The Chase is getting way too terrifying as there are now eight Chasemates trying their darnedest to win the USD 300 000, some might even say the remaining Housemates can now smell the money as they near the end. Tonight a confused Beverly replaced Ethiopia’s Bimp with the gorgeous Dillish in an attempt to keep her pal in the game.
As much as the Nigerian beauty would have loved to have had a variety of people to choose from, she didn’t and therefore had to Nominate the person she saw fit for replacing Bimp. What this will mean on Eviction night remains a mystery.
Who can blame Beverly for throwing Dillish under the bus like that? Who would have made a better candidate you might ask. The game is so tight that every Housemate has to do what needs to be done and this week Dillish needs to experience life in the world of Nominations like the rest of them. You can hide under the radar until someone catches you out, this is the case for our beautiful Namibian queen.
Fortunately for Beverly’s man, South African dancer Angelo and Nigerian model Melvinnever got any Nominations today thus making them the slickest contenders by far. Why is this? Could it be that they are purely good at outsmarting others or they are merely that good in the game. You be the judge. But for now we wait to see who will be the next to leave Biggie’s comfy House.
Tell us how you think Dillish will react to being a pawn in Beverly’s game when she finds out on Sunday.
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Saving a certain Housemate and replacing with another is an intense business on The Chase and it was no different for Nigerian video vixen Beverly when she opted to save her friend Bimp and replaced him with Namibia’s Dillish instead.
As Dillish, Cleo and Elikem were chatting in the bedroom after dining together, Dillish told them that she harbours no ill feelings towards Beverly for doing what she did, in fact she is still her best buddy. “She should stop avoiding me because she is making all this very awkward,” said the Namibian beauty.
Beverly has all the reason to feel bad about her save and replace but there was nothing she could do about it because whoever she chose would still be a close friend and contender in the game, there is simply no winning when it comes to the ‘save and replace’ part of the game.
Elikem tried to make the two girls understand that this is a game and all Housemates do everything they can to get ahead at this stage. None of them have the right to judge each other because they all understand the pressure that comes with Biggie’s game. Fortunately for Beverly, she has Angelo to keep her sane and away from the eyes of the beautiful Dillish. You can’t hide forever Beverly.
Do you think Beverly is feeling bad for replacing Bimp with Dillish?
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) are organizsing a Nigerian Bond Market Conference on Wednesday 7th August 2013 in Lagos. The event is coming at a time of increasing realisation by the international investor community of the immense potential that the Nigerian bond market offers following a series of reforms and initiatives aimed at enhancing the regulatory framework and increasing market depth and liquidity. “This conference provides our market a unique opportunity to leverage the IFC’s wealth of experience in both developed and developing markets to boost capacity while highlighting some of our key achievements and challenges within the last few years.”
The SEC and the IFC have enjoyed a close relationship and strong partnership over the years and we are pleased to note that the IFC has been very supportive of our work from the outset of our reform initiatives. We benefited from the expertise of a Resident Bond Advisor sponsored through the Efficient Securities Markets Institutional Development (which the IFC hosts) from 2010 to 2011. The IFC has also shown leadership by being the first multi-lateral institution to access the Nigerian domestic bond market by issuing a $50 million naira-denominated bond to help deepen the domestic bond market in February 2013.
The highpoint of the event will be an on-the-record interview session featuring the Director General of the SEC, Ms. Arunma Oteh, and Mr. Jingdong Hua, Vice President and Treasurer, IFC with Mr. Andrew Cross, the IFC Treasury’s Head for Africa, Latin America and Caribbean as moderator.
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Delta State Ministry of Information Summit Road, Asaba
It was with profound shock and sadness that the news of the sudden demise of three officials of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) reach me. The officials from the Lagos Council of the Union were involved in a ghastly auto accident last week.
As a result, the on-going Ministerial Mid-Term Press Conference by commissioners in Delta State is hereby suspended for one week in honour of the three officials who paid the supreme price in their commitment to serve their members and improve the climate for media practice. The suspension affects the briefings scheduled for Tuesday, August 6 and Thursday, August 8, 2013.
On behalf of the Government and People of Delta State, I extend my heartfelt condolence to the NUJ and media practitioners in Nigeria. We pray the Almighty to grant the souls of the departed eternal rest. To their families and the media community, we pray for divine succor.
The ministerial briefings will resume on Tuesday, August 13, 2013.
Signed CHIKE C. OGEAHB Esq Honourable Commissioner for Information Monday, August 5, 2013
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
The sum of $143.5 billion was the total financial flow to the federation and other government entities from 2009 to 2011, the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, NEITI, report assessing and reconciling financial flows within Nigeria’s oil and gas industry stated.
