Friday, June 28, 2013

How To Subscribe And Use Airtel Unlimited BB Plan On Pc And Mobile Devices

By Yemi | 9:06 PM | | | Be the first to comment!
Well what can i say, airtel  just keeps making internet accessibility easier and easier as time goes by.
Recently they launched another blackberry plan called airtel BlackBerry unlimited.it gives you 2gigabyte of data valid for 30days and costs N1,500 Naira.
The good thing about this bundle is that you can use it with your modem, smartphones, android and other mobile devices.

  To subscribe to this plan just load 1500 naira on your phone and dial *440*16#
to check your bundle balance dial *123*10# or *141*712*0#.

 If you have issues with configuring your modem please check my previous post. How To Browse On Your PC Using Airtel Blackberry Bundle Without Additional Software 
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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Quote Of The Day - 23rd June 2013

By Yemi | 12:49 AM | | Be the first to comment!
THE PESSIMIST SEES THE DIFFICULTY IN EVERY OPPORTUNITY ; AN OPTIMIST SEES THE OPPORTUNITY IN EVERY DIFFICULTY.
- WINSTON CHURCHILL
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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

What Investors Want to see in your Business Plan

By Yemi | 9:49 AM | | Be the first to comment!
  

Hi everyone, i found this article on NairaLand so i thought i'd  share it with you cos you just might pick a thing or two from it, i hope you enjoy it, Cheers!!!

If you are in the process of raising capital for your business from investors, then you unquestionably need a business plan. A business plan is a critical part of starting any business and serves a number of critical functions. Writing a solid business plan can be a real challenge, however, which is likely how you found yourself here

A good business plan must answer in sufficient details the following 10 questions if it is to meet the expectations of prospective investors and potential business partners.

1.Company Description – What does your company do? What is your mission statement and overall product or service focus?

2.Management Team – Give a brief description of your key employees with respect to leadership, education, background and work experience.

3.Problem Being Solved – What problem is your company solving and how great is the pain or waste?

4.Customers – Who are your potential customers? Does your product or service directly impact your customer’s bottom line?

5.Value Proposition – How much does your customer make or save by using your product or service? What are the benefits to your customer? How long does it take to realize these benefits?

6.Business Opportunity – How does your company make money? Describe the revenue streams, and include a yearly projection of revenue, expenses, EBITDA, net income and funding requirements for the next five years.

7.Uniqueness – How do your customers use your product or service today? Who else does the same thing you are doing today? Who else could be doing it tomorrow?

8.Barriers to Entry – Is your product or service defensible? Are there sufficient barriers to entry? What patents, copyrights, trade secrets, etc. protect your product from duplication?

9.Competitive Differentiation – What is the competitive landscape? Discuss companies that can be viewed as competition in the market segment. Please explain the key points of differentiation between you and your competitors.

10.Scalability – Where might your product grow within your client company (and its supply chain and sales channels) or among client users?

11.Sales and Marketing Strategy – What is the target market size and growth over the next five years? How will you attract customers? What are your distribution channels and how do you plan to achieve market penetration?

12.Strategic Partners – What strategic relationships do you currently have or plan to have in the future? What is the nature of these relationships?

Answering these questions successfully will sufficiently excite a lender or investor about your concept and that will convince them they should fund your business.

Whether you are seeking a bank loan, equity investment from angel investors, venture capital firms or friends and family, you need an Investor Ready business plan. An investor ready business plan is a document that has been professionally prepared to meet the needs of investors.
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Monday, June 17, 2013

The 10 Things You Can’t Learn In The Classroom

By Yemi | 8:35 PM | Be the first to comment!
The 10 Things You Can’t Learn In The Classroom

Sometimes I wonder why we bother going to school. To learn, of course. Well… yes, but why is it that we have to go to a building specifically designed for this purpose? Why can we not just sit at home and read books? Whatever it is that is taught in school can be learned out of a book.

In fact, it almost always is taught out of a book. Teachers and college professors alike will assign books that they will teach out of and then later assign to read from. So why not cut out the middleman? Why waste time going to school to learn when we can do it from anywhere else on our own time?

One answer is obviously that most people will choose not to bother with learning and as a result, society will suffer as a whole. Secondly, it is important for people to form mini-societies when growing up in order to learn the importance of social interaction and influence.

Therefore, the chance of the world getting rid of schooling institutions is zero. But don’t think for one minute that what schools have to offer is all the knowledge that one needs in order to live a life of prosperity. In fact, the most important lessons one will learn will be learned outside of the classroom. Here are 10 things you won’t learn in school:

1. People are only looking out for themselves.

School can be rather competitive. Students compete for grades, compete for their teacher’s favor and compete in sports. However, nothing will teach you the importance of competition as when you enter life after school. With technology getting more and more advanced, the world is getting smaller and smaller. This means that the competition is getting bigger and bigger.

