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Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 12:54pm On Mar 06, 2017
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Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 12:54pm On Mar 06, 2017
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Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 12:54pm On Mar 06, 2017
dokunbam:
You can now access your site and cpanel
Backup your site now I just did mine
One love
how did you do the backup or which plugin did you use?
Webmasters / Re: Domainking Finally Gone by princejude(m): 10:43am On Feb 27, 2017
Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 10:39am On Feb 27, 2017
Terror angle unearthed in bogus website case

Pune: Investigations have revealed that two persons arrested from Punjab had sold domain names that were used for creating fake websites related to ISIS, other terror groups, porn, job frauds, etc. by people from about 100 countries, including 116 Pakistanis. The Pune ciy police is now investigating terrorist links in the case.

In another startling revelation, it has been found that out of 15 websites with .gov.in domain name, seven contained the word RBI and have been used by fraudsters to cheat people.

A team from the cyber crime cell under guidance of DCP Deepak Sakore has till now analysed 86,000 domain names registered in India by the two accused, identified as Hargurnaz Karimsingh Vijaysingh (30) and Parabhnaj Karamsingh Vijaysingh (25), from Jalandhar, Punjab. The police also discovered that the suspects' bank had Rs 2 crore in ill-gotten money. Hargurnaz has studied Master of Computer Application (MCA), while his brother Parabhnaj is 12th pass.

An officer privy to the investigation told Sakal Times, "Some of the domain names were used for creating fake websites with words like ISIS and jihad. We have found that the fake websites included 452 related to various governments, 362 military related, 249 had the word India, 34 payment gateways, 11 related to ISIS and other terror groups, 81 about jobs, 1492 for banks and 25 porn websites."

When contacted, Senior Police Inspector Sunil Pawar, in-charge of the cyber crime cell, said, "Most of the websites dealt with economic fraud and the fradusters mostly from Nigeria had used the domain names for fake websites to cheat people through bogus lotteries, jobs, email spoofing, etc. Out of the total 86,000 websites, 30,875 were registered here by people from Nigeria. We have found that people from about 100 countries including the USA, UK as well as Pakistan had got their website domain registered with the arrested accused. The websites look similar to original ones and thus people get cheated. In India, people had been fooled with websites which had RBI word in their names."

According to police, in 2008, Hargurnaz had set up Ideaa Biz Solutions as domain registrar, web hosting and Internet company. Actually, he worked as a re-seller for PublicDomainRegistry (PDR), which is a global leader in providing domain registration services. In 2014, he established Hannu Internet Corp. Private Limited with him and his mother as directors. This company operated through the website domainking.ng claiming to be Nigeria's no. 1 domain name registrar and web hosting company.

Though he had given an address from Nigeria, the firm operated from Jalandhar with 24x7 technical support with the help of 14 computers. For monetary transactions, they used Hong Kong-based payment wallet perfectmoney.com and wrtransfer.com
Police officials said that initially the accused did genuine work but since 2012, he had been associated with people registering domain names for fake websites. The accused was arrested on February 4 and the duo are in police custody till February 16. Police Inspector Radhika Phadke is further investigating the case.

How the accused were tracked

The case came to light through a complaint filed by Ajaykumar Thakur of Keshavnagar, who runs an electronic weighing machine manufacturing unit. Thakur imports raw material from a Chinese firm. On October 10 last year, he placed an order worth $72,672 through an e-mail to the company. Upon receiving an email confirmation, he had transferred $7,000. However, he discovered the money was wired into a different account. Thakur would often communicate with ‘harvey@camry.com’, but in March 2016, he received a mail from ‘harvey@camrry.com’ and accordingly he transferred money without seeing the mail id properly. After this he had lodged a police complaint in November last year and further investigation led the police to the two brothers.

http://archive.is/i5Gj5
Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 10:38am On Feb 27, 2017
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Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 10:04am On Feb 27, 2017
DomainKing.NG, allegedly the top domain registrar in Nigeria, has failed to provide basic support to its Nigerian customers, for the past two weeks.
Based in Punjab, India, two of DomainKing.NG’s officers were arrested earlier in February on a variety of charges.
Pune City police arrested the DomainKing.NG founders on fraud charges, but the Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) has launched a parallel probe into the case, examining whether charges related to terrorism would apply.
Domains and web sites operated by DomainKing.NG on behalf of its Nigerians customers have been offline, or broken; there have been numerous complaints on Facebook, as it’s the only forum open to the public. The DomainKing.NG support has been offline.

