Showing posts with label iddaru mogullu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iddaru mogullu. Show all posts

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Sundhari Katha Six


The ability to customise software is critical to allow an organisation to continue to improve their business processes, but how does a company afford to pay for such customisations,One of the side effects of allowing any user access to the source code is that the cost of acquiring the software in the first instance is massively reduced. In most cases the source code is available for no cost. This enables the user to divert resources normally allocated to pay software license fees into enhancing the software.

Madhu kamakeli


Stetson University College of Law, founded in 1900, is Florida's first law school. Located in Gulfport, FL, it also has a campus in Tampa, FL. The law school occupies a historic 1920s resort hotel, the Rolyat.The College of Law is accredited by the American Bar Association and has been a member of the Association of American Law Schools .

Monday, December 20, 2010

Kushee ga Denanu Rendu


The American University of Nigeria opened its doors to its first students in 2005. Founded by the former vice president of Nigeria, Atiku Abubakar, it is located in north-eastern Nigeria in Yola, the state capital of Adamawa state, the vice president’s home town. Having benefited from the U.S. system of instruction as a young man, Abubakar sought to make this style of education — emphasizing critical thinking, small classes, student participation, problem-solving, a US-style general education program, and an American-trained faculty — available to all qualified young people of Nigeria and, increasingly, to the rest of the world.

Ravika Nine


The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine , England, was founded on 12 November 1898, by a donation from Sir Alfred Lewis Jones, a Liverpool Shipowner. The donation of £350 created the first school of its kind in the world. The school has made many contributions to tropical medicine especially in identifying the vector for malaria, for which Sir Ronald Ross won the first British Nobel Prize in 1902. Its focus today is on the control of diseases caused by poverty.