The report released last week indicated that the amount showed a decrease of four percent as against the 2006-2008 audit record of $148.8 billion.
NEITI said the decrease was largely due to a 50 percent reduction (from $60 billion to $30 billion) in 2009, arising from a drop in the applicable average oil price (from $100 per barrel in 2008 to $63 in 2009) despite fairly consistent production volumes. The increase in average oil prices in 2010 and 2011 (from $80 to $112 –per barrel) led to increased financial flows observed in the subsequent years with a total flow of $68 billion in 2011.
According to NEITI, flows to the Federation Account are $131.7billion or 91.8 percent of total flows compared to $143.8 billion 96.6 percent of 2006-2008 audit, while flows to states are $1. billion (1.1 percent of total flows) as compared to $552 million (0.4 percent) of the previous audit.
The flows to other Federal Government entities including Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC and the Tertiary Education Tax (TETFUND) are $3.2 billion as against $2.5billion in 2006-2008.
The NEITI report also stated that flows to NDDC are directly made to the agency and outside the purview of the National Assembly through the Appropriation Act whilst that of the TETFUND is paid to a designated account in the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF) as stipulated by the enabling act.
Furthermore, financial flows from the sale of crude oil and gas amounted to $81.9 billion which constitutes 57 percent of the total flows against $97.6 billion or 66 percent of the total flows in the previous audit. The proportion of export crude oil and gas sales to total sales of crude oil and gas reduced to 53 percent ($52.8 billion) in the period 2009-2011, when compared to 62 percent ($65.7billion) from 2006-2008. On the other hand, the proportion of the domestic crude oil and gas sales increased from 35 percent ($37.2billion) to 42 percent ($41.5billion).
Oil, gas export
According to the report, the export crude oil and gas sales flows to the Federation Account are affected by the Alternative Funding (AF) arrangements, such as Modified Carry Agreements (MCA), adopted to support production activities in the event of inadequate normal joint venture cash call funding.
In these cases, direct entitlements (in kind payments) are made from production to cover production costs as well as for funding repayments. However, there are slight increases in the financial flows from gas and feedstock as a result of increased gas processing, reduction of gas flares and the utilization of feedstock by Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas, NLNG.
Confirmed financial flows, which are flows that are directly attributable to activities within the industry (such as petroleum profit tax, PPT, royalty, signature bonus and concessional rentals and statutory contributions), maintained relative proportion to total financial flows by staying in the region of 30 to 32 percent. Also, individual striking increases were noted in royalty on gas as well as in gas flaring penalties indicating increased attention on gas utilization.
It noted that no bid rounds were conducted during the period under review, hence the flows reported for signature bonuses arose from the payment of arrears of signature bonuses. Other flows to the Federation Account (such as company income tax and value added tax) showed a consistent relationship in the financial flows increasing from 2 percent to 4 percent.
The drop in company income tax, CIT, receipts between 2010 and 2011 is said to be due to the timing difference in the payment of CIT on gas of $128.7 million by Mobil Producing Nigeria Unlimted for 2011 in July 2012.
The report also noted that the financial flows from NLNG include dividends and repayment of loans of which an amount of $4.84 billion was received by NNPC. However, it was confirmed that these amounts have not been remitted to the CBN/NNPC JP Morgan Account or Federation Account.
NEITI pointed out that this has been a recurring issue as an amount of $3.996 billion was also reported as received but not remitted by NNPC in the previous audit.
It also observed that there is need to confirm the ownership of the 49 percent investment in NLNG, “Is it for the benefit of the Federation, or the Federal Government, or NNPC itself? This is an area for further enquiry,” it stated.
Other flows involving taxes on income (PAYE) and withholding taxes show a consistent trend with the previous audit as well as in relation to the activity volume and their location of collection. PAYE flows to the states, where most of the operating companies are domiciled, however, show a significant increase from $452 million in the previous audit to the current $1.53billion.
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
SINCE November 2012, the Federal Government and electricity workers reached agreement on major labour issues regarding power sector privatization, yet these are not implemented. In this interview, the General Secretary of National Union of Electricity Employees, NUEE, Mr.Joe Ajaero, gives insights into the situation from the labour’s perspective. Excerpts:
What is the situation with the government in terms of workers’ benefits and other issues ahead of the transfer of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria, PHCN’s assets to the private sector?
Well the position clearly is that the Nigeria Government does not have money to finance reforms and if they don’t have money to finance reforms, they are taking certain steps and actions that are capable of derailing the process while at the same time they are trying to shift the blame to the workers. Negotiations were concluded since last year and on daily basis they have been making claims of when they are to pay or whether they have started paying.
