Thursday 3 March 2016

💬WhatsApp💬WhatsApp has just launched document sharing.

New❗️: How to Share a Document on 💬WhatsApp
💬WhatsApp has just launched document sharing. For now, only PDF documents can be shared. Here's how to get started:Get the upgraded WhatsApp version. WhatsApp is rolling out the update via its servers, so you will be automatically updated within the next couple of days. If you're not, download the latest version of WhatsApp from your app store. Bear in mind, the feature only works when you and the recipient of the document both are using the updated version of WhatsApp.<\br>For  Android phones:  Launch WhatsApp   Tap on an ongoing conversation in the Chats tab to open an existing thread  To top left of your chat screen there's a paperclip icon. Click on it  You'll see 6 icons, click on the first one titled "Document" (purple)  If the recipient has not yet updated their WhatsApp version , a message will come up  If the recipient has upgraded you'll be presented with a list of PDF documents on your mobile device to select from  Select one by tapping on it, then press send.  ✅Done❗️<\br>For 🍏Apple phones:  Launch WhatsApp  Tap on an ongoing conversation in the Chats tab to open an existing thread  To bottom right of your chat screen there's an arrow in a circle icon. Click on it  You'll see 5 options, click on "Share Document"  If the recipient has not yet updated their WhatsApp version , a message will come up  If the recipient has upgraded you'll be presented with a list of PDF documents on your mobile device to select from  Select one by tapping on it, then press send.  ✅Done❗️

Tuesday 1 March 2016

NEW INVENTION: SCIENTISTS MAKES NEW CONDOMS CALLED ‘PANT CONDOMS’ (SEE PHOTOS)

NEW INVENTION: SCIENTISTS MAKES NEW CONDOMS CALLED ‘PANT CONDOMS’ (SEE PHOTOS)
Sweden Scientists has come out with new condoms  for those who worry about condoms coming off during S.ex.
The new condom is called pant condom which they say gives 100% protection against all STI’s and prevents unwanted pregnancy. See photo of a man wearing one below:

Wednesday 17 February 2016

How to get airtel 3gb for #1000

How to get airtel 3gb for #1000

Just dial *431# and you are good to go.

To check your balance, dial *140#. Which will last you for 30 days.

Does it work on all devices?
Yes, it works on all device.

Now you have an option to either go for Glo 3GB for N1k or Airtel 3GB for 1K. make your choice.

Note
This is different from their existing Blackberry plan of N1,000 3GB which only works on Blackberry devices. This is kind of new and you don’t need to worry about eligibility stuff because even a new born
baby is eligible to subscribe to this plan.

Friday 12 February 2016

MTN Introduced Unlimited Daily Data Plan For Just N100

MTN Introduced Unlimited Daily Data Plan For Just N100

Globacom gained the highest number of internet users in September 2015 with over a million new internet users on its network and as a result of that, NCC Declares GLO As Best Network In New Internet Subscription, it seems MTN Nigeria are jealous this and want to start work toward winning the 2016 award In New Internet Subscription. MTN has decided to offer something interesting. For those who really want to download heavy files, movie lovers, games addicted, smartphone and system updating, apps, music, etc. MTN now secretly unleashed two different 24hrs unlimited data plan, one goes for N100 and the second one goes for N150, but I don't no different between the two plans yet, because I haven't give any of them trial.

If the plan works as expected, it should among of the best plan ever, but the worst part of it, not all MTN SIMs supported. It is for those who are eligible.

To Know If Your Sim is Eligible
For N100, dial *567*58#and reply with 1 to activate it if you are eligible. 
For N150, dial *567*59# and reply with 1 to activate it if you are eligible.

I wish you the best of luck with your MTN Sim for this cheapest plan. Make sure you first of all dial the code before you load the money to know if your sim is eligible or not. Try it and tell us your experience viathe comment box.

Friday 5 February 2016

Google Cardboard saves baby's life

Google Cardboard saves baby's life

    Teegan Lexcen was born with a heart and lung defect so unusual that doctors had never seen it before
    Her parents say their doctors in Minnesota told them there was nothing they could do to save Teegan's life
    But surgery on Teegan's birth defect was made possible by a $20 piece of virtual reality technology.

A toy-like cardboard contraption that sells for less than $20 online has helped save the life of a baby who was so sick that doctors told her parents to take her home to die.

