Friends connect


I heart FeedBurner

5 Responses to Friends connect

  1. JOHNSON says:

    The jAIM community has around a hundreds registered users, predominantly in
    emerging markets of Tz

    “This investment gets us ready for prime-time. 2010 will be a deciding year for
    mobile social network service as we see mobile operators in emerging markets
    leveraging their networks to drive data usage through value added services and
    applications. Opportunities and challenges of mobile technology ahead
    can offer tremendous help in growing jAIM to a global mobile brand.

    jAIM social network platform provides a compelling value proposition for
    telecom operators, application developers and users alike to benefit from the
    growth of the mobile internet, particularly in emerging markets. I look forward
    to supporting JAIM’s exceptional management team at the Board and through our
    extensive network in Tz (read less)
    The objectives are seeking for various professionals from different fields and from different organization as well as from international to have there contributions on how to overcome Poverty in developing Countries and how tostep dowm the consequences of economic financial crisis in the world but most focus to the developing countries inluding countries along African continents.Major Mobile Operator Deals Follow Tremendous User Growth Across Tanzania

    jAIM is a social networking platform… (read more)

  2. Katherine Donnelly says:

    IRELAND is close to the bottom of the world league when it comes to technology in the classroom.

    One in three Irish 15 year olds hasn’t used a computer in school, twice the average in the rest of the developed world, according to a 2006 survey.

    Another study in the same year put Ireland 19th out of 25 European countries on the use of technology in the classroom.

    And nothing has changed since then.

    The 2007 National Development Plan envisaged a €252m investment in Information and Communications Technology (ICT) in schools in the period to 2013.

    The proposed investment was the subject of no less than 17 statements from former education minister Mary Hanafin.

    A strategy group was set up to advise on spending priorities, and it reported that an “expansive and strategic investment in ICT in education is an investment in all our futures, and must now become a reality for Ireland”.

    But darkening economic clouds cast a shadow over the plan. Soon after his appointment in May 2008, Education Minister Batt O’Keeffe was forced to admit that “decisions on the timing and amount of expenditure in this area this year must be made in the overall context of the current budgetary situation”.

    Disadvantaged

    While there has been limited sponsorship from industry and some ICT support for disadvantaged schools from government agencies, most others have relied on parent donations, cake sales, raffles, golf classics and supermarket tokens for even the most basic ICT equipment.

    The delay in rolling out a national scheme is worrying educationalists, who say Irish pupils are being left behind in the digital revolution.

    A recent report on ICT in schools warned that years of under-investment meant that Ireland has been “leapfrogged” by other countries, and at a time of fierce global competition for hi-tech jobs.

    Last week, Mr O’Keeffe finally signalled that money for computers in schools may be on the way at the end of this year — but only at the expense of the school building programme.

    – Katherine Donnelly

  3. Pingback: Yankee Candles Wholesale

  4. Congrats jAIM Tanzania.

Leave a comment