Up till now nothing concrete has taken place. Rather the meetings we have been involved in the last few weeks are meetings where they are trying to tell us that they don’t have enough money. So, I think if they don’t have enough money we have to sit down and review the whole process and how best to go about it. But my own understanding as at now is that it appears Nigerian Government does not have money, and the proceeds from the sale of PHCN would not be enough to settle the labour liabilities in PHCN. So I think they should be more initiative and find out how best to go about this whole process.
But they are still pushing ahead with the terminal date for private sector to take over the assets of PHCN?
That is not even the major problem that we have. It is not even the takeover, you know that taking over is dependent on settling the labour issues and in the whole privatisation process, all over the world and as contain even in the Nigeria Privatisation Process, you can’t take over the sector until all labour issues are resolved. So I would not know the extent they are pushing whether they want to take over without resolving the labour issues. Unless they want to do that, I can’t see any serious effort so far from their side. Because, come to think of it, somebody has paid for 25 percent and 75 percent is still pending. So, if you now hand over to a person who paid for only 25 percent, in a situation where you even undervalued the sector to next to nothing, and then the person paid for only 25 percent, you start to wonder which type of process is this.
There are insinuations that labour is dragging the process backward?
When an agreement has been signed and we are at the point of payment, is it labour that will pay itself? So those insinuations, if you see anybody making those insinuations, know that the person must be a pure illiterates. Negotiations were conducted, agreements were signed and even in February every Nigerian heard the Minister of Labour saying they will start payment the following day. From February till now, you will be hearing either May, June from the same government, they have not paid. We were at the point of paying and they have refused to pay, so how is labour dragging it back? Is it the labour that will pay itself?
So, you see when people fail to do what they are supposed to do first, it has a tendency to bounce back. I have it in good authority that the government did not assess the implication of privatising PHCN. As at the time they were even asking us for negotiation, they did not know the cost implication, even some of the social implication is yet to be felt. The other day the Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC, came up with a release condemning tariff adjustment by PHCN, before long it will be unattractive for you to tell any investor who probably bought gas for 10 million not to sell it up to 10 million because he must remain in business.
As at today even PHCN is like it is receiving gas from gas companies almost free and if private individual now buys gas after selling electricity, such a person should be able to recoup the money for even buying gas. I am telling you that the cost of gas presently is almost higher than the cost of the tariff people are paying. So, we should be brazing up for higher tariff. However, I told you once that the unions would not talk again on the issue and that Nigerian people would talk last. I want to maintain that position.
What about the issue of the contributory pension scheme, have your members subscribed to it?
Yes, we have subscribed to the contributory pension scheme, but it appears there is a deceit somewhere along the line and that is why we are going to engage them. Any moment from now we are going to engage them in a show down because the power ministry is chronically deficient in terms of acknowledging letters. You know we have written series of letters on certain developments in the sector but they have refused to acknowledge them or address them. Now why did I say this? We ask our members to subscribe to the Pension Fund Administrators, PFAs, and they have subscribed to PFAs, in doing that, our agreements is clear.
In the first instance, we have the ones contributed maybe from 2004, the one Government is going to pay up, and the one that management is going to pay up with current contribution, that has been calculated. Government has given the workers a kind of pay advise, every worker in PHCN now understands how much he is collecting and by extension how much will go into the pension fund. Now as we discuss, government wants to pay because the negotiation is in two components.
The one going to pension and the one the workers are receiving as cash. So, if you are receiving 10 million for instance and 6 million is going into your pension, and 4 million is coming to you cash, the government is planning to pay you 4 million cash and tell the whole world that they have paid. We said no, the pension component should go into workers pension fund which they have opened and by the time government pays in workers will receive alert from the pension. It is not cash that they are receiving, when they receive an alert. When government now gets money it can pay the one that is cash. If government pays the workers cash and asks them to go and it does not pay the pension, it then means that the government has deceived the workers.
The government is not finding it funny and they wanted to eat our heads. That was when we realised that there was more to it. In the first instance, you have not funded the arrears and secondly, government is supposed to commence deduction. Now they wrote a letter that deduction should be commenced, from June and we told them that they can’t do that because the agreement we had was that government should pay up and then when we go into the private sector, the private sector pays 7.5 and the workers pay 7.5 percent. We equally agreed that government should fund it because the circular they sent government did not fund the 7.5 that management is supposed to pay. They now want to deduct the workers 7.5 and the circular equally said it should be paid into dedicated account. So, if i have a worker has his pin and he has opened a pension account why will you pay it into a dedicated account?