Google Cardboard looks like a set of big square goggles. Stick your iPhone inside and with the right app, you can see images in three-dimensional virtual reality.

Doctors at Nicklaus Childrenʼs Hospital in Miami used the device to map out an operation they say they couldnʼt have envisioned otherwise.

On Wednesday, four weeks after her surgery, baby Teegan was taken off a ventilator and is breathing on her own. Doctors expect her to go home within the next two weeks and make a full recovery.

"It was mind-blowing," says Cassidy Lexcen, the babyʼs mother. "To see this little cardboard box and a phone, and to think this is what saved our daughterʼs life."

Hereʼs how it was done:

Missing one lung and half a heart

Teegan Lexcen was born in August with a heart and lung defect so unusual that doctors had never seen it before. She has only one lung, and almost all of left half of her heart is missing.

Her parents, Cassidy and Chad Lexcen, say their doctors in Minnesota told them there was nothing they could do. Soon after she was born, they sent her home with a hospice nurse and medications to make her as comfortable as possible.

Two months later, when Teegan was still alive, her parents wondered whether the doctors had been right. They started searching for a second opinion.

The Lexcens found out that a friend of a friend of a friend was a nurse in a cardiac intensive care unit in Boston. They made contact, and doctors asked them to send images of Teeganʼs heart taken at the Minnesota hospital.

Elated, the Lexcens sent the images to Boston. Two weeks passed and they didnʼt hear anything. Cassidy sent an email, politely reminding them that time was of the essence. She received an apologetic note back, saying there had been a communications glitch, and someone would get back to her soon.

The Lexcens knew that soon might not be soon enough. Teegan has a twin sister, Riley, who was growing steadily, while Teegan stayed tiny. It was a constant reminder of how poorly her heart was working.

"I felt like we were racing against the clock," Cassidy said.

It was around that time that Chadʼs sister found an article entitled "The 20 Most Innovative Pediatric Surgeons Alive Today."

No. 3 was Dr. Redmond Burke, the chief of cardiovascular surgery at Nicklaus Childrenʼs Hospital in Miami.

Chadʼs sister reached out and heard back immediately. Please send images immediately, a nurse told her. Weʼll see what we can do.

A broken 3-D printer comes to the rescue

Three times a week, 30 cardiac doctors and nurses sit in a room at Nicklaus Childrenʼs Hospital and discuss the treatment road maps for their patients and for children who might become their patients.

"The arc of peopleʼs lives get determined in these conferences," Burke said.

On a Wednesday morning in November, they looked at pictures of Teeganʼs heart.

Like the doctors in Minnesota, the doctors in Miami had never seen a child who was missing a lung and nearly half a heart. They threw out ideas about possible surgeries to help her. No one had a definitive plan. Some were skeptical that they could do anything.

Burke asked Dr. Juan Carlos Muniz, a pediatric cardiologist who specializes in imaging, to make a 3-D model of Teeganʼs heart. It had helped in complicated cases before.

A few hours later, Muniz reported bad news: Their 3-D printer was broken. "Technology always goes on the fritz at the worst possible time," he lamented.
Doctors in Minnesota thought there was no operation available to save Teegan (left) and sent her home to die.

But then a new team of surgeons at Nicklaus Children's Hospital in Miami created a 3-D virtual reality image of Teegan's heart using a Google Cardboard app. &quot;We said, -"Wait a second. We can figure this out"; said Dr. Anthony Rossi.

Doctors in Minnesota thought there was no operation available to save Teegan (left) and sent her home to die.

Teegan ahead of her heart surgery operation.

Teegan in the cardiac intensive care unit after her operation.

Teegan recovering at Nicklaus Children's Hospital in Miami.

Teegan, left, and Riley Lexcen were born in August.

Teegan was born with only one lung and half of a heart.

But then a new team of surgeons at Nicklaus Children's Hospital in Miami created a 3-D virtual reality image of Teegan's heart using a Google Cardboard app. &quot;We said, "Wait a second. We can figure this out" ; said Dr. Anthony Rossi.

Doctors in Minnesota thought there was no operation available to save Teegan (left) and sent her home to die.

But it turned out to be the best possible time, because it forced Muniz to come up with an option that worked better.

