also offers a variety of “vertical” search engines, which are versions of Google that let you search just for particular types of material like images, videos or news stories. If you’re interested in specific content like this, it may make more sense to search starting at one of these subject-specific versions of Google. You’ll find a list of them here, under the “search” heading.
Step 2: Go To Google Via A Toolbar A faster way to use Google is to enter a search into the search box that’s built into most popular browsers. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox have little boxes in the top right corners where you can type what you’re searching for, hit return, and the search results will load into your browser:
Note that Internet Explorer may be already set to use Microsoft’s Bing search engine rather than Google, if you type into the search toolbar. This is easily changed. The article below talks more about it:
Search & Internet Explorer 8 Google also offers its own Google Toolbar for both Internet Explorer and Firefox. The toolbar makes it simple to search Google right from your browser, get “cached” copies of page, share pages and offers many other handy features. You can learn more about the toolbar or get it from Google here.
With the Google’s Chrome browser, you type your search right into the same box where you enter web addresses. The article below explains this in more detail:
Searching With Google Chrome & Omnibox Step 3: Enter Your Search Terms Actually searching Google is pretty easy. Just type what you’re interested in finding into the search box on the Google web site or into your toolbar!
If you’re using a toolbar, as you type, you may see words begin to appear below the toolbar’s search box. These are suggestions that Google thinks may match what you’re interested in. Google calls this “Google Suggest” or “Autocomplete.” You can ignore the suggestions, but if one seems useful, select it to save some typing.
On Google itself, you’ll not only get suggestions but as you type, actual search results will begin to load:
This is called Google Instant, and the article below talks more about it:
Google Instant Search: The Complete User’s Guide Step 4: Review Your Search Results After you’ve searched, you’ll get a page full of results. Some of these will be matching pages from across the web. Some of these will be matching content from those subject-specific versions of Google that were mentioned above. You might get news or image results mixed in, as you can see below:
This mixing is called “Universal Search,” and the articles below explain more about how it works:
Google 2.0: Google Universal Search Google Universal Search: 2008 Edition The units that get mixed in are called OneBox results. Sometimes, you’ll also get special OneBoxes that give you a direct answer, without requiring a click away from Google. For example, here’s the weather in Los Angeles:
The article below has more about how OneBox answers work:
Meet The Google OneBox, Plus Box, Direct Answers & The 10-Pack Google also has a guide to special searches like weather, stock quotes, the current time, sports scores and more than will trigger direct answers:
You may also see ads that appear above or to the right of the main search results. The main search results are not sold, and Google says they are not influenced by advertising. Google keeps the ads separated from those results and labeled with the word “Ad” or “Ads,” as the arrows point to in the example above.
That’s an overview of the type of results you’ll see, after doing a search. Google also maintains a detailed guide to everything you’ll find on the search results page.
Step 5: Preview Your Answers As you review results, you’ll wonder if some of the listed sites are the best answer to what you’re looking for. Google provides a way to quickly check on this. It’s called Google Instant Previews.
Next to the web page listings, you’ll see a magnifying glass symbol appear:
Click on this, and you’ll make a preview of the page for that listing appear:
For more about how this feature works, see our article below:
Google Launches Instant Previews Step 6: Refine Your Google Search Google doesn’t know exactly what you want, when you enter a search, so the results you get are its best guess. There are ways you can help it make better guesses. For one, Google provides a variety of ways to refine your searches, to narrow them down.
You can get back just video answers, restrict results by date, explore answers by browsing through a “Wonder Wheel” of suggestions or simple review some of the related searches it may list among your results, like these examples from a search for dvd players:
For a comprehensive guide to the many options that Google offers for refining your results, see our article below:
Meet The New Google Look & Its Colorful, Useful “Search Options” Column There are also special commands that you can use when entering your search words. For example, if you put quotes around search words like this:
“how to search in google” Then your results will only show pages that are deemed to have those exact words on them, in that exact order — or be relevant to those exact words in other ways.
Google has a guide to all these special commands, which you will find here.
Step 7: Congratulate Yourself! If you found this page by doing a search on Google, congrats! You clearly already know how to Google search! But hopefully, this page has helped you learn some additional tips that you’ll find useful in your future searches.
Google also maintains a variety of help documents on how to search Google, which you’ll find here.