Those dedicated accounts who are the signatories to them? It then means that there are some plots behind all these. These are some of the problems we are having. The workers have pin numbers and they have subscribed to some of the PFAs, let us say Trustfund pension. Now their 7.5 and 7.5 of the management should go into that place. You can’t say deduct it and pay it into a dedicated account why must it be so? Then say a worker’s accumulation maybe 20 million or 10 million before, you have not even transferred that into the worker’s PFA account and you are saying you will pay the worker this one that is cash, maybe gratuity and that he should go. I tell you, the main clash is still ahead. They are not handling this in good fate and it is really unfortunate.
How prepared are you to ensure that your members are paid their entitlements before new owners take all over?
Well that is where we are now. Already, we have given them an ultimatum to address some issues. One, we realised they were dashing some people promotions, even some they gave double promotions from principal managers to general managers or to assistant general managers, fine and good. The Ministry of power can give promotion from principal manager to assistant general manager, but then the normal promotion in PHCN takes place every June. Between June last year and June this year they refused to carry out that promotion exercise. Meanwhile, they are promoting people, which mean that promotion is not abolished. But the main workforce they refused to promote them.
Two, our agreements took effect from June 2012 and now because of their inability to implement these agreements between June 2012 to July 2013, there is 13 months service that is not computed. We are going to have a show down with them and that 13 months service is not National Youth Services to anybody. Now, we have 13 months outstanding, how do you compute this and add to workers entitlements? That is the issue that is on ground now. Nobody will tell you after working for one year, maybe you worked for 10 years before and you worked for additional one year plus and you say that one year plus is free.
We have written to the ministry of power and up till now they have not acknowledge the letter, rather the ministry of labour has sent a letter inviting us for a meeting and we are not going to attend that meeting. The ministry of power should be able to address even a letter by replying us, to say we are not going to do what is in the letter. We have written not less than 10 letters that they have refused to acknowledge.
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
The Bank of Industry, BoI, said it has disbursed not less than N56.48 billion out of a total of N100 billion mapped out by the Federal Government as Cotton, Textiles and Garmenting Revival Fund to-date.
Presenting a paper, ‘Bridging the Gap between Manufacturing and the Bank of Industry’, in a forum with manufacturers in Lagos, the Managing Director, BoI, Ms Evelyn Oputu, represented by Mohammed Alkali, Executive Director, Operations, said the amount was used to fund 70 projects.
Giving a breakdown, she said that textiles industry was funded with the largest chunk totalling N38.66 billion, which was used to support 30 projects, while cotton/ginning followed with N10.62 billion, used as support fund for 14 projects. A total of 25 companies in garmenting sector were funded with N3.703 billion, while support and logistics gulped the remaining N3.5 billion.
She noted that in a whole, a total of two million jobs have been created through BoI’s various interventions, saying that they hope to double it by the end of this year.
Oputu noted that the support has seen an increased capacity utilisation of 60 percent in the sector, as against 30 percent when the fund was launched in 2009, while a total of 8,070 jobs were saved as a result. “Additional 3,472 jobs, comprising 2,197news jobs, 1,197 male and 1,027 female, were created, while 1,275 workers previously laid off were recalled. There has been improved industry employees’ welfare because of improved salaries and improved industry efficiency and competitiveness as a result,” she stated.
Speaking further, Oputu said that out of N236 billion set aside for refinancing and restructuring SMEs and the entire manufacturing sector, the BoI has disbursed N232 billion to over 550 beneficiaries through commercial banks cutting across all key sectors of the economy. Out of the N300 billion CBN’s power and aviation intervention fund, PAIF, a total of N221 billion has so far been disbursed with N104 billion used to fund power sector projects, while the remaining N117 billion was used to fund aviation sector projects.
According to him, the N18 billion NAC Fund, established in 2003 to fund automobile industry has been utilised in funding 33 projects, adding that BoI has successfully funded not less than 730 corporative societies with N3.9 billion.
Stressing the importance the bank attach to supporting the real sector, she said, “Today, we have risk assets portfolio of over N146 billion; 90 percent of the portfolio goes to the manufacturing sector, while the remaining 10 percent goes to the service sector.”
While listing paucity of structured funds as one of the problems of the manufacturing sector, the BoI boss explained that the bank is working towards having a structured funding for different industries, adding “We want to see if we can target SMEs in different sectors and prescribe different incentives for them.”
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Nollywood actor, Ali Nuhu, for close to a score, has been a secret admirer of the sexy actress, Omotola Jalade Ekeinde, he has confessed this in a recent interview.