Meanwhile, more details about the case are coming to light, with Indian news web site, Sakal Times reporting the following:
“It has been confirmed that around 116 websites registered by Pakistanis had their IP origin in that country. Most of these websites are related to videos, porn websites and movies. The duo had registered over 86,000 domain names of websites for people from around 100 countries. Many of the websites have words like ISIS, Al-Qaeda and jihad. The accused knew that these are related to terrorists. Even then, they registered these for money. We are in the process of getting records of the accused’s email conversation with those who had got the websites registered and hope to get information about their activities,” a senior officer told Sakal Times.
Officers have also stumbled upon 15 websites with ‘.gov.in’ domain name while seven of them contained the word RBI. These websites have been used by fraudsters to cheat gullible people in the various lottery and jobs scams.
An analysis of the domain names had revealed that they had registered 362 military-related websites and most of them were about the US Army. Besides the registered websites included 452 related to various governments, 249 had the word India, 34 payment gateways, 11 related to ISIS and other terror groups, 81 about jobs, 1492 for banks and 25 porn websites.
The case of DomainKing.NG is of particular interest outside of India and Nigeria, as one of their domain assets, DomainKing.biz, was involved in a UDRP filed by the de facto Domain King®, domain investor Rick Schwartz.
Ironically, several Facebook complaints on the DomainKing.NG Facebook page come from shady characters complaining how their MLM, micro-payment affiliate and questionable charity web sites have been broken or offline; scams are rampant in Nigeria, where the term “419 Scam” originates from.

Copyright DomainGang.com: http://domaingang.com/domain-crime/domainking-ng-indian-companys-nigerian-customers-in-limbo-for-two-weeks/
Web Market / Re: The Domainkingng Thread by princejude(m): 9:57am On Feb 27, 2017
Domainking.NG, a self-styled domain registrar asserting to be Nigeria’s top choice, is in trouble; its founders were arrested by the Pune city police early in February, accused of a variety of charges.
The company’s founders operated Domainking.NG from Punjab, in India, and the local police is now taking a “terrorist angle” to the charges.
According to a report by Sakal Times, an officer in knowledge of the investigation stated:
“Some of the domain names were used for creating fake websites with words like ISIS and jihad.
We have found that the fake websites included 452 related to various governments, 362 military related, 249 had the word India, 34 payment gateways, 11 related to ISIS and other terror groups, 81 about jobs, 1492 for banks and 25 porn websites.”
Senior Police Inspector Sunil Pawar, in-charge of the cyber crime cell, said:
“Most of the websites dealt with economic fraud and the fradusters mostly from Nigeria had used the domain names for fake websites to cheat people through bogus lotteries, jobs, email spoofing, etc. Out of the total 86,000 websites, 30,875 were registered here by people from Nigeria.
We have found that people from about 100 countries including the USA, UK as well as Pakistan had got their website domain registered with the arrested accused.
The websites look similar to original ones and thus people get cheated. In India, people had been fooled with websites which had RBI word in their names.”
Meanwhile, the Facebook page of Domainking.NG is filling up with desperate and angry complaints, primarily from customers in Nigeria:
“I am not registering a new domain. All i am asking is if i can renew my existing .com domain that is about to expire? Please i need answers”
“You people are the worst set of people. You took down your server without any notice”
“Domainking.ng is presently a total waste of time…….. no customer care number to call, live chat with your customer care is zero….. you keep accepting orders meanwhile you know they’ll later encounter issues”

Copyright DomainGang.com: http://domaingang.com/domain-crime/domainking-ng-police-report-asserts-terrorist-angle-to-indian-registrars-activities/

http://domaingang.com/domain-crime/domainking-ng-police-report-asserts-terrorist-angle-to-indian-registrars-activities/
Programming / Re: Microcontrollers by princejude(m): 12:50am On Jan 11, 2017
AideeSheks:
Hello everyone. Have a quick question.
I'm quite proficient working with microcontrollers but I'm mainly familiar mikroc pro. One problem I once encountered with one of the works I did was that the demo version has a limit of only 2k program words and my code exceeded that by much. This will be a major problem if I'm to do more complex works. This has made me to start considering trying out other compilers (ccs especially on my mind). What advice would you have for me?

Trying other compilers will not solve the issue of 2k program limit because most of the free version of compilers have their own limitations.