Also be sure to see our overview guide to Google, which leads to more information about specific Google services: |
Investment › Re: The GHWW Crash: A Prophecy Fufilled by frankdudus(m): 7:32am On Mar 25, 2017 |
Quite informative Hypocrites: HOW TO USE GOOGLE Google is the most popular search engine in the world. But while so many people use it, few actually get formal instructions on how to search with Google. Below, tips on how to search on Google.
Step 1: Go To Google (But Which Google?) Obviously, to search Google, you have to go to Google. But did you know there are various ways to reach the site? In fact, that there are even different Google web sites? There are!
You can go directly to Google.com by typing in http://google.com into your web browser. That will take you to the main Google web site, which is designed to serve the United States plus the world in general.
If you are outside the United States, you may prefer to go to the version of Google designed for your own country. You’ll find a list of country-specific versions of Google shown on this page.
Google also offers a variety of “vertical” search engines, which are versions of Google that let you search just for particular types of material like images, videos or news stories. If you’re interested in specific content like this, it may make more sense to search starting at one of these subject-specific versions of Google. You’ll find a list of them here, under the “search” heading.
Step 2: Go To Google Via A Toolbar A faster way to use Google is to enter a search into the search box that’s built into most popular browsers. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox have little boxes in the top right corners where you can type what you’re searching for, hit return, and the search results will load into your browser:
Note that Internet Explorer may be already set to use Microsoft’s Bing search engine rather than Google, if you type into the search toolbar. This is easily changed. The article below talks more about it:
Search & Internet Explorer 8 Google also offers its own Google Toolbar for both Internet Explorer and Firefox. The toolbar makes it simple to search Google right from your browser, get “cached” copies of page, share pages and offers many other handy features. You can learn more about the toolbar or get it from Google here.
With the Google’s Chrome browser, you type your search right into the same box where you enter web addresses. The article below explains this in more detail:
Searching With Google Chrome & Omnibox Step 3: Enter Your Search Terms Actually searching Google is pretty easy. Just type what you’re interested in finding into the search box on the Google web site or into your toolbar!
If you’re using a toolbar, as you type, you may see words begin to appear below the toolbar’s search box. These are suggestions that Google thinks may match what you’re interested in. Google calls this “Google Suggest” or “Autocomplete.” You can ignore the suggestions, but if one seems useful, select it to save some typing.
On Google itself, you’ll not only get suggestions but as you type, actual search results will begin to load:
This is called Google Instant, and the article below talks more about it:
Google Instant Search: The Complete User’s Guide Step 4: Review Your Search Results After you’ve searched, you’ll get a page full of results. Some of these will be matching pages from across the web. Some of these will be matching content from those subject-specific versions of Google that were mentioned above. You might get news or image results mixed in, as you can see below:
This mixing is called “Universal Search,” and the articles below explain more about how it works:
Google 2.0: Google Universal Search Google Universal Search: 2008 Edition The units that get mixed in are called OneBox results. Sometimes, you’ll also get special OneBoxes that give you a direct answer, without requiring a click away from Google. For example, here’s the weather in Los Angeles:
The article below has more about how OneBox answers work:
Meet The Google OneBox, Plus Box, Direct Answers & The 10-Pack Google also has a guide to special searches like weather, stock quotes, the current time, sports scores and more than will trigger direct answers:
You may also see ads that appear above or to the right of the main search results. The main search results are not sold, and Google says they are not influenced by advertising. Google keeps the ads separated from those results and labeled with the word “Ad” or “Ads,” as the arrows point to in the example above.
That’s an overview of the type of results you’ll see, after doing a search. Google also maintains a detailed guide to everything you’ll find on the search results page.
Step 5: Preview Your Answers As you review results, you’ll wonder if some of the listed sites are the best answer to what you’re looking for. Google provides a way to quickly check on this. It’s called Google Instant Previews.
Next to the web page listings, you’ll see a magnifying glass symbol appear:
Click on this, and you’ll make a preview of the page for that listing appear:
For more about how this feature works, see our article below:
Google Launches Instant Previews Step 6: Refine Your Google Search Google doesn’t know exactly what you want, when you enter a search, so the results you get are its best guess. There are ways you can help it make better guesses. For one, Google provides a variety of ways to refine your searches, to narrow them down.
