TV .... HIGH DEFINATION ONLY...
KIU-CONNECT WELL COMES YOU AL,
THE FOUNDER
MUHAMMED L. HYDARA
01 JANUARY 2010
LOCATION GAMBIA
THIS WEBSITE IS BEEN CREATED OUT OF MY OWN EMARGINSTION. THINKING OF HOW TO MAKE THE WHOLE SOCIAL NETWORK AND CONNECTING THE WHOLD AS A GLOBAL VILLAGE WITH JOY AND DELIGHT.............
YOU CANNOT GO THAT FAR.
THIS WEBSITE IS BEEN CREATED IN BANJUL THE GAMBIA, BIJILO KOMBO NORTH WESTERN REGION. WITH THE HELP OF WEBS, YOUTUBE, AND GOOGLE MAKE ITS BREAKTHROUGH VERY EASY AND COMPLICATED TO SOME EXTEND. THE IDEA OF ME BROADCASTING ONLINE HAVE STARTED SINCE 2001 BY THEN IT WAS VERY DIFFICULT FOR ME TO GET ACCESS TO THE INTERNET AND MAKE ALL THIS POSSIBLE MY AIM IS TO GO TO SPACE FROM AFRICA.
PRODUCER BIOGRAPHY:
MY ANME IS MUHAMMED L HYDARA, I AM 22 YEARS OLD. I STARTED GOING TO SCHOOL IN BANSANG
IN 1994 I WENT TO BANSANG LOWER BASIC SCHOOL, THEN WENT TO BANSANG UPPER BASIC SCHOOL AND BANSANG SENIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL WERE I GRADUATED IN 2008.
THINKING OF HOW TO GET THE THIRTY EDUCATION WAS ALSO ANOTHER CHALLENGE FOR MY EDUCATIONAL CARER. I WENT TO MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE IN 2010 AND COMPLIED IN 2010 WERE I GOT THE FOLLOWING QUALIFICATION:
CERTIFICATE IN COMMERCIAL STUDIES
CERTIFICATE IN BUSINESS NON AS DIPLOMA 1
DIPLOMA IN BUSINESS STUDIES NON AS DIPLOMA 2
ADVANCE DIPLOMA IN BUSINESS STUDIES
CERTIFICATE IN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
1ST YEAR BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
FINALLY I WILL GIVE HANK'S TO THE LORD AND HIS MESSENGER MUHAMMED (PEACE BE OPEN HIM) FOR BUILDING THIS WEBSITE AND ITS FEATURES IN GOOD HEALTH WITH GOOD KNOWLEDGE TO COMPLETE IN PEACE AND TO MY FAMILY, FRIENDS ALSO SHOUTCAST AND WEBS
THE KIU-CONNECT WAS BUILD WITH WINAMP DANS SOUTCAT DSP WITH THE SERVER WHICH I INSTALL AND CONFIGURED MY SELF.
WE ARE PROUD TO ASSOCIATED OUR SELF WITH THE DEVELOPMEN AND JOB CRATION IN TANZANIA.
....ECONOMY BOOM COMING SOON.....
....... KIU-CONNECT ......
RAMADAN MUBARAK
WISH YOU A BLESSED RAMADAN IN GOOD HEALTH AND LONG LIFE. MAY ALL OUR PRAYERS BE ACCEPTED AND OUR SINS BE FORGIVEN
WE ARE WITH YOU ALL THE WAY..........
RAMADAN MUBARAK
WISH YOU A BLESSED RAMADAN IN GOOD HEALTH AND LONG LIFE. MAY ALL OUR PRAYERS BE ACCEPTED AND OUR SINS BE FORGIVEN
WE ARE WITH YOU ALL THE WAY..........
WHY RAMADAN.
