
Som@li
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Everything posted by Som@li
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^why not now, or there is no freedom of speach?
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There is nothing taboo about work, Spoon feeding is slowly killing thier creativity. Hardwork is the way to go.
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^as long as u do behind doors, it is acceptable there.
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^Qarxis.com
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waryaa there is no "budcad" in laasqoray
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Buuxo, watchout of any suspisious gift, madiido weeye waxa lagu soo diray.
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Delegation Record for .SO (Country-code top-level domain designated for Somalia) Sponsoring Organisation Ministry of Post and Telecommunications Mogadishu Somalia Administrative Contact Mr. Ahmed M Aden Ministry of Post and Telecommunications Mogadishu Somalia Email: minpostel_somalia@ho tmail.com Voice: +252 1 587 1200 Fax: +252 1 231 599 Technical Contact SO-Tech Support International Telecommunication Union Place des Nations Geneva 1211 Switzerland Email: so-tech@itu.int Voice: +41 22 730 5554 Fax: +41 22 730 5337
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Originally posted by Duufaan: at least they know, .com is only for commercial purpose but .net is not for organisations use Actually it should be .gov.so and Somalia finaly succeeded in gettin .so domain. Guys, Stop critizing, and atleast enjoy the new website, the whole Somali infrastructure has collapsed and it will take years to sort everything out. Somalia government seeks control of .so domain The interim government of Somalia has applied to the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) seeking to regain control of the .so domain. The government approached the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) for help in regaining control of the domain, which has a registered office in the U.S. but is currently not operational. The Importance of Network Time Synchronization: Download nowAs the ITU does not run the registries, the organization has enlisted Jim Reid, founder of RTFM, to help Somalia transfer control of the domain to its Telecommunications Ministry. "The process could take days, weeks or months; it depends on the workload of IANA staff," Reid said It is unlikely that IANA will ignore a request from a sovereign government," he noted. "The organization in the U.S. will have to prove that it has permission from the Somali government to run the domain." In reviving the domain operations, Reid said he has spoken with friends and has managed to get secondary name servers scattered around the world to host for at least two years until the situation is assessed. The servers are hosted in Australia, Canada, Japan, Singapore, Sweden and the U.S. Somalia has been torn by civil war for 17 years, so there is no Internet Society chapter in the country. Ahmed Ugas, chairman of the Somali ICT Development Association, recognized that the country faces communication challenges but noted that it is on the path of recovery. "This is good progress," Ugas said of Reid's work. "It is important that the domain gets operational; then organizations can start using it." The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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this is it guys, they are good if they got this much together Consipiracy, Donate some of your time ,skills, and help them out, pro bono,I know you could help instead of critizing them.
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new website has been launched by the Somali government to promote and inform about its policies to the public and the world. The site of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) of Somalia, www.tfgsomalia.com represents the only media for the beleaguered government to propagate itself to its people and its partners around the world The site, slick and glossy as it is, still remains under construction with much of its links not yet operational. But Minister of information Farhan Mohamoud promises the site will soon improve. The website "is still under constant improvement in terms of contents, context and design", said the minister in an email sent to the media. The Somali government, which has been beset by persistent deadly insurgency since its establishment, does not have radio or television station or newspapers to compete with the dozen independent radio and televisions stations as well as newspapers in Mogadishu. The opposition groups have their own sites where they propagate attacks on the Somali government forces and African Union peacekeepers as well as their ideology. The official government site, available both in Somali and English, has sections about the president, the prime minister, the parliament as well as latest news. There are also links to the various government ministries along with a section on official government documents, such as the Transitional Federal Charter of the current government. Source: Xinhua
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^Waryaa ma mid baa ku been guurtay? Ninka dila abesee ubadkeeda daystaa daajee rabaystaa dib u qoomameeyee xawiyo dirkeeduna isma darajo dhamaan waxad ii dul joogtaa doolaalo weyee dan kalaad u jeedaa day dayo asaagey
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Potential Successes: Somali receive highest rankings!
Som@li replied to Abu-Salman's topic in General
With all these available, few SOmalis enjoy seafood. I say "Cuna malayga" -
Naxar,and I know Che on facebook, what is ur name there?
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It is not me, Oops,is Naxar after terrorists? who are u working mate?
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I know him, he is active member ,specially in politics but can't disclose his identity.
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8 years and no change! atleast tribalism I reckon is slowly dissappearing, and now more into religious conflict.
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Tuujiye meesha ma bajaq buu ka soo doontay
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lol, rageedi, where can i find this book?
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They want to scare and don't want change , that is all. Obama is already softing on issues of Health Care.
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It was said to signal the end of time; the Euphrates is running dry, reports Campbell Robertson from Jubaish in Iraq. "MAAKU mai!" shout the reed gatherers, holding up their rusty sickles to passing boats. "There is no water!" The Euphrates is drying up; strangled by Iraq's neighbours, Turkey and Syria, a two-year drought and years of misuse by farmers. The shrinking of the Euphrates, a river so crucial to the birth of civilisation that the Book of Revelation prophesied its drying up as a sign of the end of time, has decimated farms along its banks, leaving fishermen impoverished and depleting riverside towns as people flee to the cities looking for work. Along the river, rice and wheat fields have turned to baked dirt. Canals have dwindled to shallow streams, and fishing boats sit on dry land. "The old men say it's the worst they remember," said Sayid Diyia, a 34-year-old fisherman in Hindiya, sitting in a riverside cafe full of his idle colleagues. "I'm depending on God's blessings." The drought is widespread in Iraq. The area sown with wheat and barley in the rain-fed north is down roughly 95 per cent from the usual and the date palm and citrus orchards of the east are parched. But drought is only part of what is choking the Euphrates. The most frequently cited culprits are the Turkish and Syrian governments. There are at least seven dams on the Euphrates in Turkey and Syria, according to Iraqi water officials, and with no treaties or agreements, the Iraqi Government is reduced to begging its neighbours for water. Along the river, there is no shortage of resentment at the Turks and Syrians. But there is also resentment at the Americans, Kurds, Iranians and the Iraqi Government, all of whom are blamed. Scarcity makes foes of everyone. On a scorching morning in Diwaniya, Bashia Mohammed, 60, was working in a drainage pool by the highway gathering salt, her family's only source of income now that its rice farm has dried up. But the dead farm was not the real crisis. "There's no water in the river that we drink from," she said, referring to a channel that flows from the Euphrates. "It's now totally dry, and it contains sewage water. They dig wells but sometimes the water just cuts out and we have to drink from the river. All my kids are sick because of the water." In the south-east, where the Euphrates nears the end of its 2785-kilometre journey and mingles with the less salty waters of the Tigris before emptying into the Persian Gulf, the situation is grave. The marshes there that were intentionally reflooded in 2003, rescuing the ancient culture of the marsh Arabs, are drying up again. Sheep graze on land in the middle of the river. "Next winter will be the final chance," said Hashem Hilead Shehi, a 73-year-old farmer who lives in a bone-dry village west of the marshes. "If we are not able to plant, then all of the families will leave." NEW YORK TIMES
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so what are u doing with pirates? business?