You can get back just video answers, restrict results by date, explore answers by browsing through a “Wonder Wheel” of suggestions or simple review some of the related searches it may list among your results, like these examples from a search for dvd players:
For a comprehensive guide to the many options that Google offers for refining your results, see our article below:
Meet The New Google Look & Its Colorful, Useful “Search Options” Column There are also special commands that you can use when entering your search words. For example, if you put quotes around search words like this:
“how to search in google” Then your results will only show pages that are deemed to have those exact words on them, in that exact order — or be relevant to those exact words in other ways.
Google has a guide to all these special commands, which you will find here.
Step 7: Congratulate Yourself! If you found this page by doing a search on Google, congrats! You clearly already know how to Google search! But hopefully, this page has helped you learn some additional tips that you’ll find useful in your future searches.
Google also maintains a variety of help documents on how to search Google, which you’ll find here.
Also be sure to see our overview guide to Google, which leads to more information about specific Google services: |
Investment › Re: The GHWW Crash: A Prophecy Fufilled by frankdudus(m): 7:29am On Mar 25, 2017 |
Quite informative Hypocrites: HOW TO USE GOOGLE Google is the most popular search engine in the world. But while so many people use it, few actually get formal instructions on how to search with Google. Below, tips on how to search on Google.
Step 1: Go To Google (But Which Google?) Obviously, to search Google, you have to go to Google. But did you know there are various ways to reach the site? In fact, that there are even different Google web sites? There are!
You can go directly to Google.com by typing in http://google.com into your web browser. That will take you to the main Google web site, which is designed to serve the United States plus the world in general.
If you are outside the United States, you may prefer to go to the version of Google designed for your own country. You’ll find a list of country-specific versions of Google shown on this page.
Google also offers a variety of “vertical” search engines, which are versions of Google that let you search just for particular types of material like images, videos or news stories. If you’re interested in specific content like this, it may make more sense to search starting at one of these subject-specific versions of Google. You’ll find a list of them here, under the “search” heading.
Step 2: Go To Google Via A Toolbar A faster way to use Google is to enter a search into the search box that’s built into most popular browsers. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox have little boxes in the top right corners where you can type what you’re searching for, hit return, and the search results will load into your browser:
Note that Internet Explorer may be already set to use Microsoft’s Bing search engine rather than Google, if you type into the search toolbar. This is easily changed. The article below talks more about it:
Search & Internet Explorer 8 Google also offers its own Google Toolbar for both Internet Explorer and Firefox. The toolbar makes it simple to search Google right from your browser, get “cached” copies of page, share pages and offers many other handy features. You can learn more about the toolbar or get it from Google here.
With the Google’s Chrome browser, you type your search right into the same box where you enter web addresses. The article below explains this in more detail:
Searching With Google Chrome & Omnibox Step 3: Enter Your Search Terms Actually searching Google is pretty easy. Just type what you’re interested in finding into the search box on the Google web site or into your toolbar!
If you’re using a toolbar, as you type, you may see words begin to appear below the toolbar’s search box. These are suggestions that Google thinks may match what you’re interested in. Google calls this “Google Suggest” or “Autocomplete.” You can ignore the suggestions, but if one seems useful, select it to save some typing.
On Google itself, you’ll not only get suggestions but as you type, actual search results will begin to load:
This is called Google Instant, and the article below talks more about it:
Google Instant Search: The Complete User’s Guide Step 4: Review Your Search Results After you’ve searched, you’ll get a page full of results. Some of these will be matching pages from across the web. Some of these will be matching content from those subject-specific versions of Google that were mentioned above. You might get news or image results mixed in, as you can see below:
This mixing is called “Universal Search,” and the articles below explain more about how it works:
Google 2.0: Google Universal Search Google Universal Search: 2008 Edition The units that get mixed in are called OneBox results. Sometimes, you’ll also get special OneBoxes that give you a direct answer, without requiring a click away from Google. For example, here’s the weather in Los Angeles:
The article below has more about how OneBox answers work:
Meet The Google OneBox, Plus Box, Direct Answers & The 10-Pack Google also has a guide to special searches like weather, stock quotes, the current time, sports scores and more than will trigger direct answers:
You may also see ads that appear above or to the right of the main search results. The main search results are not sold, and Google says they are not influenced by advertising. Google keeps the ads separated from those results and labeled with the word “Ad” or “Ads,” as the arrows point to in the example above.
That’s an overview of the type of results you’ll see, after doing a search. Google also maintains a detailed guide to everything you’ll find on the search results page.