I will suggest three options for you:

1. Manage the free version of the compiler
2. Buy the full version
3. google for the crack
Programming / Re: ARM Processor Programming Tutorial by princejude(m): 3:30pm On Oct 22, 2016
pcguru1:
The little I know about it is that one from Nintendo DS they wrote an emulator so they converted arm instructions to X86. In fact I can say I don't know anything about it sef
The cpu used in Nintendo DS is ARM
Programming / Re: ARM Processor Programming Tutorial by princejude(m): 3:28pm On Oct 22, 2016
ANTONINEUTRON:
language use in programming processor pls??

i think only ASM and C

You can use any language (such as ASM,C, Basic, Pascal, Hausa or Yoruba)to program proceasors if and only if you have their compilers
Programming / Re: ARM Processor Programming Tutorial by princejude(m): 2:15am On Oct 19, 2016
What is ARM processor ?

An ARM processor is one of a family of CPUs based on the RISC (reduced instruction set computer) architecture developed by Advanced RISC Machines (ARM).

ARM makes 32-bit and 64-bit RISC multi-core processors. RISC processors are designed to perform a smaller number of types of computer instructions so that they can operate at a higher speed, performing more millions of instructions per second (MIPS). By stripping out unneeded instructions and optimizing pathways, RISC processors provide outstanding performance at a fraction of the power demand of CISC (complex instruction set computing) devices.

Copied from: http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/ARM-processor
Programming / Re: ARM Processor Programming Tutorial by princejude(m): 1:49am On Oct 19, 2016
stack1:
This would be cool, as I have keen interest in embedded/microprocessor stuff..

You can start from here : https://www.nairaland.com/1214892/microcontrollers
Programming / Re: ARM Processor Programming Tutorial by princejude(m): 1:43am On Oct 19, 2016
ARM Processors are the type of processors used in our smartphones, drones and other interesting things. They are very powerful and tricky to program
Education / Re: Unizik Students Build A Drone by princejude(m): 11:13am On Oct 17, 2016
Build or buy ?
Phones / Re: Funniest Memes On Galaxy Note 7 Explosions by princejude(m): 7:40am On Oct 16, 2016
Techm8:

the battery i guess.

It is not battery problem. check the link I posted before your comment
Programming / ARM Processor Programming Tutorial by princejude(m): 8:54am On Oct 13, 2016
Any ARM programmers here? If yes, let's discuss about these wonderful 32-bits processors, what they are, their different types, their applications, their IDEs and their learning kits
Phones / Re: Funniest Memes On Galaxy Note 7 Explosions by princejude(m): 3:54am On Oct 13, 2016
Marvell23:
Hahahahahaha, where did Samsung got it all wrong with the Note 7?

Check this: https://www.nairaland.com/3404437/did-processor-cause-samsung-note
Phones / Re: Did Processor Cause Samsung Note 7 Blowup? by princejude(m): 3:26am On Oct 13, 2016
Samsung Needs to Get Transparent

Samsung owes its customers and the tech community a clear explanation of what happened with the lithium ion batteries in its Galaxy Note 7 smartphones.

We live in an industry that operates behind closed walls. Most days corporations need to protect their intellectual property carefully, but this is not one of them.

Lithium ion batteries are widely used across the industry in everything from hearing aids to electric cars. The drive for profits from the premium smartphone market drove Samsung to push the limits of how much work the thinnest and lightest of those batteries could do in a high res, multitasking consumer product.

Something went horribly awry and customers and fellow engineers need to know the details.

Customers deserve an answer because they implicitly trusted the company with products they put in their pockets and held up to their faces. It’s not just Samsung’s credibility at stake here; any maker of smartphones now faces the consumer backlash these phablets created.

Engineers across the supply chain need to understand what happened if they are to prevent it happening again. We are a long way from any other mainstream battery chemistry at a time when the volume of smartphones, cars and other products using lithium ion are rapidly on the rise.

Whatever lessons Samsung learned about these products needs to be shared with the community—with the same intensity and speed with which the products are designed and built.

I applaud executives who made the hard decision to pull the Galaxy Note 7 from the market entirely. The move slashed and estimated $17 billion off Samsung’s market capitalization and could cost another $2.8 billion in quarterly losses, according to analysts quoted by The Wall Street Journal.

You could argue, and plenty will, the company took too long to come to this hard decision. But I think a more important point to argue is that the best reparations should come from transparency.

Samsung can refund the costs of the phone to customers and dealers, and it should. But that won’t stop the problem from happening again.