Ramadan (Arabic: رمضان Ramaḍān, IPA: [rɑmɑˈdˤɑːn]; variations Persian: Ramazān; Urdu: Ramzān; Turkish: Ramazan) is the ninth month of the Islamic calendar,[4] Muslims worldwide observe this month of fasting.[5][6] This annual observance is regarded as one of the Five Pillars of Islam.[7] The month lasts 29-30 days based on the visual sightings of the crescent moon according to numerous biographical accounts compiled in hadiths.[8][9][10] The word Ramadan comes from the Arabic root “ramida” or “ar-ramad,” which means scorching heat or dryness.[11]
While fasting from dawn until sunset Muslims are supposed to refrain from consuming food, drinking liquids and sexual relations.[12] According to Islam, the sawab (rewards) of fasting are many, but in this month, they are believed to be multiplied.[13] Fasting for Muslims in this month, typically, includes the increased offering of salat prayers and recitation of the Quran.
GO TO SCHOOL KIDS.
NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL NEWS
HABARI KITAIFA
TODAYS SPECIAL THANKS.
WHO IS BARAK OBAMA
Barack Hussein Obama II (i/bəˈrɑːk huːˈseɪn oʊˈbɑːmə/; born August 4, 1961) is the 44th and current President of the United States. He is the first African American to hold the office.
Born in Honolulu, Hawaii, Obama is a graduate of Columbia University and Harvard Law School, where he was president of the Harvard Law Review. He was a community organizer in Chicago before earning his law degree. He worked as a civil rights attorney in Chicago and taught constitutional law at the University of Chicago Law School from 1992 to 2004. He served three terms representing the 13th District in the Illinois Senate from 1997 to 2004, running unsuccessfully for the United States House of Representatives in 2000.
Several events brought Obama to national attention during his 2004 campaign to represent the state of Illinois in the United States Senate in 2004, including his victory in the March 2004 Illinois Democratic primary and his keynote address at the Democratic National Convention in July 2004. He won the Senate election in November 2004, serving until his resignation following his 2008 presidential election victory. His presidential campaign began in February 2007, and after a close campaign in the 2008 Democratic Party presidential primaries against Hillary Rodham Clinton, he won his party's nomination. In the 2008 presidential election, he defeated Republican nominee John McCain, and was inaugurated as president on January 20, 2009. Nine months later, Obama was named the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize laureate. In April 2011, he announced that he would be running for re-election in 2012.
As president, Obama signed economic stimulus legislation in the form of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 in response to the 2007–2009 recession in the United States. Other major domestic policy initiatives include the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010, and the Budget Control Act of 2011. In foreign policy, Obama ended US military involvement in the Iraq War, increased troop levels in Afghanistan, signed the New START arms control treaty with Russia, ordered U.S. military involvement in Libya, and ordered the military operation that resulted in the death of Osama bin Laden. In May 2012, he became the first sitting U.S. president to openly support legalizing same-sex marriage.
TANZANIAN-RUWANDA RAILWAY
A standard-gauge railway is to be built between Isaka in central Tanzania and the Rwandan capital Kigali to facilitate the transport of goods and raw materials between the two countries, “The East African” reports. The works are to be carried out by US firm Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway at a projected cost of $US2.7 million, which is to be financed mainly by the African Development Bank. Construction is expected to take five years. The railway will be the first 1,435 mm wide track in the east African region, where most railways are 1,000 mm narrow gauge.
The existing Dar es Salaam-Isaka line will also be rehabilitated as part of the project although it is not clear if this includes an upgrade to standard gauge from the current narrow gauge.
Located on the Tabora-Mwanza branch line, since the late 1980s Isaka has become an inland container terminal and important commercial centre serving cargo traffic between Rwanda and Tanzania. Currently the town is only connected to the neighbouring country by road.
HYDRO POWER PROJECT....
Help could be at hand for the struggling national grid with the revival of a long-standing project to build a 2100MW hydroelectric power station on the Rufiji river in the Selous Game Reserve southwest of Dar es Salaam.
The so-called Stiegler Gorge (STIGO) power project is a joint venture of the Rufiji Basin Development Authority (RUBADA) and the Infrastructure Development Finance of South Africa. The initiative still needs final clearance from the government, but if all goes to plan the power plant could be running at full capacity by 2017.
