Graphene's Posts
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Henry240:Sir, I believe you have in-depth knowledge on weaponry. I maintain its classified cos I don't have an idea of the mechanism of the guns however what I know is that there are automatic and manual guns on the vessel. |
Henry240:Sorry sir but that's classified information. |
The military vessel NNS KARADUWA was designed and built in Nigeria by Nigerians. Nigerian navy provided the design and engineering. Fabrication was carried out by Dormanlong Engineering while instrumentation was carried out by Blueflag. NNS Karaduwas is a 38M long vessel.
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Acunon, can I strike a 70K deal for a neat 40''+ smart tv? |
Acunon can you source for xiaomi smart TVs. Thanks. |
Hello debbie, happy birthday to you. please are there job vacancies in calabar or akwa ibom? |
Hmm!! The rate at which this "Agege Bread model" dey go ehnnn! Soon agege bread price go increase. Dem seller will be like " bread no dey bakery again, jumoke don dey export agege bread" |
If you don't have a 2016 calendar, don't worry, start the year 2016 by flipping to the month of MAY in the 2015 calander!! Enjoy! |
Point of correction op, android one is not a software. Its an initiative/project embarked by Google to promote its android software. It involves having a mix of good specs and pure android experience. Take it as a junior brother of the nexus project |
Did anyone notice that obama and PMB sat same way as the flags |
the teem is of good quality. teem has two cap colour, white and green. same with pepsi, white and blue. so please verify before posting as we have many brainless humans roaming nairaland. |
silverdam:Hmm! Many igbos weren't planning on voting! A lot of them registered in their hometown so as to vote there especially for the governor ship elections this saturday. So what's the fuss about the igbos in lagos. Its not as if they will single handedly make agbaje win. Abeg make dem free dem igbos! How market!!! |
just as i expected, changing the topic after you have been cornered. .. Nobody is arguing the fact that Samsung makes top notch Products unlike their Chinese counterparts who are famed for making sub standard Products.. . But saying a device shouldn't be named "note" just because it doesn't have a stylus is ludicrous.. its like saying since Samsung uses the letter "s" on most most of their phones, other phonemakers shouldn't use the letter's tooo... Infinix cannot be sued for using "note" but they can and will be sued if they had used "galaxy note" cos that clearly infringes on Samsung copy right...[/quote]Ok man I get what your point is. Anyone is free to use the word "note" as long as its not copyright. |
FKO1:Yeah, xperia Z is sony's own flagship line-up that's unique for it water-resistance capabilities. Samsung's ACE line-up offers entry-level specification and small screen(4.3" . People around the world would very well associate any smart phone having the acronym Note with a stylus |
FKO1:SOrry bro but its your post that reeks of ignorance. The term "note" is synonymous with writing (your dictionary will help). Writing is always done with either a stylus or a pen. The use of "note" was copied from samsung's galaxy note series. Theses were true notes because of the use of stylus and that's what differentiates it from others. An example is the iphone 6plus, its a 5.5" phone but apple never name it iphone 6 note. Why you ask? That's because the iphone doesn't have hand writing recognition due to lack of a stylus. This infinix phone should have been call "Infinix hot pro" |
emperorizzy:Chinese or not this is a nice phone if the specs are true. Its comparable to other mid-range smartphones by other top end manufacture. |
emperorizzy:I don't know how tech savvy you are but a 64bit CPU with a cortex A53 cores and a new mali T7650 GPU is definitely an upgrade |
This is a clone people! Be careful |
gemtech:Hey!! The chipset is not made b qualcomm rather its mediatek. As of when tablet was lauched, qualmcomm didn't have an octa core cpu. So correct your post. |
tsdarkside:Sorry to burst your bubble but a vessel similar to this was built in nigeria by nigerians: NNS Andoni. Right now another one is being built at the naval dockyard VI by Dormanlong Engineering, a 38m long and 7m wide vessel. Take it from a military contractor. |
seangy4konji:Nice bro, apart from the first pic, we've got the last two pics here in nigeria. Take it from someone who is a military contractor |
First, As a christian, only sin can make your spirit unclean and as much as I remember, sex in marriage is not a sin be it oral or anal. Second, the bible does not approve or condemn any form of sexual intercourse btw a man and a woman. Third, if a man or woman are in disagreement about their sexual life let them go see a counsellor! |