Step 5: Preview Your Answers As you review results, you’ll wonder if some of the listed sites are the best answer to what you’re looking for. Google provides a way to quickly check on this. It’s called Google Instant Previews.
Next to the web page listings, you’ll see a magnifying glass symbol appear:
Click on this, and you’ll make a preview of the page for that listing appear:
For more about how this feature works, see our article below:
Google Launches Instant Previews Step 6: Refine Your Google Search Google doesn’t know exactly what you want, when you enter a search, so the results you get are its best guess. There are ways you can help it make better guesses. For one, Google provides a variety of ways to refine your searches, to narrow them down.
You can get back just video answers, restrict results by date, explore answers by browsing through a “Wonder Wheel” of suggestions or simple review some of the related searches it may list among your results, like these examples from a search for dvd players:
For a comprehensive guide to the many options that Google offers for refining your results, see our article below:
Meet The New Google Look & Its Colorful, Useful “Search Options” Column There are also special commands that you can use when entering your search words. For example, if you put quotes around search words like this:
“how to search in google” Then your results will only show pages that are deemed to have those exact words on them, in that exact order — or be relevant to those exact words in other ways.
Google has a guide to all these special commands, which you will find here.
Step 7: Congratulate Yourself! If you found this page by doing a search on Google, congrats! You clearly already know how to Google search! But hopefully, this page has helped you learn some additional tips that you’ll find useful in your future searches.
Google also maintains a variety of help documents on how to search Google, which you’ll find here.
Also be sure to see our overview guide to Google, which leads to more information about specific Google services: |
Investment › Re: The GHWW Crash: A Prophecy Fufilled by frankdudus(m): 7:28am On Mar 25, 2017 |
Quite informative Hypocrites: HOW TO USE GOOGLE Google is the most popular search engine in the world. But while so many people use it, few actually get formal instructions on how to search with Google. Below, tips on how to search on Google.
Step 1: Go To Google (But Which Google?) Obviously, to search Google, you have to go to Google. But did you know there are various ways to reach the site? In fact, that there are even different Google web sites? There are!
You can go directly to Google.com by typing in http://google.com into your web browser. That will take you to the main Google web site, which is designed to serve the United States plus the world in general.
If you are outside the United States, you may prefer to go to the version of Google designed for your own country. You’ll find a list of country-specific versions of Google shown on this page.
Google also offers a variety of “vertical” search engines, which are versions of Google that let you search just for particular types of material like images, videos or news stories. If you’re interested in specific content like this, it may make more sense to search starting at one of these subject-specific versions of Google. You’ll find a list of them here, under the “search” heading.
Step 2: Go To Google Via A Toolbar A faster way to use Google is to enter a search into the search box that’s built into most popular browsers. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, Apple’s Safari and Mozilla’s Firefox have little boxes in the top right corners where you can type what you’re searching for, hit return, and the search results will load into your browser:
Note that Internet Explorer may be already set to use Microsoft’s Bing search engine rather than Google, if you type into the search toolbar. This is easily changed. The article below talks more about it:
Search & Internet Explorer 8 Google also offers its own Google Toolbar for both Internet Explorer and Firefox. The toolbar makes it simple to search Google right from your browser, get “cached” copies of page, share pages and offers many other handy features. You can learn more about the toolbar or get it from Google here.
With the Google’s Chrome browser, you type your search right into the same box where you enter web addresses. The article below explains this in more detail:
Searching With Google Chrome & Omnibox Step 3: Enter Your Search Terms Actually searching Google is pretty easy. Just type what you’re interested in finding into the search box on the Google web site or into your toolbar!
If you’re using a toolbar, as you type, you may see words begin to appear below the toolbar’s search box. These are suggestions that Google thinks may match what you’re interested in. Google calls this “Google Suggest” or “Autocomplete.” You can ignore the suggestions, but if one seems useful, select it to save some typing.
On Google itself, you’ll not only get suggestions but as you type, actual search results will begin to load:
This is called Google Instant, and the article below talks more about it:
Google Instant Search: The Complete User’s Guide Step 4: Review Your Search Results After you’ve searched, you’ll get a page full of results. Some of these will be matching pages from across the web. Some of these will be matching content from those subject-specific versions of Google that were mentioned above. You might get news or image results mixed in, as you can see below:
This mixing is called “Universal Search,” and the articles below explain more about how it works:
Google 2.0: Google Universal Search Google Universal Search: 2008 Edition The units that get mixed in are called OneBox results. Sometimes, you’ll also get special OneBoxes that give you a direct answer, without requiring a click away from Google. For example, here’s the weather in Los Angeles:
The article below has more about how OneBox answers work:
Meet The Google OneBox, Plus Box, Direct Answers & The 10-Pack Google also has a guide to special searches like weather, stock quotes, the current time, sports scores and more than will trigger direct answers:
You may also see ads that appear above or to the right of the main search results. The main search results are not sold, and Google says they are not influenced by advertising. Google keeps the ads separated from those results and labeled with the word “Ad” or “Ads,” as the arrows point to in the example above.