In a global industry that lacks a global consumer protection agency, Samsung needs to step up to the plate. Investigate and share the flaws of the Galaxy Note 7 batteries with your customers and the technical community. It’s the right thing to do.


http://www.eetimes.com/author.asp?section_id=36&doc_id=1330614&_mc=NL_EET_EDT_EET_daily_20161012&cid=NL_EET_EDT_EET_daily_20161012&elqTrackId=03ba9d11b478488abf8e3a9a4e40e22e&elq=e064bb406ec648e193aea01305bd7f71&elqaid=34324&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=29950
Phones / Did Processor Cause Samsung Note 7 Blowup? by princejude(m): 3:02am On Oct 13, 2016



PARIS — It’s far from clear what exactly caused Samsung Note 7 to catch fire at this point. Samsung isn’t talking until after it finishes its own investigation.

But a new report emerged Wednesday that the culprit might not be the lithium-ion batteries themselves, which Samsung initially suspected. Rather, the problem might reside in the underlying technology -- tweaks made to the processor in the smartphone.

Attributing an unnamed source who has spoken to Samsung chiefs, the Financial Times reported, “Problems with the phone appeared to have arisen from tweaks to the processor to speed up the rate at which the phone could be charged.”

The source told the U.K. newspaper, “If you try to charge the battery too quickly it can make it more volatile. If you push an engine too hard, it will explode. Something had to give.”

After the market closed Tuesday, the Korean electronics giant announced that it would scrap its Note 7 smartphone and completely halt production.

Samsung's Note 7 comes in two versions, with one using Samsung's own Exynos 8893 processor and another based on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 820 processor.

Giving some credence to the new theory — putting the blame beyond the battery itself — are explosion incidents that have surfaced with replacement phones using new batteries produced by another company.

Samsung initially connected the explosions to batteries produced by Samsung SDI, an affiliate company. The Korea Herald reported that Samsung SDI supplied 70 percent of Note 7 batteries, while Amperex Technology (ATL) supplying the remaining 30 percent.
Initially, Samsung did not observe the overheating issues among Note 7 using ATL batteries. Therefore, after the first recall, as a temporary solution, Samsung asked ATL to step in and supply batteries for the replacement phones.

However, as it turns out, on Monday, the replacement phones with ATL batteries also started blowing up.

ATL is a Hong Kong-based company established in 1999, acquired by TDK in 2005. Its production lines reportedly have been operating under strict manufacturing processes compliant to those of TDK since 2010.

Did this mean that ATL/TDK batteries were also defective?

Not exactly. By process of elimination, Samsung now seems to conclude that changing batteries doesn’t lower the heat.

By all accounts, Samsung’s decision to cancel all production of the Note 7 indicates that the Korean giant realizes it must look elsewhere — other than batteries — to explain the alarming phenomenon of its smartphones bursting into flame.

According to the information posted by the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission, Samsung has received 92 reports of the batteries overheating in the United States, including 26 reports of burns and 55 reports of property damage, including fires in cars and a garage.


http://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1330616&_mc=NL_EET_EDT_EET_daily_20161012&cid=NL_EET_EDT_EET_daily_20161012&elqTrackId=792c2b1e66974937bb60820f2b163002&elq=e064bb406ec648e193aea01305bd7f71&elqaid=34324&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=29950
Science/Technology / Re: Electronics Circuit Design From Concept To Implementation by princejude(m): 2:19pm On Sep 18, 2016
BRIGHTSOLAR:
Hello house were can I get a good reliable inverter casing design

Kindly reply me for urgent supply

even me will like to know them because I have been searching for them since. But I am thinking of something difference, may be I will save money and get a good 3d printer. It will do a lot of plastic works.
Science/Technology / Re: Electronics Circuit Design From Concept To Implementation by princejude(m): 2:14pm On Sep 18, 2016
Janyves:
To all the esteemed gurus in the house...... Compliments.
I need trainings on electronic design. I'll appreciate if you can help me out with suggestions on seminars and trainings I can attend.. thanks

check jutronix

1 Like

Programming / Pdp-11 On A Chip by princejude(m): 9:14pm On Aug 23, 2016
If you entered the world of professional computing sometime in the 1960s or 1970s there is a high probability that you would have found yourself working on a minicomputer. These were a class of computer smaller than the colossal mainframes of the day, with a price tag that put them within the range of medium-sized companies and institutions rather than large corporations or government-funded entities. Physically they were not small machines, but compared to the mainframes they did not require a special building to house them, or a high-power electrical supply.
One of the most prominent among the suppliers of minicomputers was Digital Equipment Corporation, otherwise known as DEC. Their PDP line of machines dominated the market, and can be found in the ancestry of many of the things we take for granted today. The first UNIX development in 1969 for instance was performed on a DEC PDP-7.

