MAAJABU YA MTANDAONI,BOFYA HAPO CHINI HUTAAMINI MACHO YAKO
Rais Donald Trump amsifu magufuli kwa utendaji kazi uliotukuka kwa watanzania.
Posted by Irene Raymond on Saturday, March 11, 2017
SOURCES TANZAGIZA,TBC AND MANGE KIMAMBI.
Smartphones and Mobile Phone
Technology.
"Text messages are like little
sugar rushes of contact, postcards from the people's cyberspace, the real
reason God gave us thumbs and the capacity for language"
The history out
- The first official mobile phone used in Sweden by the Swedish police in 1946; could make 6 phone calls before car's battery was drained
- development of first cell phone (creation of towers/cells at Bell Labs in 1947
- FCC?
- 1983 Motorola DynaTAC 8000X made commercially available: 2 lbs, $3,500
- 1991 Motorola MicroTac Lite the lightest phone: $1,000
- 2nd generation: from the early 1990's
- smaller, better batteries, huge increase in popularity
- 3rd generation: include 2 Megabits of maximum data rate indoors and 384 kbits for outdoor use
- include internet access and other modern innovations
- 1993 IBM developed first smartphone, Simon
- Smartphones provide portable use of IT
- Entertainment Uses:
games, music (mp3 player), books (e-book), and digital television broadcast
- Social Uses: phone call, text message, wireless internet (access to e-mail, social networking websites)
- Organization Uses: calendar, finance manager, address book, storage for data.
- Hospital Uses: used to view image (x-ray, MRI, etc).
means of communication between nurses and clinicians.
- Museum Uses: audio guide is provided through cell phones.
- China: mobile learning provides access to lectures and test preps.
Mobile technology is key to keeping in touch in the modern world.
Text messaging
Smart Phones aren't only used for communication, but for organizing schedules, jotting down notes, playing music, games, checking the weather, and other applications.
TAFADHALI SHARE HABARI HII KWA RAFIKI ZAKO HAPO CHINI ILI IWAFIKIE NA WENGINE PIA
Pig industry sustains livelihoods of many families in Kenya. Pig rearing has been one of wellestablishedindustry
in Kenya following growing export markets and increasing number of health
conscious consumers. Pig production if efficiently managed has great potentials for increasing
protein supply in Kenya. Smallholder pig farms in Tharaka-Nithi County have been facing
varying and dismal profits. The main objective of this study will be to establish which
institutional arrangements and management factors affect the profit efficiency of small-holder
pig farmers in Tharaka-Nithi County. A multi-stage purposive sampling technique will be
adopted to collect cross sectional data of eighty (80) smallholder pig farmers in Maara
Constituency by the use of semi-structured interview schedules. The work will employ Data
Envelopment Analysis to come up with profit efficiency rankings among the farmers and
stochastic frontier profit function will be used to analyze the factors that affect profit efficiency.
The data will be processed using STATA and DEA Frontier packages. The findings could be
useful to the stakeholders of the pig industry sub sector to formulate policies pertaining to pig
enterprise inputs, marketing issues and financial products and also can establish benchmarks
which can be used as a package for enhancing and stabilizing profit efficiencies of smallholder
pig farmers which in turn could help improve the Kenya economy.
An Overview of Livestock Sub-sector in Kenya Perspectives, Opportunities and Innovations for Market Access for Market Access for Pastoral Producers Recent statistics point that the livestock sub-sector in Kenya accounts for approximately 10% of the National Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This is 30% of the agricultural GDP. It employs about 50% of the national agricultural workforce and about 90% of the ASAL workforce. 95% of ASAL household income comes from this sub-sector. This is despite the fact that the sector receives only 1 % of the total annual budget allocation. The livestock resource base is estimated at 60 million units comprising of 29 million indigenous and exotic chicken, 10 million beef cattle, 3 million dairy and dairy crosses, 9 million goats, 7 million sheep, 0.8 mi camels, 0.52 mi donkeys and 0.3 million pigs. (Strategy for Revitalizing Agriculture (SRA) 2003) Kenya is broadly self-sufficient in most livestock products but is a net importer of red meat mostly inform of on-the-hoof animals trekked across the porous boundaries of neighbouring countries- Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, Uganda and Tanzania. Livestock supply in Kenya results from a complex set of interactions between Kenya and its neighbours and the traditional Middle East market and their respective livestock populations, demand and market prices. Kenya is part of a regional market where livestock flow according to markets and price differentials in a liberalized system throughout the region as a whole and where Nairobi represents a focus of demand for the region Supply of red-meat from domestic cattle, shoats and camels falls short of demand, and is almost permanently augmented by a traditional livestock trade drawn in from neighbouring countries, especially Somalia, Tanzania, Sudan and Ethiopia in varying quantities according to demand, which maintains a supply/demand
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