That’s an overview of the type of results you’ll see, after doing a search. Google also maintains a detailed guide to everything you’ll find on the search results page.
Step 5: Preview Your Answers As you review results, you’ll wonder if some of the listed sites are the best answer to what you’re looking for. Google provides a way to quickly check on this. It’s called Google Instant Previews.
Next to the web page listings, you’ll see a magnifying glass symbol appear:
Click on this, and you’ll make a preview of the page for that listing appear:
For more about how this feature works, see our article below:
Google Launches Instant Previews Step 6: Refine Your Google Search Google doesn’t know exactly what you want, when you enter a search, so the results you get are its best guess. There are ways you can help it make better guesses. For one, Google provides a variety of ways to refine your searches, to narrow them down.
You can get back just video answers, restrict results by date, explore answers by browsing through a “Wonder Wheel” of suggestions or simple review some of the related searches it may list among your results, like these examples from a search for dvd players:
For a comprehensive guide to the many options that Google offers for refining your results, see our article below:
Meet The New Google Look & Its Colorful, Useful “Search Options” Column There are also special commands that you can use when entering your search words. For example, if you put quotes around search words like this:
“how to search in google” Then your results will only show pages that are deemed to have those exact words on them, in that exact order — or be relevant to those exact words in other ways.
Google has a guide to all these special commands, which you will find here.
Step 7: Congratulate Yourself! If you found this page by doing a search on Google, congrats! You clearly already know how to Google search! But hopefully, this page has helped you learn some additional tips that you’ll find useful in your future searches.
Google also maintains a variety of help documents on how to search Google, which you’ll find here.
Also be sure to see our overview guide to Google, which leads to more information about specific Google services: |
Romance › Re: Blackandwhite Picture Challenge! by frankdudus(m): 7:33pm On Mar 17, 2017 |
Accepted
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Pets › Re: Pet Sitters Needed. by frankdudus(m): 10:50am On Jul 02, 2016*. Modified: 6:01pm On Nov 28, 2016 |
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Education › Re: University Of Ibadan Closed Over Rusticated 500l Student by frankdudus(m): 3:45am On Apr 27, 2016 |
ishowdotgmail: Report reaching us here in UI is that, the management had ordered all students to vacate all Hall of residences and academic activities should be suspended till further notice. It will be recalled that, Tunji Epketi Micheal, a 500L student of the department of Petroleum Engineering, Faculty of Technology and a resident of Independence Hall,was recently rusticated from University of Ibadan for been part of those who protested over light and water issue that occurred on the 18th of November last year, 2015. Now UI has finally joined the likes of Unilag and OAU, suspending academic activities. Get ur info's ryt, OAU just finished a session and academic activities are not suspended... Oau will resume anoda session May 29. |
Politics › Entrepreneurship Is Not The Solution Of Mass Unemployment in Nigeria by frankdudus(op): 6:18pm On Mar 16, 2016*. Modified: 6:35pm On Mar 16, 2016 |
Entrepreneurship/vocational education is government's way of telling the youth and graduates that she (the government) lacks industrialisation and job creation strategies while the youth have been left to fate.
Entrepreneurship/vocational education is government's way of making the youth/graduates look intellectually lazy and burdensome as well as telling them that they are have been abandoned in the valley of unemployment. Unemployment rate increased simply because government owned industries and companies get strangulated by the python of corruption as well as the refusal of the government to establish new ones.
Entrepreneurship in advanced countries is about innovations, inventions, improvements, expansions, people and institutional empowerment. Modern and sophisticated skills are being utilised to manufacture goods and services which culminates into abundant job creation.
Entrepreneurship in Nigeria is of the graduate job seeker told to engage in bead making, soap making, hair dressing, laundry and so on. These businesses have neither inventions nor advancement to add to the business practice and the economy, as they also have little or no impact on the international market.