While in school, you only had to worry about your fellow classmates. When out in the real world, you have to now not only worry about everyone else in the country you live in, but now often have to compete with the rest of the world. If you think good grades were good motivation, wait until you see how money motivates people. Outside of school you will learn that people will cheat, lie and even kill for money.

2. The importance of being patient and staying positive.

School is set up in a way where we are only made to make short-term goals. Each year is split up into semesters and our only goal is to get good grades by the time that we get our report card. We get assignments, we complete them and then after three months or so, we get assessed on our work and reap the rewards.

Real life does not work this way — nothing worth doing takes only 3 months to conquer. Outside of the classroom, our goals are much more long-term and can take years to transpire. We quickly learn the importance of being patient and keeping a positive mindset in order to survive. If we don’t, then we quickly lose our cool and make dumb, rash decisions.

3. The importance of self-improvement for the sake of self-improvement.

School teaches us that we must improve in order to succeed. Life teaches us that we must improve in order to live. While in school, we learn because we must learn in order to keep up with the curriculum. This in itself is important when entering the workforce; it teaches us that slacking can often at times produce poor results.

However, after we graduate we often find that work is not only what life is about. We learn that we should not just improve the skills that make us better at what we do, but also improve the skills that make us better people.

4. Doing things for the love of doing them.

Doing things because we must do them just doesn’t quite fly in our adulthood. We may need to sometimes do things that we would prefer not to do, but being adults makes us feel as if we have a right to decide for ourselves what it is that we ought to do.

Life teaches us to start doing things not because others tell us to do them, but rather because we want to do them. We learn that the easiest way for us to become successful is to find what we love and to spend as much time and put as much passion into it as possible.

5. Friends aren’t as important as we thought.

Friends are great to have, but people grow in different directions and life often removes those that once were closest to us. Having a handful or less of friends is crucial, but understanding that you can always make new ones is also important. Life teaches us that with friends or without friends, we remain who we are; our friends don’t make us, we make us.

6. The importance of networking.

School can teach us how to make friends, but life teaches us the importance of powerful acquaintances and how to make them. When in school, our possible network is at a minimum — we just aren’t exposed to enough people, not to mention people that hold power in the real world. Once free to roam about in the real world, we quickly learn that getting ahead in life often depends on whom you know and on how good of terms you are on with them.

7. Some things are simply out of our control.

The classroom is a small environment with few variables. If something goes wrong, we can often quickly fix it or avoid it entirely — we have control. After leaving the classroom, the variables multiply exponentially. We no longer have the control we once had and often at times find ourselves at a loss of even figuring out from where the issue is arising. Dealing with such circumstances for long enough teaches us that if we find things to be out of our control, there is no point of getting hung up on them — so we let them go and focus on what we can influence.

8. If we don’t adapt, we don’t survive.

The school system is static, unchanging. Life is everything but. Things, situations and circumstances are changing constantly and more often than not, without any warning. After falling a few times on our asses, we learn that if we want to survive and prosper, we must adapt — and do so quickly.

9. We aren’t Superman or Wonder Woman.

Tackling task after task in school, playing sports and getting involved in extracurricular activities, for many of us comes easy. Doing this for long enough gets us feeling that we can take on the world. But then we meet the world. All of a sudden our superhuman powers disappear and we become overwhelmed.

We come to realize that there is a lot more “maintenance” required than we first thought. Laundry doesn’t do itself. The apartment doesn’t clean itself. Bills pile up and we are the ones that have to pay them. Free time quickly becomes a cherished commodity.

10. Less is more — quality over quantity.

Doing more in order to get ahead may have worked in high school, but getting a real job most often doesn’t allow for the same strategy. Some people may appreciate quantity over quality, but with the changing times, this sort of thinking is becoming extinct. We may find ourselves having to redo the same project several times, cutting out the excess fat, in order to produce something worth selling.

http://elitedaily.com/life/motivation/the-10-things-you-cant-learn-in-the-classroom/
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Monday, June 10, 2013

A 1988 NY Times Report On Nigeria's Quota System

By Yemi | 9:52 AM | | Be the first to comment!

Ethnic Quota For Nigerians Is Challenged
By JAMES BROOKE, Special to the New York Times
Published: November 06, 1988

At the age of 11, Adeyinka Badejo is learning the hard way about affirmative action, Nigerian style.

The daughter of an eminent political science professor here, Miss Badejo hoped last month to win admission to a Nigerian Unity School - a Government-financed prep school for top universities here and abroad.

To Miss Badejo's dismay, she discovered that several of her sixth-grade classmates scored lower than she did on a national test, but that they won admission to the prestigious boarding school system. In this West African nation where virtually everyone is of the same race, the difference is ''state of origin'' - often a code phrase in Nigeria for tribe.

Miss Badejo scored 293 on a 400-point test - three points below the cutoff for girls from Ogun state, a southern state largely populated by members of the Yoruba tribe. If she had been born to parents from Kano state, the northern heartland of the Hausa and Fulani tribes, she would have sailed into a Unity School with a score as low as 151. 'Federal Character' Policy
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Miss Badejo's rejection was a result of Nigeria's policy of ''reflecting the federal character.'' Through nationally mandated quotas, this policy is intended to insure that Nigeria's disadvantaged tribal groups have equal access to higher education and to Government employment.