GenBuhari:Na wa ooo!! Bros you need to reduce the amount of movies you watch |
[url][/url]"More often than I care to admit, I’ll walk from one room to another with a clear vision in mind of whatever I need to do once I get there, but then I get there and can’t remember why I started. The only thing that happened between my first movement and my last is that I walked through a doorway. Surely that has nothing at all to do with forgetting something I knew just moments before, right? Wrong, says new research. As it turns out, walking through a doorway exerts an imperceptible influence on memory. In fact, merely imagining walking through a doorway can zap memory. Researchers in the latest study took their cue from an earlier study showing that passing through a doorway seems to insert a mental divider into memory. Our brains record memories in segments, or episodes, rather than as a continuous event. Dubbed the “Event Horizon Model” by earlier researchers, walking through a doorway triggers memory segmentation, like a video editor inserting a momentary pause between scenes. In that tiny pause— the Event Horizon—the connective parts of memories can be lost, and we suddenly can’t recall that we got up from watching the basketball game to unplug the iron in the next room. Think of it as a blip in your brain’s matrix. Even more curious is that imagining walking through a doorway has a similar effect. The research team brought two groups of participants into a large room. One group experienced the room as a continuous space; the other walked through it after divider curtains were set up to simulate a doorway. The groups were then shown a picture of an unusually shaped object before closing their eyes and imagining walking across the room they’d seen earlier. The first group imagined the room as a big space with no physical dividers; the other imagined walking through the draped doorway. They were then asked to jog their memories and pick out the picture of the object from a set of ten images. As predicted, the group that imagined walking through a doorway performed significantly worse on the memory test than the other group. “That walking through a doorway elicits forgetting is surprising because it is such a subtle perceptual feature compared to the rich environment in which it sits,” the researchers said, “that simply imagining such a walk yields a similar result is even more surprising, particularly when compared with actually walking through doorways.” Indeed. And this gets even weirder. If right now I started telling you a story about a boy and his dog, going on for a few paragraphs detailing all the things this boy and his dog do together in their happy little boy-dog comedy drama of a life, and then I suddenly inserted a phrase like “A few hours later…” – do you think your recall of what I just told you about the boy and his dog might be better or worse? If you’ve been following the plot of this article so far you’re likely guessing “worse,” and you’d be right. Research has demonstrated that phrases which insert a temporal boundary between events in a narrative place the same sort of mental divider into memory as a doorway. It’s as if the phrase instructs the brain’s video editor to insert a pause between memory episodes, and you find yourself going back to re-read the last few paragraphs that you suddenly can’t remember much about. What all of this tells us is that our brains operate with certain mechanical dynamics that we generally only glimpse when they hiccup. So the next time you can’t remember why you walked from one room to another, don’t be alarmed. Just remind yourself that your brain simply misconstrued instructions from your environment and thought that doorway meant you needed a memory divider. Rest assured, “Oh yeah the iron!” will come back eventually."- David Disalvo www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2015/01/22/yes-walking-through-a-doorway-really-does-make-you-forget-heres-why/?utm_campaign=ForbesTech&utm_source=TWITTER&utm_medium=social&utm_channel=Business&linkId=11887753[url]"More often than I care to admit, I’ll walk from one room to another with a clear vision in mind of whatever I need to do once I get there, but then I get there and can’t remember why I started. The only thing that happened between my first movement and my last is that I walked through a doorway. Surely that has nothing at all to do with forgetting something I knew just moments before, right? Wrong, says new research. As it turns out, walking through a doorway exerts an imperceptible influence on memory. In fact, merely imagining walking through a doorway can zap memory. Researchers in the