Hidee20's Posts
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softnipples:you get bad mouth sha!!haba!!.... ![]() |
i think dis guy has a good PR team. |
sosanova:maybe when you've gotten yours ![]() |
yassjib:same with the new testament of the bible. western culture is not the same as Christianity brother. |
ki02020:the two of them......make dem share the blame into two equal parts no cheating.. |
But Mark, who showed his dissatisfaction with Ribadu’s charge, wondered why “every time, people will talk about National Assembly budget.”was David Mark talking about the budget which contain personal information that made it impossible to be given to the press?. newsrescue.com/n150-billion-a-year-nigerian-national-assembly-to-be-sued-to-disclose-budget/ |
xtreme007:To tell you it will be easy is a lie but you just need to view this situation as a challenge you need to overcome,come to think of it in what state do you want her to meet you in the next six month,one or three year(s)?(certainly it wont be in a pathetic state), if you know the answer start working towards it and you might just find another person worth more than her. |
hmmmm,dis life is full of............... op,first you have to believe in yourself that you deserve more than her(a betrayer) then you can start your journey to recovery.I propose you get yourself busy with work and mingle with people a lot(don't isolate yourself as this will always bring back old memories) and trust me you will gradually forget about her. To all those saying leave and forget about her,it is easy to say when you aren't the victim.five years no be child's play..... |
chai,see the beauty of demor-cracy........
see as dem dey fight to outshine one another for public eyes... |
endowednicky:i dey mad?wetin wan carry me go on top coconut tree in the first place... ![]() |
no one to confirm package been sent and more people provides emails? |
i dont know oooooooo..... |
endowednicky:lolz *falls from ewedu tree* nairanlanders una no go kill person ooooo. |
no pinshure?
ok...,kontinu.......... ![]() |
codedflowz:A very chilled one i propose.... ![]() |
Collinz2:ok o,thatz your own decision ![]() |
Collinz2:As u cant compare them,if and when Cyanogen OS takes over you wont be able to compare.you might love Google services that does not rule out the fact that if you are given an option to try out other apps you cant be tempted to do so. This is a market struggle bro,you just might not know the number of customers out there that are not well pleased with the Google services(if to say d tin no compulsory o ).I was on a US based tech. website,if you see the level of eagerness this people in support showed you will know that even if it does not send google android from the market it will take a meaningful share of their market share. |
kenny987:In the case of source of livelihood been destroyed,i think the federal govt. should relocate those affected or provide another means for them(which i strongly condemn as the area is even not fit for habitation in my opinion) and not monthly allocation that does little or no change to this areas but increases the level of corruption in those states(my opinion). |
Collinz2:yeah,Google is not sleeping as Apple and Nokia were not sleeping when they emerged.we aren't even taking about about another OS but a modified Andriod that allows you have that your favourite Microsoft app. to replace Google own on your phone. In this world the only constant thing is CHANGE. |
kenny987:thanks for the reply.About population i can support that cos its means that we are equal(i.e man to man) which means when the allocation is broken down the same amount of money allocated to a man in kano is the same as the man in Bayelsa. About bearing the environmental brunt,i have the following to say; i) i could remember last year or two,an NGO help the host communities to a well known court judgement awarding them millions in dollar(not naira) as compensation for the environmental degradation caused by the oil companies activities.what is the reason for federal govt. allocation monthly? ii) there is a federal govt ministry(niger delta ministry) set up by the federal govt. of Nigeria and sponsored from the federal account specially for this region.why the extra federal allocation monthly? There is a saying that "he who comes to equity must come with clean hands"(hope i got it right),so before we could ask for "ONE NIGERIA" i think each region should first look inward and abolish that advantage(s) it enjoy over others,then ask other to follow suit. Enough said,i think Nigeria still as a long way to go in its quest for "ONE NIGERIA" maybe two to three generation from now if we don't succeed in poisoning their mind. |
kenny987:God bless u for this wonderful unbias analysis @kenny but i wonder why oyel money is not evenly distributed among states,afterall its "ONE NIGERIA". |
ibotjaycob:helloooo,na fight?....In as much as I feel the urge to reply you in your tone,I wouldn't cos I wasn't brought up like that(maybe you just want to be notice ).To your rant,Cyanogen OS is developed from Android open source project run by Google so its basically a modified Android OS so what it means by taking it off Googles hand is; i)Cyanogen OS is increasingly becoming popular and attracting phone manufacturers partnership(more Cyanogen OS phones in market) ii) unlike Google Andriod OS which are preloaded with Google apps(sources of income for Google) with no alternatives,Cyanogen has made it clear that all apps on its platform will be optional(which Microsoft is taking advantage of now) As market dominance is all about consumers,what do you think will happen to Google Android with the increasing popularity of Cyanogen OS Android?. I will implore you to read the first two paragraphs(cos am sure you didn't read the write-up) and do more research. |