Nuhu stated that he would have married Omosexy the first time he set his eyes on her, he was obsessed by her beauty. And the second time, she was already gone, so, he couldn't have proposed because they weren't both single.
Hear him, I was pretty young when I first saw Omotola in ‘Thorns of Roses’ and liked her performance. After that, when I saw her in ‘Mortal Inheritance,’ I fell in love with her as a person because she gave a perfect interpretation to the character. Of course, if we were both single, I would have proposed to her."
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe blasted Nelson Mandela as a "coward" and "idiot" during a rally today to celebrate Mugabe's record seventh term in office following his victory in the country's disputed elections last week.
In one of his trademark fiery speeches, the 89-year-old Mugabe — who has led the southern African country since 1980 — claimed that he should be hailed as an African hero instead of Mandela, the anti-apartheid icon and former president of neighboring South Africa.
"My huge victory in these elections prove I am the greatest leader in the history of Africa," Mugabe told supporters in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare. "I have spent my whole life fighting for the Zimbabwean people and they continue to elect me."
Mugabe tightened his iron grip on power in last week's elections after he received 61 percent of the vote while his ZANU-PF party won a two-thirds majority in parliament, though there are allegations of widespread fraud and violence against the opposition.
"I am the greatest African who has ever lived," Mugabe said. "The world should love me more than the idiot Nelson Mandela. F**k Nelson Mandela. As I waged war against colonialism, that coward sat on his ass in prison for 27 years. He's a coward.
"I have been leader for 33 years. Mandela was president for five years. What kind of idiot gives up political power? Great leaders like me know how to stay in power.
"While Mandela sits comfortably in a hospital, I stand before you fit and healthy, ready to lead this country and the Zimbabwean people for at least another 25 years," Mugabe added, referring to the 95-year-old Mandela's ongoing treatment for a lung condition.
Mugabe also mocked South Africa's multicultural "rainbow nation" in his speech, claiming that Mandela didn't care about the interests of black Africans.
"There is only one color allowed in Zimbabwe, and it is black," he said. "I banned the color white in my country. Nelson Mandela told all the white people to stay in his ridiculous rainbow nation. He should have thrown all of the whites and homosexuals out of his country like I did. South Africa would be so much better off."
The Lord of Misrule
Mandela served as South Africa's president from 1994 to 1999 and is highly regarded at home and worldwide for his role in ending apartheid and becoming the country's first democratically elected leader.
Similar to Mandela, Mugabe played a pivotal role in the struggle for black-majority rule against the white minority-controlled Rhodesia, which became Zimbabwe.
In recent years, however, Mugabe and his government have plunged the country into diplomatic and economic isolation due to corruption, authoritarian rule, political violence and human rights abuses. Mugabe drew international condemnation in particular over his land redistribution policies, in which prosperous commercial farmers were chased off their land by violent mobs.
South Africa, which borders Zimbabwe, has pursued a policy of silent diplomacy with Mugabe, appeasing him in public while supposedly criticizing him in private.
South Africa's President Jacob Zuma, who congratulated Mugabe on his presidential victory, said he would review Mugabe's remarks before making an official statement.
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
The Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) has invoked the wrath of God on Abia State Government officials who lie and deceive the public about the state of roads in Aba, the commercial town.
Reacting to a live TV programme, where former Abia State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Eze Chikamnanyo, stated that most roads in Aba, including Ngwa, had been rehabilitated by the state government, MASSOB said the statement was ridiculous and untrue.
Speaking through its Director of Information, Aba region, Mr. Sunny Okereafor, MASSOB said that based on the former commissioner’s claim, his organization had assessed the roads and found out that it was false and deceitful, adding that the residents are living in squalor.
MASSOB described as baffling, the rate at which government officials allegedly dish out lies, especially on the state of roads in the city, which it said were in terrible condition.
He stated, “which of the roads in Aba do we take for good in the real sense? Are they Ohanku, Ngwa, Ikot Ekpene, Port Harcourt or Faulks, which leads to Ariaria International Market, all of which were claimed to have been rehabilitated? Who is fooling who?
“We know that some of these officials and agents either want to remain in their posts or be re-appointed. Inasmuch as there was nothing wrong in that, it should not be achieved through barefaced lies and at the expense of the suffering masses.
“People should come to Aba and see the roads somebody went on television to tell the world they had been rehabilitated. This is mere deceit. Take Ngwa Road, for instance. That road is not only impassable, but people there are living in squalor.
“If these government officials and agents think they can go ahead telling lies and deceiving people, the wrath of God, which we have invoked, is awaiting them and there is no escape route,” MASSOB said.
Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.