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Tuesday 24 September 2013

Jose Mourinho Applauds Mikel Obi's Performance

23 September, 2013

Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has applauded John Obi Mikel's performance in their ' 2-0 victory over Fulham last Saturday at Stamford Bridge.
photo Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has applauded John Obi Mikel's performance in their ' 2-0 victory over Fulham last Saturday at Stamford Bridge.
Mourinho who watched Mikel break his 261-game goal drought that had lasted since his first spell in charge said the Nigerian international gave his side the needed balance.
“Good for him, good for us. I think it is good for his confidence. And I think people enjoyed seeing John (Obi Mikel) score a goal.'
“The goal was a shot in a set-piece, in a corner, a rebound, the finishing was good and he was in the position, but the important thing for me is he played a good game, he gave balance and stability.
"He kept very good control of the game, so I am happy with the way John is playing,” Mourinho concluded.

BlackBerry: On The road to extinction?

23 September, 2013

The struggle for relevance and market share among mobile platform providers continues. Samsung and Apple are holding on to major market share and Techno is also making a stealthy incursion into the market as well.
What has not changed is the fact that the customer is still king and the consumption habits are the determinants for mobile service and its add-on apps provision. The magic of constant innovation, advertising and persistence in this regard is what has continued to keep these companies alive.
Ontario, Canada-based former mobile phone giant, Blackberry Limited, formerly known as Research in Motion, has announced that accessing Blackberry Messenger would no longer be tied to the ownership of a Blackberry phone. The news is one of the most significant in the industry thus far this year.
Until recently, before the decline in the revenue of Blackberry Limited, Blackberry had a tight grip on the market and the sales and popularity in Nigeria was premised on the novelty that came with its being first to provide instant messaging. For once, it was a freedom of sorts from the cost that came with paying N10 for text messages within same network and N15 across networks before the recent change in price to N4.
That users can now ‘port’ to BBM using their Android phones running on Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean and/or Apple phone running on iOS 6 and 7 means BBM has now become an independent messaging template.
This recent stint by Blackberry is a posture that says it is succumbing to the reality of how things have remarkably changed in the industry. It is a sincere fight for survival, similar to that of an Olympian swimmer in brackish water swamp. What, however, we cannot take away from BlackBerry is its pioneering role in the field of mobile instant communication. Blackberry Limited, owners of the Blackberry brand, had redefined mobile telephony and social media use.
News of the availability of BBM for other users first caught public attention last May; and after a long wait of five months, it’s finally available. Starting on Saturday 21st September, Android users can now download the application from the Google Play Store and iPhone users get to download same a day after. This would allow for chats on two of its main rival platforms — Android and iPhone. Shut out from this are Windows phone produced by Microsoft.
BBM, as on Blackberry phones, allows users to chat, share files in audio and photo forms, keep conversation on in a group of up to 30 other users, broadcast messages to all users on one’s BB contact list, post status updates and read those of others, change display pictures at will and every user has an eight-character unique Personal Identification Number. These are the exact features it will be availing users who download same.
All features of a good chat platform are also activated with this new offering of BBM — knowledge that the message has been delivered, read and is being replied or not by the receiver are available. BBM is popular and it is perhaps responsible for why, before the release date, app stores were loaded with several fakes.
The first Blackberry device — an email pager — was available in the market in 1999. BBM was introduced in 2006, and by 2012, BB had sold 200 million phones, with its current figure of users placed at about 80 million. Six years down the line, a lot has changed. BBM now has to compete with several other substitutes for it — Whatsapp, Facebook chat, Google Chat, Viber chat and a number of other chat platforms.
Mobile network providers have been the major loser in terms of revenues from SMS. BB Limited is the latest hit. Whatsapp, BBM’s arch rival, claims a figure of about 200 million users currently, a far one from BBM’s.
Google is rumoured to be interested in acquiring Whatsapp, especially since it ranks as the second most downloaded app on Google Play. As BBM continues to struggle for a market share, this move may be a potent one in an attempt for a comeback. What is not clear is how this would affect the sales of Blackberry phones.
To maintain growth, the company will be offering hardware and software solutions to other firms. For those concerned about privacy, it is only expected that the use of a PIN, which BBM offers, would appeal, as against Whatsapp and others which are activated using mostly a mobile phone number.
Blackberry phones also have the all-touch screen device and physical keyboard model, which appeals to a section of the market. The Z and Q series phones are attempts to adapt sleek features that other smart phones are known for. The complaint has been about the quick draining of the battery and the dependence on extra battery or constant power source for BB users. For the African market, the flat monthly data tariff of the phone would still make it appealing.
Thoston Heins, Blackberry’s Chief Executive, in saying “We will make BBM available as the premiere multi-platform IM solution all around the globe,” is anchoring this on the belief that consumers would either prefer BBM to Whatsapp et al; or desire to add it to their collection of apps. The reality is that instant messaging is no longer novel for Android and iPhone users.
The download figure in the coming days would tell if this move by the smart phone company was a smart one. The industry would have to wait and see if several contacts would be transferred from BB phones to Android and iphones using the Bluetooth setting.
If things go south, it may mean that the only place where Blackberry phones would remain popular is the technology museum. Already, 40 per cent of the company’s staff are expected to be dismissed before 2014. If this move falters, then may be the figure would be higher than this and would mean that BB is on a slow path to extinction.