Femi Badejo, Adeyinka's father and a professor at the University of Lagos, decided to sue Nigeria's Minister of Education on the grounds that the Unity School's admission policy constitutes discrimination.

In Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation and one of its most diverse, the case has attracted attention comparable to lawsuits challenging affirmative action programs in the United States.

Late last month, Nigerian reporters packed the three wooden press benches in Court 19 of Lagos High Court as opposing lawyers in black robes and white wigs argued their positions.

During a recess, Mr. Badejo, clad in a yellow dashiki-style shirt favored by the Yoruba people, limited his comments to saying: ''There is no comparison between affirmative action in the United States and 'federal character' in Nigeria.''

For Nigeria's southerners, Mr. Badejo's case has become a minor cause celebre, and several southern educators and politicians have sharply attacked the 10-year-old quota system. 'Unjust Discrimination'

''I think it's unjust discrimination,'' Lateef Kayode Jakande, a former governor of Lagos State, told a Nigerian reporter. ''The way out is to encourage the underdeveloped ones to catch up, rather than to bring down the developed ones.''

In Ibadan, the nation's largest city and one that is largely Yoruba, Dapo Ajayi, a high school principal, said the national quota system discourages southern students who see it as reverse discrimination.

Support for the federal character policy comes from Nigeria's north. The northerners, most of them Muslim, long resisted Western-style education first introduced by Britain, the colonial power here until 1960. Nigerians on the Atlantic coast -Yoruba in the west and members of the Ibo tribe in the east - sent their children in large numbers to British colonial schools.

Today, almost 30 years after independence, a new generation of Nigerians bears the stamp of this colonial inheritance. In the test Miss Badejo took last September, the cutoff point was set by the score attained by the 500th-ranking boy or girl in each state.

Cutoff scores for students from states largely populated by the Ibo or the Yoruba ranged from 280 to 303. Cutoff scores for students from northern states with high Hausa and Fulani populations ranged from 151 to 252.

http://www.nytimes.com/1988/11/06/world/ethnic-quota-for-nigerians-is-challenged.html
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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Specifications For Tecno F7 a.k.a Phantom A1 Android Smart Phone

By Yemi | 11:35 PM | | Be the first to comment!


Tecno has once again released another powerful android smart phone called Tecno F7 a.k.a Phantom A1


It was realeasd in May 2013 and really does have a number of unique features that sets it apart from all the phones previously produced by tecno, e.g  1GB ram.
Below are the specifications i was able to gather about the phone.

Tecno F7 a.k.a Phantom A1

Status
Announced 2013 Q2

Released 2013 May

Body
Dimensions 143.5 x 70.8 x 9.1mm mm
Weight N/A
Keypad None

SIM Mini SIM

Display / Screen
Type Capacitive Touch Screen
Size 5.0 inches
Protection None
Resolution 720 x 1280 pixels (H.D)

Sound
Earphone Jack Yes, 3.5mm Jack
Vibration Yes
Ringtones MP3 / WMA / MIDI / AMR / WAV / AAC

Memory / Storage
Internal 4.0GB
RAM 1GB
External microSD Up to 32GB
Included N/A

Network / Connectivity
GPRS Yes
EDGE Yes
3.5G Yes
4G No
Speed N/A
Bluetooth Yed
Infrared No
NFC No
USB Yes, micro USB
USB-OTG N/A
TV-OUT N/A
FM Radio Yes
GPS Yes
WiFi Yes
WiFi Hotspot Yes
Sensors G-Sensor, Light Sensor, Proximity Sensor

Camera
Primary 8.0MP
Flash Yes, Led Flash
Secondary Yes, 1.2MP

U.I.
O.S. Android 4.1.1 (JellyBean)
Processor Dual Core 1.0Ghz
GPU Yes, PowerVR SGX531 Ultra
Browser Android Browser, HTML5 & Flash Compatible
Java Yes, Via MIDP Emulator
Audio Player MP3 / WMA / MIDI / AMR / WAV / AAC
Video Player MP4 / 3GP / AVI (Others via 3rd party apps)
Others Torch
Calculator
Alarm
Memo
Asphalt 6
World Clock
Calendar
Gmail
Facebook
Voice Recording
Google Maps

Battery
Name BL-3H
Capacity 2100mAh
Talk Time Up to 120H
Standby Up to 400H


 If you liked this post, you may also like the following posts Below.

1 Specifications for Tecno N9 aka Phantom Pad
2 Samsung Galaxy Tab Vs Tecno Tab N9
3 How to Effectively Manage power on your Android Device
 
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Quote For The Day - 4Th June 2013

By Yemi | 11:20 PM | | Be the first to comment!
The 3 C's In Life: Choice,Chance and Change. you must make the choice to take a chance if you want anything in your life to change.
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