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Wednesday, 20 September 2017

4 Online Educational Platforms That Will Be Useful For  High School Kenyan Students

4 Online Educational Platforms That Will Be Useful For  High School Kenyan Students

The key to life is education and knowledge and technology has made this challenge possible each and every day. For certain more people are now educated and information is not stuck in urban areas but also spreading to rural areas and places where getting an education seems almost impossible. However these e-learning platforms have made given teachers and students a better interacting system that has enabled many to have all the material they need online.
1 .Kytabu
As long as you have mobile money then you can access this application at an affordable price. They have local teachers and the necessary curriculum material on mobile devices and gives teachers an opportunity to create learning content around the required content.This allows students to enjoy learning and can have a better teacher-student relationship.
2. Eneza Education
The whole point of Eneza was to ensure that students in rural areas could also access an education. They have a dedicated group of teachers and affordable fee for whoever who may need it.
3. eLimu center
eLimu has digitized the Kenyan national curriculum content to deliver an affordable and engaging app to primary children in Kenya.The app is diversified in a way that it can focus on on digitally rich videos, animations, and games, the app promotes cognitive thinking skills, social consciousness, and IT literacy alongside academic learning.
4. Moringa School
It has been praised as Africa’s top coding school, Moringa School is a full-time, immersive coding school in Nairobi, Kenya. After a selective admission process, 12 students out of around 200 applicants are selected to undergo a four-month intense boot-camp training to become the next generation of ‘techies’.
Throughout this period, students go through an accelerator programme to improve their technical skills, learning different programming languages such as Javascript, HTML, CSS, Ruby on Rails, Android L or UI&UX Design. In addition, presentation skills and business fundamentals are additional modules to ensure that the learners are well-equipped upon ‘graduation’ from the school. Since its creation in 2014, 100 students have already graduated and, among those, 59 per cent have reported a salary increase after the code course, averaging USD$23,000 annually.

Tuesday, 19 September 2017

Nokia 9 leaks, has bezel-less curved AMOLED display and dual Carl Zeiss camera

Nokia 9 leaks, has bezel-less curved AMOLED display and dual Carl Zeiss camera

Nokia made a return with HMD, they initially released some mid-range smartphones, Nokia 3, Nokia 5 and Nokia 6. The company recently dipped its toes into the flagship realm with the Nokia 8. The 8 might find a tough time competing with  other flagship phones which pack modern full screen displays and waterproof bodies. Well it seems things will change with the introduction of the upcoming Nokia 9 according to the new rumor.
It has been said that the Nokia 9 will have edge to edge, bezel-less display thanks to a curved AMOLED screen. The back is curved as well to make a seamless and ergonomic design. The rear shows a shiny copper-gold reflection which means it might be made of glass.
Nokia 9 Renders Leaked with 3D Glass & Rear-Facing Fingerprint scanner
On the back you get a dual camera, but since this is a Nokia flagship, the premium Carl Zeiss lens have been utilized. Chances are that one camera will be a monochrome like they did on the Nokia 8, but we will inform you once everything is confirmed. The screen details are inconsistent as well, some expect a 5.3 inch while others put it at 5.5 inches.
The processor is definitely going to be the Snapdragon 835 since its successor is yet to get into the market. Water and dust resistance will be supported this time round. Finally, the price has been said to be 750 euros which is significantly cheaper than the new iPhone X, LG V30 and the Samsung Galaxy Note 8, so that might work in Nokia’s favor.

Saturday, 16 September 2017

Watch where you're going with new Google Maps' new video feature

Watch where you're going with new Google Maps' new video feature
Your destination will now come to life when you search on Google Maps.
Google has added a new video feature to accompany its mapping service, the company announced.

Thursday, 7 September 2017

How to download with Airtel Social Media Plan

Airtel 1gb is not a new stuff but to download with it is the new trick i will be teaching you guys today. Normally this Airtel 1gb is for social media only and it is valid for 1 month .This subscription was out last year when it's normally N200 for 30gb and
N300 for 100gb but it can't download nor browse with any other browser except opera mini.