Monday 16 September 2013

SHIPWRECK: Attempt To Pull The Costa Concordia Underway

16 September, 2013

One of the largest and most daunting salvage operations ever undertaken is under way with an attempt to pull the shipwrecked Costa Concordia.
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The operation was delayed for three hours because of an overnight storm, but began at 09:00 local time.
Righting the ship is expected to take up to 12 hours.
Engineers have never tried to lift such a huge ship so close to land. Thirty-two people died when it hit rocks.
The bodies of two of the dead, a passenger and a crew member, have never been recovered and may be found during the operation.
The Italian Civil Protection Authority said the sea and weather conditions had mostly been right for the attempt.

Friday 13 September 2013

Scientists Come Very Close To Anti-HIV Vaccine


12 September, 2013
Health
Scientists form Oregon Health and Science University developed a vaccine that may be able to fight HIV. 
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Their new study suggests that a vaccine for the monkey equivalent of HIV appears to eradicate the virus.
Research published in the journal Nature has shown that vaccinated monkeys can eradicate equivalent of HIV infection, which is called Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) and is 100 times more deadly then HIV, from their bodies.
Infected monkeys usually die within two years but in nine of the 16 inoculated monkey the virus did not take hold thanks to the vaccine.
Rhesus macaque monkeys were firstly vaccinated and then exposed them to SIV. The researchers found that at first the infection began to establish and spread, but then the monkeys' bodies started to respond, searching out and destroying all signs of the virus. The nine monkey that successfully responded to the vaccine were still clear of infection between one-and-a-half and three years later.
The researchers now want to use a similar approach to test a vaccine for HIV in humans.
Prof Louis Picker, from the Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute at Oregon Health and Science University, said:
"It's always tough to claim eradication - there could always be a cell which we didn't analyse that has the virus in it. But for the most part, with very stringent criteria... there was no virus left in the body of these monkeys."

