Misplaced Lens Cap
todays bird
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Show & Tell

if i look back, i am lost
Noah Kahan

Origami Around

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YOU ARE THE REASON

ellievsbear
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

oozey mess
ojovivo
KIROKAZE

Kiana Khansmith
will byers stan first human second
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

@theartofmadeline

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@yinkawrites
African 3G Subscriptions to Reach 210m by 2015 - ABI
Press Release:
African 3G Subscriptions to Reach 210 Million by the End of 2015
SINGAPORE - September 03, 2013
At the end of 2Q-2013, the total subscriptions in Africa reached 863 millionâa strong growth of 9.3% year-on-year (YoY), which is substantially more robust than other regions around the world. Africaâs growth trajectory will continue up to 2018, with a CAGR of 6.6%, to reach 1.25 billion. âWhatâs more, due to the lower comparative 3G penetration of 13.8% in Africa at the end of 2013, ABI Research forecasts that Africa 3G subscriptions will grow rapidly from 114 million in 2013 to 210 million by 2015,â comments Marina Lu, research associate at ABI Research.
While the vast majority of African countries are still in the process of extending and enhancing their 3G networks, some major African markets, such as South Africa, Ghana, and Nigeria have launched 4G networks, notching up 0.2 million LTE subscriptions by the end of Q2-2013. âMobile voice revenues are still a key revenue generator for African mobile operators but the growing momentum behind mobile data services is providing a wider stimulus for entrepreneurship, healthcare, and just as crucially, education,â adds Jake Saunders, VP and practice director of core forecasting. âBy the end of 2018, Africa is expected to gain 51.2 million LTE subscriptions, demonstrating a CAGR of 118%.â
In terms of growth in African mobile subscriptions by carrier, Nigeria is proving to be the market to be in. MTN Nigeria is not only the fastest growing mobile operator in Africa but also the largest. Remarkably, the operator increased its subscriber base by 10 million YoY, to reach 53 million. This growth in adoptions is a result of significant tariff reductions made in Q3-2012 that made it substantially more affordable for low income end-users to take up mobile phone services. The second and the third fastest growing mobile operators in Africa were also based in Nigeria: Zain Nigeria, 5.4 million YoY; and EMTS with subscription growth of 2.9 million.
ABI Researchâs quarterly updated âMiddle East and Africa Mobile Subscriberâ Market Data, profiles mobile subscriber adoption by operator, country, technology, device type, and subscriber market-share. Detailed market trends and market forecast information for key regions and countries around the globe are provided.
These findings are part of ABI Researchâs Mobile Subscribers Research Service.
ABI Research provides in-depth analysis and quantitative forecasting of trends in global connectivity and other emerging technologies. From offices in North America, Europe and Asia, ABI Researchâs worldwide team of experts advises thousands of decision makers through 70+ research and advisory services. Est. 1990.  For more information visit www.abiresearch.com, or call +1.516.624.2500.
African Facebook users in 2013
http://www.rjr.ru.ac.za/rjrpdf/rjr_no33/Youth_and_Social_media_in_Nigeria.pdf
@YinkaWrites hosting the Second Screen and Social TV panel during SocialMediaWeek
I haven't read this yet but the headline has pulled me right because I instinctively know this is right. The data geeks will inherit the earth, mark my sorry word...
Checklist for being a ârealâ journalist from StuffJournalistslike.com
Link to original article here:
Think that j-school degree and a desk in a newsroom is all you need to call yourself a journalist? Think again. Journalists are made on deadlines. Hereâs my checklist to see if you are truly a journalist.
Written a 15-inch story in 30 minutes
Corrected a loved oneâs grammar in a greeting card
Replaced one of the major food groups with coffee
Own your own police scanner
Eat in your car more often than you do at a table
Gotten fired/laid off for no good reason
Forgotten what itâs like to have the weekend off
Can no longer read a newspaper without scanning for typos and errors
Learned that being told to âfuck off â and âgo to hellâ is part of the job
Woke in a cold sweat thinking you forgot to change the date on A1
Spend your down time coming up with the perfect lede
Slept in your car and not because you were too drunk to drive home
Found that fine line between harassment and persistence
If you needed bail, the first person you would call would be your editor
You analyze city council meetings the way sportscasters break down Monday night football
You think itâs normal to work 16 hours a day for 8 hours pay
Have conducted a phone interview while completely naked
Can write an entire interview on a cocktail napkin
Threatened to quit over an editorial decision
You couldnât imagine doing anything else
This was a funny one with Peter Kafka, of AllThingsDigital riffing off Verizon CEO Lowell McAdams comments that our exclusive was just "people who like to blog". I tried joking about this on the Reuters blog but Kafka does a much better job.
Summits are tough to organize because news never stops. But they can be fun when we have good speakers in the room, or at least entertaining speakers...some great execs this year thanks to colleagues' efforts and some excellent stories.
I love London, itâs a great city but so much of our business is here now - Daniel Ek, Spotify founder in New York
http://reut.rs/sroE2O
@Spotify platform launch: Sean Parker, Fred Davis, Ken Parks plus Daniel Ek and @YinkaWrites (in bkgrd) pic
Pic courtesy: CNET (Greg Sandoval)