Heʼd had been chatting with Dr. David Ezon, a pediatric cardiologist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, about using virtual reality -- mainly used for playing video games -- for childrenʼs hearts.

After that discussion, Muniz bought a Google cardboard and had been playing with it in his office. With the broken printer, now was the time to use it for real, he decided.

Using an app called Sketchfab, Muniz downloaded images of Teegan's heart onto his iPhone and showed them to Burke.

They were similar, yet different from 3-D images theyʼd been using on computer screens. With the goggles, it was possible to move around and see the heart from every angle -- to almost be inside the heart checking out its structure.

Burke looked through the Google Cardboard, and he could visualize what he could do to fix Teeganʼs heart.

Making the difference between life and death

On December 10, 4-month-old Teegan lay on an operating table in Miami.

The first challenge was how to get to her heart. Normally, the heart is in the center of the chest, and to access it doctors make whatʼs called a midline incision, cutting from the top to the bottom of the breastbone.

But Teeganʼs heart wasnʼt normal. It was far to the left side of her chest. Before using Google cardboard, Burke feared he would have to make whatʼs called a clamshell incision, which is a midline incision plus another cut going from the center of her chest all the way to the left side.

"Itʼs massive trauma to a baby -- itʼs just horrendous," Burke said.

He was worried Teegan wouldnʼt survive it. "She was dwindling away. Sheʼd been slowly dying for three months," he said.

Thatʼs where Google Cardboard proved advantageous over 3-D printing. The printer would have given Burke just her heart but to access her heart surgically, he needed to be able to visualize it in context with her ribcage and other structures.

With the use of the virtual image, Burke figured out a way to do just the normal midline incision and spare her the dreaded clamshell cut.

Once he was inside her chest, he says Google Cardboard helped him out again.

A normal heart has two ventricles. The right one supplies blood to the lungs, and the left one supplies blood to the rest of the body.

But Teegan has only a right ventricle. It had been doing the work of both, but it couldnʼt do it for much longer. "The right ventricle is the wimpier, weaker ventricle, and if ventricles could talk, it would say ʼI canʼt do this. Iʼm not designed for this job,ʼ " Burke said.

The usual surgeries on children with only one ventricle wouldnʼt work on Teegan because of her unique defects and anatomy. Using the virtual image, Burke invented a new surgery, shoring up and rerouting her one ventricle so it could do the work of both ventricles long term.

Figuring all this out was something he had to do before he actually opened her up -- every minute wasted in the operating room trying to map out a plan puts a baby at higher risk for heart and brain damage.

The night before Teeganʼs surgery, Burke lay in bed imagining her heart based on the Google Cardboard image, mapping out the precise steps he would take in the operating room.

When he opened her up the next day, her heart was exactly the same as the image. He proceeded with no surprises. "Sometimes thatʼs what makes the difference between life and death," he said.

On Wednesday, four weeks after her surgery, Teegan was taken off a ventilator and is breathing on her own. Doctors expect her to go home within the next two weeks and make a full recovery

Thursday 31 December 2015

Glo Introduced Night and Weekend Plans - 1GB For N200 And 3GB For N500

Glo Introduced Night and Weekend Plans - 1GB For N200 And 3GB For N500

Weekend data plan started by Airtel, follow by MTN, but MTN weekend plans was not last at all, I don't know the reason why MTN somehow canceled their own. Globacom has now joined the race by launching their own weekends data bundle for their subscribers. It seems this Glo weekend plan are more ok than the Airtel weekend bundle, because you're not only limited to weekends, it has an extra 7Nights extension. You can equally use it for 7Nights from 12.00am to 5.00am.

If you are such that always surf during the midnight, Globacom now offer you a cheap bundle to enjoy during the night, with just N200, you can get 1GB to use from 12.00am – 5.00am.

To Subscribe For Glo Weekend Plans

» Simply dial *777# and follow the prompt [Data Services » Buy Data » Night and Weekend plans], then select 1 for Night plan or 2 for weekend plan.

Both of the plans work for all devices ranging from Android Smartphones, iPhone/iPad, Laptops, BB10, Windows phone, Symbian/Java phones; you just name it.

This is an alternative plan, if you’re not eligible for Airtel weekend bundle of 1GB for N100, then Glo will surely welcome you to their weekend plan- 3GB for N500 plus 7Nights from 12am to 5am.