The government of advanced countries often invest billion of dollars on education and research, so they always have intellectuals who will offer innovative products and services to the world. These products and services are initially developed into small scale businesses as they many even grow into large enterprises.
Only an insane person will keep doing the same thing the same way and expect a different result. Am yet to see a nation that got developed by investing so little on the education of her youth and students but spend so much on SME propaganda.
Still searching for a nation that gave nothing more than mere, non-professional, common, stark and non-sophisticated skills/training to her youth and achieved rapid industrial development. Why should we buy a trailer engine, fix it in a car and try to make it compete with an aircraft? Why should we make people earn mere skills and expect them to compete with foreign sophisticated technologies? We have to know that the issue of local production of goods and services is a serious competetion with the developed nations.
Some questions for the proponents of entrepreneurship/vocational education.
1. When will out textile, fashion and leather industry be able to make products of international standard?
2. When will a Nigerian mechanic be able to manufacture car engines and other motor parts?
3. When will our furniture makers be able to make furniture that will compete with ones made overseas?
4. When will a computer repairer be able to produce motherboards, memory cards, monitors, just to mention a few?
Did America achieved greatness by emphasising on vocational trainings on how to make shoe polish, bake cake, produce detergents, event decorations , frying akara and establishment of football viewing centres?
Did Britain get it right by teaching her youth how to start a beer palour and salon businesses or by ensuring technological dynamism? I wondered if it is mere phone repair training was what brought China among world's mobile phone producers. Over and over again, I see entrepreneurship and vocational education as a scam.
It is only engineering that provides modern machines, stack entrepreneurship cannot. Entrepreneurship and and vocational education has never helped Nigeria in the manufacture of modern machines for production of finished goods that can compete favourably with imported ones.
Every sector of the Nigerian economy has been badly affected by the erroneous policy of entrepreneurship and vocational education. From the agricultural sector to the transportation sector, from manufacturing to education, from construction to entertainment, name it, we have rendered our nation incapacitated when it comes to production of goods and services. There can never be abundant job opportunities as long as we keep executing this lame practice. I wonder why we have not given so much vocational training to professional operating as doctors, nurses and pharmacist in the medical field. We give this set of people trainings that can make them compete favourably with their foreign counterpart. I believe it should appear proper to the government to substitute entrepreneurship and vocational education with the training they receive in the teaching hospitals. The government (after emptying the laboratories and workshops of polytechniques and universities) substituted requisite training for our engineers and scientist with entrepreneurship and vocational training, so they are rendered handicapped when it comes to provision of modern goods and services as well as job creation.
WHAT NEED TO BE DONE It is high time we changed our job creation policy of entrepreneurship and vocational studies to provision of qualitative education at all levels, especially science and technology education so that Nigerian graduates would possess requisite modern and sophisticated skills for our nation and the world market at large. It is only qualitative education and intensive research that can initiate intellectual thinking for creation of innovative goods and services. Entrepreneurship and vocational studies have been found to have contributed immensely only to economy of nations with massive investments in education and research. Singapore and South Korea are the examples of nations that have eradicated illiteracy and have invested huge funds into science and technology education, so entrepreneurship thrives there.
Let the laboratories and workshops of our secondary schools and higher institutions be adequately equipped with modern and facilities so as to provide avenues for learning practicals. We need to replicate the likes of Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg who utilised the qualitative education they obtained in the tetiary institutions to create worldwide business ventures in their fields. Real entrepreneurship is when Nigerian graduates of electrical engineers can produce transformers, power generation turbines, alternators, televisions from local technologies. Metallurgical engineers must be able to produce steel for oil and gas pipelines as well as in train and car manufacturing. Combustion engines, pumps, hydraulic and pneumatic parts must be what our mechanical engineers must be able to manufacture from their companies. Businesses of agricultural science graduates should able to feed the nation cos they should empowered to do so. This is what is called real entrepreneurship. Businesses that leads to industrialisation are offshoots of science and technological discoveries and investments.
The entrepreneurship that Nigeria needs is one in which local engineering enterprises will be able to metamorphous into multinationals like General Electric, Ford Motors, Chevron, Microsoft Corporations,Tata Steel and the likes. This is how we can solve the problem of unemployment as well as put an end to the massive importation of good in Nigeria. However, with this, Nigeria will become industrialised and be listed among the developed nations of the world.
Thank you. |