DEC’s flagship product line of the 1970s was the 16-bit PDP-11 series, launched in 1970 and continuing in production until sometime in the late 1990s. Huge numbers of these machines were sold, and it is likely that nearly all adults reading this have at some time or other encountered one at work even if we are unaware that the supermarket till receipt, invoice, or doctor’s appointment slip in our hand was processed on it.

During that over-20-year lifespan of course DEC did not retain the 74 logic based architecture of the earliest model. Successive PDP-11 generations featured ever greater integration of their processor, culminating by the 1980s in the J-11, a CMOS microprocessor implementation of a PDP-11/70. This took the form of two integrated circuits mounted on a large 60-pin DIP ceramic wafer. It was one of these devices that came the way of [bhilpert], and instead of retaining it as a curio he decided to see if he could make it work.

The PDP-11 processors had a useful feature: a debugging console built into their hardware. This means that it should be a relatively simple task to bring up a PDP-11 processor like the J-11 without providing the rest of the PDP-11 to support it, and it was this task that he set about performing. Providing a 6402 UART at the address expected of the console with a bit of 74 glue logic, a bit more 74 for an address latch, and a couple of 6264 8K by 8 RAM chips gave him a very simple but functional PDP-11 on a breadboard. He found it would run with a clock speed as high as 11MHz, but baulked at a 14MHz crystal. He suggests that the breadboard layout may be responsible for this. Hand-keying a couple of test programs, he was able to demonstrate it working.

We’ve seen a lot of the PDP-11 on these pages over the years. Of note are a restoration of a PDP-11/04, this faithful reproduction of a PDP-11 panel emulated with the help of a Raspberry Pi, and an entire PDP-11 emulated on an AVR microcontroller. We have indeed come a long way.

http://hackaday.com/2016/08/22/a-pdp-11-on-a-chip/
Science/Technology / Re: Electronics Circuit Design From Concept To Implementation by princejude(m): 5:13am On Aug 15, 2016
wildrose21:

Thanks. I am using MikroC Pro

I don't know if it is possible with MikroC Pro.
Why not try CCS C because it has enough online resources
Programming / Re: Embedded Systems Tutorial For Beginners:experiment 4 (traffic Light System) by princejude(m): 6:18pm On Aug 14, 2016
Talkwisdom:

Please let me have your contact.......let`s discuss
www.jutronix.com/contact
Science/Technology / Re: Electronics Circuit Design From Concept To Implementation by princejude(m): 6:10pm On Aug 14, 2016
wildrose21:
Hello gurus in the house. Please I am in a real fix.. I have to submit a project on Monday, but I am having issues with it.

Basically, I am required to carry out a PROTEUS simulation involving multiplexing using Pic 16f877, whereby (1) A keypad and a LCD display will be connected on the same port, say PORT D, though the EN and RS will be on PORT A

(2) A keypad and a Seven Segment Display, still using the same PORT D..

Can anyone please help with the basics of this multiplexing.. I can do the simulation using separate PORTS, but not the multiplexing .

Gracias

What compiler are you using?
If it is ccs c, search there forum for flex lcd driver and flex keypad driver.
With these drivers you can connect them as you like.

@ www.ccsinfo.com/forum

...and don't forget to get them from our store. We also have I2C LCD driver module which will help you to drive you lcd with only 2 pins.
Programming / Re: Embedded Systems Tutorial For Beginners:experiment 4 (traffic Light System) by princejude(m): 2:20pm On Aug 13, 2016
Talkwisdom:

mein,i stay in GRA,around Polo Park........nsukka is far from this location,about one and half hours` drive.

i am considering t.fare bro

If it is a group training of at least 10 poeple,We can do it at Enugu, but if it is only you then you can try the weekend class at Nsukka.
Science/Technology / Re: Electronics Circuit Design From Concept To Implementation by princejude(m): 10:36pm On Aug 12, 2016
Are they still using basic for MCUs ?
Programming / Re: Embedded Systems Tutorial For Beginners:experiment 4 (traffic Light System) by princejude(m): 9:56pm On Aug 07, 2016
Talkwisdom:


i would like to start the training by month end,

where is your office located in ENUGU?

Nsukka
Programming / Re: Embedded Systems Tutorial For Beginners:experiment 4 (traffic Light System) by princejude(m): 5:31pm On Aug 06, 2016
Talkwisdom:


Dear Prince,

are you guys done with the training on embedded system in Enugu?
Anytime you are ready for any embedded system design training or kits and sensors sourcing, just contact us.

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