The extra power would be a major boon for Tanzania, which struggles with regular power cuts due to problems with maintenance and supply. The project might also reduce flooding in the lower Rufiji valley due to controlled water discharge from the dam, as well as opening up the tourist potential of an important wildlife area. However, experts warn of other negative environmental impacts particularly on floodplain and delta fisheries and agriculture
HABARI ZA KIMATAIFA INTERNATIONAL NEWS .......
WATS NEW IN TECHNOLOGY ......
FACEBOOK WATS NEW...
INSIDE TWEETER
TODAYS GOSSIP .
OUR BIG MAC HIM SELF AIMS TO BUILD HIS SERVERS INTO YOUR ECONOMY WATCH HIM CLOSE ....
.ADMIN.MUHAMMED L. HYDARA
.ADMIN.MUHAMMED L. HYDARA
..........Biggest Stories of 2012 All About The world........
July 27: London Olympics Begin
..........Biggest Stories of 2012 All About The world........
July 27: London Olympics Begin
MEDIATAKEOUT BREAKING NEWS:
Remember When We TOLD Y'ALL That Lil Wayne BROKE UP WITH HIS FIANCE . . . Because She Took SEXY PICS . . . Well We've GOT THE PICS!!!
Remember When We TOLD Y'ALL That Lil Wayne BROKE UP WITH HIS FIANCE . . . Because She Took SEXY PICS . . . Well We've GOT THE PICS!!!
August 06, 2012: MediaTakeOut.com told you a few months ago that rapper Lil Wayne ended his engagement , and briefly BROKE UP with his fiance Dhea - because she took "sexy modeling photos."
Well Weezy has SINCE FORGIVEN Dhea . .. and we were sent, what we believe to be THOSE "sexy modeling pics" that caused all that drama.
C'mon Weezy. She's showing a teeny bit of CAKE CAKE CAKE CAKE CAKE . . . but it's really NOT THAT SERIOUS. Now her NOSE on the other hand . . . that's SERIOUS!!
lil wayne you need to settle down women are goona be mad at u, u change them all times K.KDING
keep her close ........... niggas ar not gonna give up
ADMIN
KIU-CONNECT
keep her close ........... niggas ar not gonna give up
ADMIN
KIU-CONNECT
KIU-CONNECT EXCLUSIVE NEWS...
Syria conflict: Aleppo shootings by rebels condemned
Syria conflict: Aleppo shootings by rebels condemned
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Amateur video shows rebels preparing to kill alleged Assad loyalists
Human rights activists have condemned the public shooting in Syria of four apparent Assad loyalists by rebels in the battleground city of Aleppo.
Video posted online shows the men, who included the alleged head of a feared local militia, being put up against a wall and shot with Kalashnikov rifles.
Human Rights Watch has told the BBC the act was potentially a war crime.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has said the nation's fate is being decided by the fight against the rebels.
Clive Baldwin Senior legal adviser for Human Rights WatchWhat it looks like is execution of detainees and if that is the case, that would be a war crime”
The head of the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which documents violence by all sides in the conflict, condemned the killings by the rebels as "criminal".
But Russia, one of Syria's closest allies, said the video showed there were human rights violations on both sides.
Government forces have been battling to oust Free Syria Army (FSA) rebels from Aleppo, the country's biggest city and its commercial capital, since they launched an assault last month.
The rebels appear to control large parts of the city despite government assertions that they have suffered heavy losses and are being mopped up by security forces.
The UN mission in Syria reports that the rebels in Aleppo are now armed with some heavy weapons including tanks and says that helicopters, heavy machine guns and artillery are also being used in the fighting.
"We are calling on all parties to exercise utmost restraint... to distinguish between civilians and [combatants] in this conflict," said spokeswoman Sausan Ghosheh.
War crime?The public shootings seem to have taken place on Tuesday, in what looks like a schoolyard.