latest study took their cue from an earlier study showing that passing through a doorway seems to insert a mental divider into memory. Our brains record memories in segments, or episodes, rather than as a continuous event. Dubbed the “Event Horizon Model” by earlier researchers, walking through a doorway triggers memory segmentation, like a video editor inserting a momentary pause between scenes. In that tiny pause— the Event Horizon—the connective parts of memories can be lost, and we suddenly can’t recall that we got up from watching the basketball game to unplug the iron in the next room. Think of it as a blip in your brain’s matrix. Even more curious is that imagining walking through a doorway has a similar effect. The research team brought two groups of participants into a large room. One group experienced the room as a continuous space; the other walked through it after divider curtains were set up to simulate a doorway. The groups were then shown a picture of an unusually shaped object before closing their eyes and imagining walking across the room they’d seen earlier. The first group imagined the room as a big space with no physical dividers; the other imagined walking through the draped doorway. They were then asked to jog their memories and pick out the picture of the object from a set of ten images. As predicted, the group that imagined walking through a doorway performed significantly worse on the memory test than the other group. “That walking through a doorway elicits forgetting is surprising because it is such a subtle perceptual feature compared to the rich environment in which it sits,” the researchers said, “that simply imagining such a walk yields a similar result is even more surprising, particularly when compared with actually walking through doorways.” Indeed. And this gets even weirder. If right now I started telling you a story about a boy and his dog, going on for a few paragraphs detailing all the things this boy and his dog do together in their happy little boy-dog comedy drama of a life, and then I suddenly inserted a phrase like “A few hours later…” – do you think your recall of what I just told you about the boy and his dog might be better or worse? If you’ve been following the plot of this article so far you’re likely guessing “worse,” and you’d be right. Research has demonstrated that phrases which insert a temporal boundary between events in a narrative place the same sort of mental divider into memory as a doorway. It’s as if the phrase instructs the brain’s video editor to insert a pause between memory episodes, and you find yourself going back to re-read the last few paragraphs that you suddenly can’t remember much about. What all of this tells us is that our brains operate with certain mechanical dynamics that we generally only glimpse when they hiccup. So the next time you can’t remember why you walked from one room to another, don’t be alarmed. Just remind yourself that your brain simply misconstrued instructions from your environment and thought that doorway meant you needed a memory divider. Rest assured, “Oh yeah the iron!” will come back eventually."- David Disalvo www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2015/01/22/yes-walking-through-a-doorway-really-does-make-you-forget-heres-why/?utm_campaign=ForbesTech&utm_source=TWITTER&utm_medium=social&utm_channel=Business&linkId=11887753[/url]"More often than I care to admit, I’ll walk from one room to another with a clear vision in mind of whatever I need to do once I get there, but then I get there and can’t remember why I started. The only thing that happened between my first movement and my last is that I walked through a doorway. Surely that has nothing at all to do with forgetting something I knew just moments before, right? Wrong, says new research. As it turns out, walking through a doorway exerts an imperceptible influence on memory. In fact, merely imagining walking through a doorway can zap memory. Researchers in the latest study took their cue from an earlier study showing that passing through a doorway seems to insert a mental divider into memory. Our brains record memories in segments, or episodes, rather than as a continuous event. Dubbed the “Event Horizon Model” by earlier researchers, walking through a doorway triggers memory segmentation, like a video editor inserting a momentary pause between scenes. In that tiny pause— the Event Horizon—the connective parts of memories can be lost, and we suddenly can’t recall that we got up from watching the basketball game to unplug the iron in the next room. Think of it as a blip in your brain’s matrix. Even more curious is that imagining walking through a doorway has a similar effect. The research team brought two groups of participants into