Mustay's Posts
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pf
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I know and i have a "jar" version too. (http://mobilefirefox.com/) Can you find the same application on Mozilla's site? |
how does a thread disfavour me? PS: i pinged your jonahses. Moreover, all Nland related matters are discussed here: https://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/board-18.0.html |
favour? |
npf
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sharrap |
do what in particular? |
npf
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rally |
i saw it 5 hrs later. what axN? |
no mind am jo |
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access
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>> The Opera Mini Thread << exists for all opera-mini related matters. |
waste management/
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This topic has been discussed here: Janaba |
[quote author=davidylan* link=topic=180085.msg2908904#msg2908904 date=1223410927]lol mohammad wasnt born until the 1400 AD, the quran came 300 years later. Prior to that the bible had recorded the use of bows and arrows, spears, coat of mail and chariots. these muslims make you wonder sometimes.[/quote][quote author=davidylan* link=topic=180085.msg2909746#msg2909746 date=1223423143]I am just saying rubbish.[/quote]571 AD not 1400AD |
ikj
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who? in that phones board? |
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ikj
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419 scam hits Kenya Kenyans have not been spared by cyber crooks, an increase in fraud has been witnessed and the victims have lost heavily. The East Africans have seen a surging e-mail and computer fraud in the financial services sector, seeing their bank balances emptied and savings wiped out in electronic scams. Business Daily said world figures show financial service fraud is at its highest level, accounting for more than 90 per cent of computer rip-offs, as fraudsters use computer viruses and e-mail campaigns to track down banking codes and balances. Several Kenyan banks have suffered attacks, but the greater risk in Kenya is proving to be e-mail campaigns, sent, purportedly, by the banks themselves. Internet scams are nothing new, but developing countries with new internet users are offering scammers a whole new pool of fresh victims. The Nigerian 419 scam is the cockroach of e-mail scams. It survives, no matter what. The best antidote is informed consumers, using the bright light of skepticism and knowledge. That’ll send those bugs scrambling into their dark corners. How it works: The number of e-mail scams still [b]using the Nigerian government [/b]is amazing. In one of the latest, wise We’ve Got Your Back reader Jay found a message from ”Anthony Duke, chairman of the Foreign Payment Unit” of the Nigerian government. Clicking on the links provided in the e-mail could lead to installation of malware and a steady stream of more harassing e-mails, looking to separate you from your money. (The 419 refers to a section of the Nigerian crimes code.) Some readers report getting e-mail from various African senders who want to share their estates with you before they die. No they don’t. What to do: Never click on the links inside e-mail from sources you don’t know. Don’t fall for come-ons in which the sender urges you to act quickly. They don’t want you to have much time to think. There’s so many of these, Scambusters reports that a Nigerian government official criticized the scam’s victims, calling them greedy. |
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in what aspect/ |
ikj2
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wyclef |
Mozilla, the firm behind the Firefox web browser expects to release the first version of its mobile internet browser within the next few weeks, while at the same time, it has been reported that Microsoft has ceased development of its own mobile internet browser, code named Deepfish. In an interview with the San Jose Mercury News, Mozilla CEO, John Lilly confirmed that the “alpha” release of the mobile phone web browser, code named Fennec will be available before the end of the year. It has been generally expected though that a stable release for the average consumer may not be ready until the end of next year. Lilly commented that “we [Mozilla] want to make sure that the Web on mobile is more like the Web than what the mobile industry offers today, which is closed, separate networks and not a very good information-getting experience for the user.” https://www.itnewsafrica.com/wp-content/uploads/.thumbs/.images_18.jpg Meanwhile, Microsoft has retired its own mobile browser project, Deepfish which had been designed to display web pages on mobile phones exactly as they look on a normal computer - and allow users to zoom in to read the content. The platform would have parsed the webpages via a Microsoft server before delivering them to the mobile phone, in a similar way to how the Opera java based mobile browser works. “Mobile browsing is now advancing to the point where mobile devices rival the desktop - which is what we wanted to see,” according to a posting on Microsoft’s Live Labs website. The company said that user feedback from the browser users would influence any future products it might be working on. Earlier this year, ABI Research forecasted that overall growth in the mobile browser category will lead to a total pre-installed revenue of $492 million by 2013, driven by the trends of more complex HTML-based browser integration. “Device manufacturers are interested in open-source solutions where there is a desire for increased control of their software footprint, and where they can bring internal programming resources to bear,” says research director Michael Wolf. “At the same time, vendors such as Opera are seeing strong growth in their mobile browser offerings, which provide the ability to access Web pages with advanced features such as zoom, bookmark syncing, and landscape mode, while also permitting handset vendors and operators to focus development resources elsewhere.” |
ikj
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Yes it does |
moved to TV/Movies PS: Fadajasi, not all would agree with you on that. Guess they're all viewing BBA# |
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