In a video which appeared on YouTube, gunmen can be seen leading a number of men in their underwear, some of them bruised or bloodied, into the yard, which is crowded with men shouting religious slogans.
There is no reason to doubt the authenticity of the troubling video footage from Aleppo, purporting to show alleged members of the hated pro-regime shabiha militia being lynched after capture.
Other videos - all filmed by rebels or activists - showed many bodies strewn around a captured police station. Not all of them looked like combat deaths. For more than a year, government forces, and the shabiha, have been accused of perpetrating many more such abuses - and worse, the cold-blooded slaying of women and children.
There have also been past allegations of abuses by the rebel side, but rarely have they been so clearly documented. Clearly, neither side has a monopoly of righteousness, nor of abuse.
As the conflict sharpens and the regime fights for survival, the level of viciousness may also intensify. The International Red Cross recently ruled that international humanitarian law now applies to Syria.
That means that combatants are obliged to obey the laws of war, and those guilty of abuses may be charged with war crimes.
Chants include, "The Free Syrian Army forever, we'll trample on the head of Assad".
After the half-naked men are put up against a wall, the camera moves back behind the crowd, losing sight of them.
Heavy gunfire from Kalashnikov assault rifles erupts, after which the camera shows a pile of bodies by the wall.
One of the men killed has been identified as Ali Zeineddin al-Berri, known as Zeno, accused of leading a shabiha group which killed 15 FSA fighters during a truce in Aleppo on Tuesday.
Clive Baldwin, a senior legal adviser for Human Rights Watch (HRW), told the BBC: "What it looks like is execution of detainees and if that is the case, that would be a war crime."
HRW, he added, had been seeing evidence of abuses such as torture and executions by rebel elements "for some time".
Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said of the footage: "This is criminal. This is revenge."
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov said the killings confirmed that human rights violations were "taking place on both sides".
"It would be useful if Western and Arab politicians looked at the situation in Syria from this angle too," he added. "Everybody must stop violence."
The Aleppo video clearly shows that large numbers of rebel fighters retain control of several parts of Aleppo and seem even to be expanding, despite reports on the state media that security forces are prevailing, says the BBC's Jim Muir, in neighbouring Lebanon.
Amnesty reportMr Assad has not spoken in public for two weeks. On Wednesday, he issued a written statement marking armed forces day.
He praised soldiers for confronting "armed terrorist gangs", saying: "The fate of our people and our nation, past, present and future, depends on this battle."
The US accused Mr Assad of cowardice for "exhorting his armed forces to continue to slaughter the civilians of his own country" while "hiding out of sight".
Amnesty International says government forces committed crimes against humanity this month in Aleppo.
In the report, based on research carried out in May, the rights group appealed to the UN Security Council to refer Syria to the International Criminal Court and impose an arms embargo on the country.
Amnesty accuses security forces and the shabiha of firing on peaceful protesters and bystanders, including children.
It also says medical teams were targeted and those arrested were often tortured.
Activists estimate some 20,000 people have died since March last year.
YOUNG MAN TAKE IT EASY BUT I THINK YOU CAN DO IT....
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As London becomes the latest big metropolitan city hosts the Olympic Summer Games, many of the athletes competing come from small towns all over the world.
US Olympians like swimmer Nathalie Coughlin, marathon runner Ryan Hall, and hockey player Lauren Crandall all come from towns with a population of less than 10,000.
A study by Jean Cote of Queen's University in Ontario, Canada showed that a majority of professional American football players came from small towns, even though 80% of Americans lived in bigger cities.
The BBC's Franz Strasser went to Jonesboro, Arkansas, where former Olympic pole vaulter Earl Bell trains current Olympians like Jeremy Scott.
The trainer talks about why small towns are better equipped to raise an athlete.
Commodore 64 turns 30: What do today's kids make of it?
Commodore 64 turns 30: What do today's kids make of it?
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It is 30 years since the Commodore 64 went on sale to the public.