a large room. One group experienced the room as a continuous space; the other walked through it after divider curtains were set up to simulate a doorway. The groups were then shown a picture of an unusually shaped object before closing their eyes and imagining walking across the room they’d seen earlier. The first group imagined the room as a big space with no physical dividers; the other imagined walking through the draped doorway. They were then asked to jog their memories and pick out the picture of the object from a set of ten images. As predicted, the group that imagined walking through a doorway performed significantly worse on the memory test than the other group. “That walking through a doorway elicits forgetting is surprising because it is such a subtle perceptual feature compared to the rich environment in which it sits,” the researchers said, “that simply imagining such a walk yields a similar result is even more surprising, particularly when compared with actually walking through doorways.” Indeed. And this gets even weirder. If right now I started telling you a story about a boy and his dog, going on for a few paragraphs detailing all the things this boy and his dog do together in their happy little boy-dog comedy drama of a life, and then I suddenly inserted a phrase like “A few hours later…” – do you think your recall of what I just told you about the boy and his dog might be better or worse? If you’ve been following the plot of this article so far you’re likely guessing “worse,” and you’d be right. Research has demonstrated that phrases which insert a temporal boundary between events in a narrative place the same sort of mental divider into memory as a doorway. It’s as if the phrase instructs the brain’s video editor to insert a pause between memory episodes, and you find yourself going back to re-read the last few paragraphs that you suddenly can’t remember much about. What all of this tells us is that our brains operate with certain mechanical dynamics that we generally only glimpse when they hiccup. So the next time you can’t remember why you walked from one room to another, don’t be alarmed. Just remind yourself that your brain simply misconstrued instructions from your environment and thought that doorway meant you needed a memory divider. Rest assured, “Oh yeah the iron!” will come back eventually."- David Disalvo www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2015/01/22/yes-walking-through-a-doorway-really-does-make-you-forget-heres-why/?utm_campaign=ForbesTech&utm_source=TWITTER&utm_medium=social&utm_channel=Business&linkId=11887753 |
Aringon:Fellow oga, I have heard of the mtk 6795. Its just a 64bit version of the mtk 6592. The only diff is that it has a slightly upgraded dual core gpu,apart from that its no match. Its just a toy compared to qualcomm's SD805, SD810, or apples A8, A8x |
UrbanMystique:Bro, its not really marketing, qualcomm has one of the best chipset as per core performance. Also you guys fail to understand that mtk chipsets uses ARM architecture while qualcomm makes use of a custom architecture just like apple. Checkout the benchmark result of snapdragon 800 vs mediateks mtk6592, the margin is clear. Let's not talk about snapdragon 810, its kills any opf mediatek latest offering. The only competitor to qualcomm is apples's A8,A8x custom cores as well as nvidia tegra cores |
Price of teclast x98 air 3g and cube talk 79 c8 |
TY no vex my questions, I wanna do a price comparison. How about the teclast x98 air 3G? How much is it landing to lagos. Permit my annoying questions |
Hello TY, please how much would the cube talk 79 UG55T C8 to land lagos. |
tyconcepts:Correction dear, resolution is qHD not QHD,there's a big difference. QHD is 'Quad High Definition' meaning its 4times the normal HD resolution while qHD is 'one-fourth the normal HÐ resolution'. |
InglishTeechar:Wow!! I'm sorry, i never knew you are suffering from a deteriorating CEREBRAL CORTEX. Eheeyaaaa!! |
pedro08:Oga you need re education. Do your research before spilling your ignorance in public. All you have said in truth is trash. You have no idea of the car market in europe or asia. European made cars have there vehicles recalled one popular being GM motors. The bently and co that you mention are called luxry cars and many europeans don't buy them. They still patronise the toyota's, hyundai and kia's As for apple, it makes 100% of its phones in asia. Apple only spell out its requirements and tspecifications to the manufacrtures. Funny enough the iphone 6 screen is made by LG (an asian firm). Wiko is a chinese firm. The french only handle the marketing( do your research on wiko). |
. People around the world would very well associate any smart phone having the acronym Note with a stylus