Wednesday, 6 September 2017

America Tests 'The Most Dangerous Nuclear Bomb Ever Produced

America Tests 'The Most Dangerous Nuclear Bomb Ever Produced'
The United States of America has reportedly tested the most dangerous nuclear bomb that has ever been made.
An F-15E from Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada released a mock nuclear weapon for an August 2017 test at Tonopah Test Range. The test is the second in a series planned over three years

Tuesday, 5 September 2017

9MOBILE Latest anonytun cheat capped @  500mb-700mb

9MOBILE Latest anonytun cheat capped @  500mb-700mb
This alternative is available for 9mobile at the moment via with 9mobile chat pack.
Without wasting time let show you how to surf internet with 9mobile chat pack at the moment.

REQUIREMENTS
Recharge N150 in your 9mobile / Etisalat sim
Dial *200*3*3*1*2# to subscribe to the chat park weekly plan

NASA is about to find out if a supercomputer can survive a year in space

NASA is about to find out if a supercomputer can survive a year in space

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On Monday, at 12:31 p.m. Eastern time, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifted off on a resupply flight for the International Space Station, and among its cargo, in addition to ice cream, was something else very cool: a supercomputer.
The machine, made by Hewlett Packard Enterprise and called the Spaceborne Computer, is capable of a teraflop worth of computing power, which puts it roughly in line with a late-1990s supercomputer. Made up of two pizza box-shaped machines in a single enclosure, the HPE supercomputer is a part of a year-long experiment to see how an off-the-shelf computer system can fare in space if protected in the right way by software.
Long space missions like a trip to Mars come with considerable communications delays, so equipping astronauts with a powerful supercomputer would allow them to solve complex problems without having to wait for the issue and the solution to be transmitted to and from Earth. But radiation on a trip like that can damage computers, so NASA and HPE are
conducting this research to see if software can provide the necessary protection to keep things functioning correctly.
Just like NASA’s famous identical twin experiment—in which Scott Kelly spent a year in space and his brother, Mark Kelly, stayed down on Earth—the supercomputer in space has a brother on this planet, a doppleganger machine located in Wisconsin acting as a control in this experiment.
HPE’s approach with the Spaceborne Computer, a two-node, water-cooled machine, is different from the way a mission-critical computer in space is physically protected (or “hardened,” in space gear speak) from radiation. For example, the chief computer for the Juno spacecraft inhabits a “protective titanium vault with walls about one centimeter thick,” according to BAE systems, which made that processor. Instead of physical protection for the HPE computer, the company is hoping to learn if software can do something similar.
Eng Lim Goh, the HPE project’s principal investigator, says that the “dramatic vision” for the future of this line of research is one in which before an astronaut travels to space, he or she would be able to take a top-of-the-line, off-the-shelf machine with them, and software could make it space-worthy. Then the astronaut could put whatever programs she wanted on the machine, a process that Goh, a computer scientist, compares to having an iPhone in space onto which you’ve preloaded your apps.
So how might this computer's software help protect it?
In general, Goh says that smart machines on Earth that exercise “self-care” may turn themselves off in the face of dangerous conditions. Another idea is that a machine can intentionally run slowly so that it can handle errors as it goes, as opposed to running at maximum capacity and not having the bandwidth to also cope with problems.
“We will find out what works, what doesn’t,” Goh says. “We have a whole list.”
HPE said in a statement describing the project that the “system software will manage real time throttling of the computer systems based on current conditions and can mitigate environmentally induced errors.” (If you’re wondering what Hewlett Packard Enterprise is, it’s one-half of the old HP, which divided in 2015; the other half is now HP, Inc., which makes personal computers and printers.)
“This system is not planned to replace the [physically] hardened systems,” Goh says. The intention is that something like this could function as a “decision support” tool on a long mission to a place like Mars, and not a primary mission computer.
It’s due to arrive at the space station in the Dragon Spacecraft on Wednesday.
This article has been updated to correct errors with the spelling of Eng Lim Goh's name. SpaceX's most recent launch lifted over 6,000 pounds of stuff destined for the ISS, including a supercomputer.