The machine was hugely successful for its time, helping to encourage personal computing, popularise video games and pioneer homemade computer-created music.
The $595 (£399) device took its name from its US maker, Commodore International, and the fact it had 64 kilobytes of RAM memory.
The firm noted that made it substantially cheaper than other personal computers on the market offered by IBM, Apple and Atari.
Commodore highlighted the fact that since it had designed and manufactured its own chips it had been able keep costs down - and the advantage helped it become the best-selling model in North America.
In Europe it faced competition from two cheaper eight-bit rivals released over the previous year: the BBC Micro and Sinclair Spectrum.
The Commodore's ability to display 16 colours, smoothly scroll graphics and play back music through its superior SID (sound interface device) chip - even while loading programs off tape - helped win over fans, but it did not become the market leader until the late 1980s.
Debates continue to this day about which was the superior system - but what would today's youth make of the C64?
BBC News invited Commodore enthusiast Mat Allen to show schoolchildren his carefully preserved computer, at a primary school and secondary school in London.
Video Journalist: Dougal Shaw
Superstitious Fund: Too mystic to fail
Superstitious Fund: Too mystic to fail
Superstitious Fund: Too mystic to fail
Would you invest in a fund that trades on superstition? David Wolman has, and in the process he discovers unsettling truths about how we treat and handle money.
When Shing Tat Chung was a baby, his parents changed his name on the advice of a fortune teller. The soothsayer warned that the name they had given him at birth had “too much fire”, whatever that means. The new one, which also happens to be his current one, “is supposed to be more balanced and carry a good fortune,” Chung told me. “I will also apparently make lots of money with this name,” he says, laughing.
That’s a relief because I recently gave him some of my money. More specifically, I put $200 into an experimental investment fund Chung launched in June. Mind you, this guy is not some stock-picking savant who finished Stanford Business School at the age of 15. Chung is a 25-year-old newly minted graduate in design from the Royal College of Art in London.
Fascinated by superstitions and their wider, yet often overlooked, ramifications for society, Chung decided to start The Superstitious Fund Project. Some people trust Windsor-knotted stock traders and mutual fund managers to grow their money. Others use algorithms designed to respond to various market conditions so that – one hopes – they deliver earnings. Still others buy gold, plunk it in a vault, and pray that it will be worth more on some future date than it is today. How odd is it then, really, to calculate trade decisions by way of astrology and numerology?
The fund works like this: stock trades are carried out by an Automated Trading System (colloquially, a “robot”), which is a computer program that buys, sells or holds stocks based on a set of specifications encoded into the program’s governing algorithm. The code for Chung’s experiment was written by Jim Hunt, who runs a firm called Trading Gurus, and together with Chung they named it “Sid the Superstitious Robot”. (They also decided to make the source code completely transparent and free to download.)
Like many investment models, Sid is an automated speculator. But whereas other algorithms might take action based, for instance, on a stock’s recent performance or the price of oil, the criterion for this program are lunar phases and the affection and disaffection people have for certain numbers. “I wanted it to operate based on human characteristics,” Chung says.
Sid won’t buy anything on the 13th of the month, and steers clear of buying or selling any stock if its value happens to have a 13 in it. As for lunar phases, Chung explains with a hint of pride that the algorithm finds a new moon to be “good”, whereas a full moon is very, very bad. “The closer the moon is to being full, the more it effects us,” Chung says. So as the full moon approaches, the robot – instead of starting to grow claws and thick brown hair – sells more, as if it is nervous about the moon’s impact on multinational corporations and the decision-making capabilities of senior management. If you’re wondering how this automated yet temperamental trader handles an eclipse, one word: sell.
And get this: the robot’s beliefs evolve. People are constantly seeing correlations in the world and interpreting them as patterns that they can or should act upon. Sid also generates new, albeit irrational, beliefs and acts on them. Cautious not to leave any spiritual stone unturned, Chung went as far as seeking the advice of a fortune teller to help him determine the most prudent launch date. When her first suggestion conflicted with a prior engagement already on Chung’s calendar, she used her powers and a sacred pendant to “visualise” another option: 1 June.
