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Online wealth.

I've got little to say about myself. I'm interested in wealth in a legal ways. I've spent time searching for how to make money online without failing in the hands of scammers, without selling Ebooks that will involve one taking illegal steps online too, and at it, I came across some. I'm not going to collect a dime and they're things one can do by oneself. You can get in touch with me and I'll show you. I'm from Nigeria, mentioning Nigeria, I know most of you'll have a kind of funny thoughts. We've got some honest as well as dis honest people everywhere. I'm also going to be posting motivational and inspirational stories to encourage people too. Before I go, I'll like to leave you with something. The least they paid is $1. You can get in touch vis the following numbers; cell phone number: +2348032739705, Blackberry pin: 216F1C6E my email is jsiahtoycom@gmail.com

AWS Battles Rivals: Advertising Campaign

Amazon Web Services has defeated IBM in a competition for lucrative federal contracts, threatened Microsoft's core businesses, and reshaped corporate technology. In the last few months, the pioneering cloud-computing unit of the online retail giant has taken a page from the playbook of some of its more traditional competitors: It started advertising. Ads have been splashed across billboards and in airport terminals, television spots and web videos, featuring a whiteboard full of sketches of software architecture and appeals to invent something using Amazon's collection of rented computing services. The advertising campaign, which bears the "Build On" tagline, represents a milestone in AWS' march from technology upstart to one of the major players in business software, technologists and marketers say. For many years, AWS didn't advertise, partly because it didn't have to. The service held a wide lead over the competition, and word-of-mouth was enough to...

Google Authenticator, a formidable layer of protection to your account.

​Google Authenticator is a free security app that can protect your accounts against password theft. It's easy to set up and can be used in a process called two-factor authentication (2FA) offered on popular social media services like Gmail, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, etc.  The app ( iOS / Android ) generates a random code used to verify your identity when you're logging into various services. The code can technically be sent to your phone via text message every time— but the Google Authenticator app provides an extra level of security.  SMS-based 2FA has a  known security flaw , and any devoted hacker can attempt to  socially engineer  an attack against your phone company. The Google Authenticator app eliminates the possibility of an SMS-based attack  using algorithms  to generate the codes on your phone. Here's how to set it up: 1. Download Google Authenticator from either the Apple App Store or the Android Google Play store. It's free. 2. Nex...