Sunday 8 September 2013

P-Square Sworn In as Honorary Calgarians in Canada


6 September, 2013
Arts and Entertainment
Nigeria's multiple award-winning duo, top singing twins Peter and Paul Okoye, P-Square, is currently on tour in Canada and the United States.
On September 5, 2013, the pop star twins were sworn in as honorary Calgarians, given their own official white cowboy hats.
The ceremony is a symbol of the city of Calgary. This tradition is alive for over 50 years. Many foreign celebrities and VIPs who visited Calagary have been 'white hatted' during the years.
PHOTOS: P Square Sworn In as Honorary Calgarians in CanadaPHOTOS: P Square Sworn In as Honorary Calgarians in CanadaPHOTOS: P Square Sworn In as Honorary Calgarians in Canada

Friday 6 September 2013

Rafael Nadal Beats Tommy Robredo In US Open

5 September, 2013

Rafael Nadal Thrashed powered into the US Open semi-finals in New York.
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The 2010 champion, seeded second, won 6-0 6-2 6-2 on Arthur Ashe Stadium against the man who had knocked out Roger Federer in the previous round.
Nadal, 27, goes on to face Richard Gasquet in the semi-finals after the Frenchman earlier beat David Ferrer in five sets.
"I think I played great the first set - it's my first set so far this year at 100%," said Nadal, who returned from a serious knee injury in February.
"I did all the things that you expect to do good in the first set, in my opinion. I am very happy with the way that I moved myself on court, very happy with the way I hit my forehand and my backhand especially.
"So in general it was my best match of the tournament, so that's great news."

Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth


5 September, 2013
Features
    Look at the beauty of our planet Earth, as seen from space. It looks beautiful, like a magical land…
Scroll for and check out all the images below. Use this minute to relax and get inspired for new things in your life. 
Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)Get Inspired: Breathtaking Photos of Planet Earth (PHOTOS)

Wednesday 4 September 2013

Can you Bend like Her- Informationgalaxy


2 September, 2013
Foreign
27-year old russian beauty, Julia Günthel aka Zlata is the world's bendiest woman. The former gymnast, who is 5ft 8in, is so flexible she can cram herself into a 50cm squared box.
Zlata can contort herself into the most extreme poses imaginable - and has broken numerous world records for her flexibility. If she wants to touch her toes she can actually do so by twisting her legs up to her head.


"Let's Tax The Sun" - Informationgalaxy

2 September, 2013

A new tax on solar power introduced in early July by the Spanish government has been described as "ludicrous" in two leading international publications.
"Let's Tax The Sun": New Law Shocks World Press
US business and finance magazine Forbes pulled no punches in an article titled, "Out of ideas and in debt, Spain sets sights on taxing the sun".
It pointed out that Spain "is one of the top countries in the world with respect to installed photovoltaic (PV) solar energy capacity."
But the author took an incredulous tone and noted: "Spain is now attempting to scale back the use of solar panels – the use of which they have encouraged and subsidized over the last decade – by imposing a tax on those who use the panels."
She added: "You get the feeling that government officials were out of ideas, stared up at the sky one day and thought, 'I’ve got it! We’ll tax the sun!'"
Australia's Business Spectator published a story on the same subject on Wednesday under the headline, "Spain's solar stupidity".
It said: "Imposed by decree, the reform aims to raise money for tackling a €26 billion debt to power producers which the state has built up over the years in regulating energy costs and prices."
The article quoted Industry Minister Jose Manuel Soria who introduced the law as saying, "I support 'autoconsumo' [independent power generation by households]... but the power system has infrastructure, grids that the rest of us Spaniards who are in the system have to pay for. And we pay for it through our electricity bill."
Both articles also quoted Teresa Ribera, who served as secretary of state for the environment under the former Socialist administration.
She responded to Soria's statement, saying: "It's like asking cyclists to pay a levy to keep open the petrol stations they don't use."
Now a senior adviser to the Paris-based Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI), Ribera said the law was "illogical in terms of energy efficiency and costs" and "a serious invitation by the government for citizens to become anti-system."
Business Spectator interviewed people who plan to ignore the new law, including Sergio Pomar, chief executive of energy-efficient installation firm INEL.
He said: "If I spend €600 to install solar panels and get fined €6 million let the judge decide."
Private individuals who fail to hook their solar panels up to the national grid to be metered and taxed could face fines of up to €30 million ($40 million) under the new law.
Forbes magazine wrote: "It seems ludicrous."