Understanding the animal mind... through music
Understanding the animal mind... through music
Do animals respond to music? And, if so, what could it tell us about their personalities?
Related Cats, memes and internet schemesLaurel Braitman, a science historian and author, has taken the slightly surreal step of organising live music in zoos to try to help answer those questions.
She says the events have begun to shed light on the individuality of different animals.
She tells BBC Future how she envisions a future where we understand what is going on in an animal’s head, something she says throws up questions about our treatment of different species.
If you would like to comment on this article or anything else you have seen on Future, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.
Superstitious Fund: Too mystic to fail
Superstitious Fund: Too mystic to fail
It all sounds rather ridiculous, until you discover that Sid and the Superstitious Fund illuminate some disquieting truths. On the one hand, magical thinking is, of course, everywhere: unlucky numbers; the dangers of Friday the 13th; boosted birth rates in the year of the dragon; holding one’s breath when driving past a cemetery; black cats, rabbit’s feet, horoscopes, crossed fingers, lucky underwear, and every palm reader, healer, mystic, shaman, soothsayer and woo-woo yoga instructor from New York to New Guinea.
But the last thing you want is the steward of your money making decisions based on slight vibrations in the cosmos. When it comes to matters financial, we’re all business, right?
Hardly. A generation of behavioural economics research has demonstrated that standard predictions of how we treat and handle money have woefully misread Homo sapiens. Rational we are not.
For example, a tax incorporated into a price tag on supermarket shelves makes us more frugal, whereas an equivalent tax added at checkout is virtually ignored. We also spend the same money differently depending on whether it’s labelled credit, rebate, or bonus, and our willingness to pay for stuff is heavily influenced by the payment method. One recent article listed eleven ways in which consumers behave irrationally when confronted with maths. There are probably more. When it comes to moo-la, the technical term for us is “cuckoo”.
Economic impact
Inconsistencies born from biases and tricks of the mind are one thing; superstition is another. The idea of a “Friday 13th effect” came to prominence thanks to a 1987 study by Robert Kolb and Ricardo Rodriguez, two finance professors at the University of Miami, who found that you are more likely to lose in the stock market on that day, as opposed to a “normal” Friday. Their findings have since been disputed by other stock market studies, but Kolb and Rodriguez say the paper was published tongue-in-cheek. Their point was not that the day itself had an effect, it was to illustrate how superstition has an effect on our behaviour.
These beliefs have a massive, and largely negative, impact on the economy –boom times for fortune tellers notwithstanding. Chung has estimated that Friday the 13th costs the US alone hundreds of millions of dollars, due not only to all those elevators and buildings indicating the absence of a 13th floor, but also lost revenue due to shortened vacations and purchases bypassed because of that unlucky date. Realtors in Hong Kong have reported that apartments deemed haunted might sell for as little as 40% of what a comparable un-haunted apartment might bring in.
According to a recent Wall Street Journal article, the majority of stock traders in Shanghai are not bankers pursuing value based on market analysis, but everyday individuals who “gamble on numerical superstitions, with little understanding of concepts from the financial arena.” Not that those who have mastered said “concepts” have necessarily done great things for anyone of late. “Given the failure of all these sophisticated mathematical models that have turned geniuses into morons over the years,” says Marc Hochstein, executive editor of the financial services daily American Banker, “it’ll be interesting to see how a model [like Sid] that intentionally has no rhyme or reason performs.”
Three years ago, a finance professor in Copenhagen looked at 80 years worth of data from the New York Stock Exchange, S&P 500, the Dow Jones Composite Average, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and tried to determine whether the 362 solar and lunar eclipses that took place over that time period affected investment decisions and the economy. “[T]he stock market is an ideal breeding ground for superstition,” wrote Gabriele Lepori, who found below-average returns during times of “negative superstitious events”, like eclipses.
