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Tuesday 9 December 2014

McKwamz Releases New COMEDYVideo. WATCH!


 Few months ago, the popular comedian tweeted about his upcoming comedy video Well, here it is.
 In this rib cracking video, it shows McKwamz caught up in a LOBATAN Situation and how he manage to escape.
Rated as one of the fastest rising Master of Ceremony (MCs) and comedian in South West Nigeria, MCKwamz is one act that can turn a gloomy face to shine in just a few seconds.
The co-host to one of Ibadan longest running weekly show “Laugh n’ Dance” is a popular figure in shows and events in Ibadan.

You can download the video or simply play it; your choice. Just be prepared to “Run Away” with laughter.
McKwamz, Popularly called “Omo Iya Elewa” put pepper is an embodiment of talent and a fashionista.
Click To Watch

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Friday 14 November 2014

Microsoft finally fusing Yammer-Office 365 sign-on systems


Well, that took longer than expected. Although Microsoft began bundling Yammer with Office 365 shortly after acquiring the enterprise social networking (ESN) startup in mid-2012, users so far have had to log in separately to both suites, an inconvenience that will soon end. Microsoft will start to roll out single sign on for Office 365 and Yammernext month, and expects to finish by March of next year, the company said Thursday. Microsoft has been progressively linking Yammer in various ways with Office 365 components like SharePoint and with other product families like Dynamics, but this extremely obvious point of integration has been a long time coming. In fact, in timetables provided last year, Microsoft indicated its intention to deliver this single sign-on capability before the end of 2013. It's not clear what has been the cause of the delay. Maybe Microsoft underestimated the technology complexity of tying Office 365 and Yammer under a common sign-on system. Perhaps a decision was made to move this down the list of priorities. At any rate, it's not ideal that this feature has taken so long to be delivered. ESN systems like Yammer have to prove extremely user friendly in order to gain traction among employees. These products try to replicate the experience of using consumer social media services like Facebook and Twitter, but adapted for workplace communication and collaboration. As has been documented multiple times in recent years by research surveys, many ESN implementations fail to yield their expected results due to lack of usage. To incorporate ESN systems into their daily workflow, employees need to alter the way they communicate and collaborate, shifting tasks away from email and doing them instead in ESN discussion forums, activity streams, wikis, microblogs, shared documents and the like. Any obvious obstacles -- such as having to log into the ESN system separately -- should be removed as soon as possible to increase the chances it will be adopted by a critical mass of employees. Juan Carlos Perez covers enterprise communication/collaboration suites, operating systems, browsers and general technology breaking news forThe IDG News Service. Follow Juan on Twitter at @JuanCPerez IDG. Juan Carlos Perez—Assistant News Editor
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Wednesday 12 November 2014

Now that you mention it, there IS one more thing...


Help desk pilot fish gets a call from a remote office: Users are having problems getting access to the local server. "I tried to remote into the server, but could not establish a connection," says fish. "I pinged the server and it responded. I went to a secondary remote connection and it also failed. "I asked the office manager, the one who reported the problem, to go to the server closet and see if the server was on. She reported back that she couldn't tell if it was on." Fish knows that IT did a cyclical hardware replacement just the week before, so he figures the power indicator light isn't where the old one was, and that's why the office manager can't find it. A PC tech is already enroute to that office for a scheduled site visit, so fish calls the tech and asks him to go immediately to the server closet upon his arrival. Then fish tells the office manager that the tech will check out the server when he arrives. Thirty minutes later, tech calls fish back -- and says the server closet is full of smoke, smells very acrid, and every now and then a flash of orange light appears from the back of the server. Fish tells tech to pull the power cords and call the server vendor's tech support. Then fish calls the office manager again and explains the situation -- and asks if there was smoke in the room when she went in to look for the power light on the server.
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Snapchat to ask users to stop using unauthorized apps


Snapchat will ask users to stop using unauthorized apps after the compromise of an app that offered to save snaps led to questions about the security of the photo and video messaging application itself. The company, whose claim to fame is that it deletes content from its own servers and the Snapchat app on mobile devicesafter it is viewed by recipients, has also warned previously that any application that isn't from the company but claims to offer Snapchat services violates its terms of use and cannot be trusted. Starting Tuesday, Snapchat will notify its userswhen it's detected that they may be using third-party apps, according to a blog post. It will ask those users to change their password and stop using unauthorized apps. "We've enjoyed some of the ways that developers have tried to make Snapchat better," the company said in the blog post. "Unfortunately, some developers build services that trick Snapchatters and compromise their accounts." Last month, Snapsaved.c om, the developer of an application that let users save snaps sent on Snapchat, said it had been hacked, after reports that images were leaked."SnapChat has not been hacked, and these images do not originate from their database," it said in a Facebook post. The breach affected 500MB of images but no personal information, according to Snapsaved.
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