WITH THE ANNOUNCEMENT that Microsoftwould partner with the truly open-source,Android-based Cyanogen OS to provide a bundled suite of apps, both companies made one thing very clear: Android’s not just for Google anymore. The partnership, as detailed by Cyanogen yesterday, will allow the budding mobile OS to integrate Microsoft apps like Outlook, Office, Skype, Bing, OneDrive,and OneNote. The subtext here is that these apps can act as a replacement for the ones that Google appends to its Android releases, such as Gmail, Maps,Hangouts, and more. Google’s obviously not the only company to preload phones on its platform with home-grown software; every iPhone comes with dozens of apps installed long before you ever power it on, and Windows Phone devices ship with plenty of Microsoft-made live tiles in place. But the increasing creep of apps you can’t uninstall, regardless of whether you want or need them—or if there are better alternatives out there—is one of the motivating forces behind the all-open-everything Cyanogen business model. Opening Up Dissociating Android from Google sounds great in theory but leaves several gaping holes in the user experience—holes that Cyanogen will now attempt to fill with bizarro-world Microsoft counterparts.Importantly, though, Cyanogen OS won’t shove Microsoft-owned Skype down your throat; according to spokesperson Vivian Lee, the apps will be “surfaced contextually,” meaning they’ll be presented as an option when it seems like they might be helpful, but you’ll also be welcome to use whatever else instead.You can also uninstall them at will, unlike the unkillable apps tethered to Apple andGoogle devices. Lee also confirmed to WIRED that thepartnership won’t affect existing devices,meaning a future update won’t mess up your OnePlus One workflow by swapping your Google apps for a Redmond imposter. For Cyanogen, the benefit is clear: Choice is its best point of differentiation. But it also doesn’t mean much without a wide variety of options from which to choose. The Microsoft deal is just one (albeit large) step towards having as many partners on board as there are mobile developers. “Cyanogen is committed to opening up Android.” said Lee, “[It’s] predicated on user choice as an operating system.” The defining ethos here isn’t that Microsoft alone will act as an anti-Google;it’s that Microsoft will help populate the broadest mobile ecosystem available, an expansive nature reserve next to everyone else’s walled gardens. What’s In It for Microsoft The more interesting question might be what Microsoft gets out of the arrangement. After all, it has its own mobile platform to worry about in Windows Phone, which nearly five years after first launching still hasn’t made an appreciable dent; according to the most recent Comscore numbers, it ended January with a US market share of just 3.6 percent. That failure to gain traction may be why Microsoft has recently embraced a push to put its software on its more popular rivals. Outlook launched earlier this year on both iPhone and Android, while its Office suite went free on iOS and Android last November. What’s even better than trying to establish an app beachhead in highly contested territory, though, is becoming the default app on a relatively new platform with lots of potential for growth. By working closely with Cyanogen,Microsoft now essentially has its own Android OS, which gives it a potential reach far greater than its own homegrown platform has found so far. No Hardware, No Cry The best part is that Microsoft won’t have to rely on its own devices to succeed. Lee says there are “no plans” for Microsoft Cyanogen hardware at present. Even so, any OEM that wants to hedge against Google’s increasing dominance without sacrificing the Android experience will have to at least consider Cyanogen OS, especially after the breakout success of the OnePlus One. Even if that only meansa handful of low-cost devices for the time being, those are potential Bing and Skype and Outlook users that Microsoft would have otherwise been unlikely to reach. One last wrinkle worth mentioning? Thanks to a trove of patents, Microsoft has Android licensing agreements that amount to billions of dollars of revenue every year, including a billion from Samsung in 2013 alone. Presumably as Android proliferates in whatever form, so too will Microsoft’s potential patent profits. That’s a lot of upside with not much to lose, especially given the recent cross-platform push. And an arrangement like this makes more sense than the $70 million investment Microsoft was rumored to make back in January. Cyanogen doesn’t have to feel beholden to one software suite, and Microsoft limits its financial exposure and Windows Phone conflicts. It’s going to be a while before we see products that realize the vision Cyanogen and Microsoft have laid out, and even longer before Cyanogen OS becomes more than a product that floats on the margins. But the news gives legitimacy to the idea that iOS might not be Google’s only serious competition for long. A more open Android is on the rise, and Microsoft just provided a powerful updraft. www.wired.com/2015/04/microsoft-google-cyanogen/ With the much anticipated windows 10 that is expected to unify both systems and phones(run on both gadget),is Microsoft not displaying a kind of no confidence in this OS especially on phones or is it the monopoly mentality of Bill Gates at work? |
i see a man who want a handshake by force by fire.... |
asumo12:pls where did u learn yoruba?... first was "....che waaje......" second ".....lori laide......." I enjoyed your humour thou... |
EgusiSoup:u mean the Independent Nairaland Electoral commission(INEC) chairman EgusiSoup announces the commencement of the registration of miss nairaland voters in earnest.The procedure and requirement will be reveal soon. |
martineverest:something like, mrs TINUBU-GEORGE,mrs OBANSANJO-JONATHAN or mrs FAKA JONATHAN-AMECHI |
] driand:why are most Nigerians like this?.when certain group of people(wouldn't being childish by naming names) turns every political post to their meeting and agitation point did you post this?.why cant you just move to the next comment if you cant understand the present ones... |





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