Mustay's Posts
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Dustin Moskovitz the co-founder of Facebook is leaving the social networking website to start a technology firm. Moskovitz with his college roommate Mark Zuckerberg started Facebook almost 5 years ago. According to AFP Moskovitz promises to remain at Facebook at least one more month before setting out to follow “another passion: making companies themselves run better”. “I didn’t want to construct efficiencies, I wanted to engineer them,” Moskovitz said of his vision for a new startup. The news agency said he is taking Facebook engineer Justin Rosenstein with him on the new business adventure. https://www.itnewsafrica.com/wp-content/uploads/.thumbs/.Dustin_Moskovitz___Facebook.jpg “Whether I work here or not, I’ll forever bleed Facebook blue,” Moskovitz wrote in a message posted, appropriately enough, on his Facebook profile. “Our new project is not a replacement for what we build here, but instead both a complement and a compliment, and we have every intention of making it feel like a natural extension of Facebook’s product and purpose.” “I am enormously excited for the company’s further success, a destiny I’m confident it will reach regardless of my participation in it.” Founded in February 2004, Facebook is a privately-owned company headquartered in Palo Alto, California. According to industry tracker Hitwise, Facebook has been closing the gap with market leader MySpace and got 20.5% of US social networking visits in August, a 50% increase from what it saw a year earlier. |
teetee here's an exemption list on their site:
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i think the answer lies here: https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-175877.0.html#msg2853103
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I'll do that for 500,000 naira. Why? Cos I'll finally handle the dba to him after getting 1000 members ![]() |
My apologies NIGERIA ![]() i shouldn't be complaining. Please knock me on ma head.' Afterall, Intern 2 hasn't started (airing) since June ![]() |
hug and peck wahala too |
power |
Usually our tribal differences stem into our beliefs here in Naija |
This is about Glo's internet connectivity seki. PS; Why didn't you just contact the customer care of MTN via another person's phone to retrieve the PUK? |
odinga |
Nigeria has overtaken South Africa to become the Middle East and African region’s largest market in the first quarter. The country has further stretched its lead in the latest period, passing the 50m milestone and ending the quarter with 51.7m mobile connections. Nigeria at the end of August hit the 55 million subscriber mark according to Engr Ernest Ndukwe, Vice Chairman of Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC). This makes it the 18th largest market in the world. South Africa which is now nearly 100% penetrated has less than one third of Nigeria’s population (44m v 138m) and is likely to drop to third place soon. Iran with a population of more than 70m has moved from sixth to third over the course of last year and is adding customers four times as quickly as the RSA. Cellular News reports that Egypt retains fourth position, with a total of 30.8m, up from 29.4m in March. The market here has been boosted by the arrival of a third entrant, though as is so often the way, the newcomer’s advertising budget merely serves to strengthen the incumbents. In the 13 months since Etisalat launched, it has built a base of 2.5m customers, but both Vodafone and Mobinil have comfortably exceeded this with additions of 4.25m and 5.62m respectively. Algeria and Saudi Arabia have both been pushed down the rankings by Iran to fifth and sixth. Algeria passed the 30m mark this quarter, to end with 30.8m, while Saudi Arabia stopped just short of 30m, at 29.8m. The market here has a significant element of seasonality to it as more than a million pilgrims enter the country every year for the Haj, only to depart a few days later leaving their newly acquired SIMs inactive once more. Morocco, Kenya and Iraq all retain the same places as at March and, indeed, as of June 07. Morocco stands at 21.4m, compared to 20.51m at March, Kenya at 14.3m and Iraq, 12.75m. Tanzania, the tenth country on the list, has 10.1m customers after adding over 850k new connections in the quarter. All ten of the top ten are into eight figures, while a further 13 countries have bases of 5m or more. In fact, such has been the spread of mobile across the region that no fewer than 52 markets have a total of more than one million customers. Of the 18 that do not, two are just under the number, while seven of the rest are small islands with populations of well below one million. As we saw in our review of the AsiaPac region last week, the developing world remains buoyant in the face of the West’s financial meltdown. http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=124678 |
na crime? |
yes it does. Did you click on the "BROWSE" button? here's one:
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mugabe |
what an interaction |
fdigital:As indicated earlier, I wrote that Mozilla has no official Mobile browser yet |
rubbish |
this is weird. so NIGERIA couldn't take off on OCT1 ![]() It's really NIGERIAN indeed |
mortein |
ibkaye my nutty schild |
shotster50:I really do not understand why they still have those images there. it makes the page load slowly anyway or is it a kinna 'trademark' thingy? @ yawa I just checked that. They must be ![]() |
penthouse |
oh no! you are a big gal now |
product |
tatianna |
panaadol |
share the fun |
post there |
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