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Playboy™

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Everything posted by Playboy™

  1. Price £29,180, On sale Now The Giulia is Alfa Romeo’s latest crack at the executive saloon class. It’s been nearly six years since the old 159 was axed, but the newcomer promises much more – even in a tough market that demands prestige, performance and thrift in equal measure. Rear-wheel drive, well equipped, attractively priced and, of course, beautifully designed, the Giulia appears to have the recipe nailed. Review A 180bhp Fiat Group 2.2-litre diesel engine gives decent performance and sub-100g/km CO2 emissions for tax-free motoring. Meanwhile, at the less sensible end of the Giulia spectrum, the 503bhp V6 Quadrifoglio model threatens the German establishment with a dose of Italian style. This all bodes very well for Alfa, and our drives have confirmed that this car is a serious player next to the likes of the BMW 3 Series.
  2. Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has suggested he and the US are ready to drive so-called Islamic State (IS) from its Syrian stronghold of Raqqa. Mr Erdogan said US counterpart Barack Obama floated the idea of joint action against the militants when they met at the G20 summit in China. He said Turkey would have "no problem" with such action. Last month Turkey launched an operation inside Syria, targeting both IS and Kurdish rebels. Turkish-backed militia drove IS from the border town of Jarablus, but Turkey has also been concerned with checking the advance of Kurdish forces whom it regards as terrorists. The offensive continues, and Deputy Prime Minister Nurettin Canikli said Turkish forces might push deeper into Syria after securing a stretch of land along the border. Mr Canikli also said 110 Islamic State and Kurdish militia fighters had been killed since the operation began. Russia, who is allied to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, said it was "deeply concerned" by the Turkish advance. What is necessary will be done' Mr Erdogan's comments on Raqqa were published in Turkish media. There has been no confirmation from the US. "Obama wants to do some things jointly concerning Raqqa," Mr Erdogan said. "We said this would not be a problem from our perspective.'' "I said: 'Our soldiers should come together and discuss, then what is necessary will be done,'" Mr Erdogan added. Mr Erdogan gave few other details but said more discussions would follow. Raqqa's fall was a key point in the rise of IS as it seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria, and is now considered the jihadists' de facto capital. Between 250,000-500,000 people are still thought to live there, with brutal stories emerging of the treatment of civilians.
  3. Leading Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Nathan Law has said he will not use his newly-won seat on the Legislative Council (LegCo) to push for independence from China. "I'm not advocating independence, I'm advocating Hong Kong people should enjoy [their] rights of self-determination," he told the BBC. China has warned that anyone advocating independence could be punished. The stern message came after several young activists won seats on LegCo. The Chinese government underlined its "resolute opposition" to any independence activities on the council or outside it, state media reported. While the positions of Mr Law and the Chinese government might appear compatible, any advocacy for greater political autonomy in Hong Kong will rile Beijing, BBC World Service Asia-Pacific editor Michael Bristow says. Mr Law said he would push for a referendum to "decide Hong Kong's sovereignty status" in 10 or 20 years. "The tough battle [has] just begun and we have to be prepared and fight against the communist party," he said. Many in Hong Kong are increasingly concerned about Beijing's interventions in its politics. Who is Nathan Law? The 23-year-old student activist and former Occupy protest leader is the most high-profile of the pro-democracy names to win a seat. He co-founded the Demosisto Party with well-known activist Joshua Wong and will now become the youngest lawmaker in Hong Kong. Despite his youth, Mr Law says he proved during the election campaign that he is capable of being a legislator. "A lot of people are believing in me and my maturity," he said. Convicted for his role in civil disobedience during the "Umbrella Protests", the soft-spoken activist has said the former British colony must be allowed a referendum on its future. He has said he does not want Hong Kong to become "just another Chinese city".
  4. Price £29,565, On sale Now Abarth has worked its magic on the Fiat 124 Spider to come up with a desirable and dynamically capable roadster that takes the fight to the car on which both models are based: the Mazda MX-5. • Abarth 124 Spider review And the Abarth 124 Spider promises a great deal: its 1.4-litre MultiAir engine has been tuned from 138bhp in the standard Fiat version to 168bhp. That’s enough to take the one-tonne roadster from 0-62mph in 6.8 seconds. A fruitier soundtrack comes courtesy of a quad exhaust, while stiffened suspension and specially tuned Bilstein dampers improve grip and feel. The £10,000 premium over the standard Fiat 124 Spider might seem steep, but the Abarth looks the part, too. Inside, there’s an Alcantara-clad dash, leather sports seats and a thick-rimmed leather steering wheel.
  5. Want to live in India? You can, if you're willing to invest $1.5 million. The Indian government is launching a new program that rewards foreigners with a 10-year residency permit if they invest $1.5 million in the country over an 18-month period. Investors are also required to generate a minimum of 20 jobs for Indian residents per financial year. In return, investors will receive a multiple entry visa and the right to purchase a property. Family members will be able to work and study in India for the duration of the visa, which can be extended by another 10 years. Roughly 20 countries currently offer immigrant investor schemes. They include the United States, select countries in Europe and a smattering of island nations in the Caribbean. The required investments range from $500,000 to several million dollars, and some countries offer citizenship rather than a residential permit. In India, the program could attract foreign entrepreneurs who are eager to do business in the world's fastest growing major economy. Under the current rules, foreigners are often caught in tangle of bureaucracy that requires them to frequently switch visas, exit the country for prescribed amounts of time and complete reams of paperwork. Still, the relatively high investment of $1.5 million could deter businesspeople in all but a few select professions. For comparison, the U.S. EB-5 immigration program hands out green cards to foreigners who invest just $500,000 and create 10 jobs. St. Kitts & Nevis in the Caribbean mandates only a $400,000 investment in real estate, or $250,000 in its sugar industry. -- Sophia Yan contributed reporting.
  6. Opinion How exactly did Apple create a company with no employees, no office and no country of registry? Why did Ireland rule not once, but twice, that such a setup was legal? Why doesn't Ireland want to collect the money the European Commission says it should have received in taxes up to 2014? But beyond these particular questions, there's a much bigger and more important dynamic playing out. Margrethe Vestager, the EC's combative competition commissioner who handed down the ruling on Tuesday, is demonstrating there's only one way to roll back multinational companies' growing exploitation of hugely complex tax avoidance schemes, dubbed "the dark side of globalization" by Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz. And that is for the really big political blocs to act in concert. United, they can stand against the financial engineering that shifts billions of dollars out of taxation's reach. If they're divided against each other, tax rates and receipts will fall, and government deficits will grow, prompting more austerity even as the big companies grow perplexingly richer. Of course that's not how the big companies want to see it. Apple's chief executive Tim Cook released an open letter on Tuesday, complaining that Apple is "the largest taxpayer in Ireland, the largest taxpayer in the United States, and the largest taxpayer in the world." Ireland's tax authorities ruled not once but twice that Apple's evanescent company, untied to any location, was legal. The EC, Cook says, "has launched an effort to rewrite Apple's history in Europe, ignore Ireland's tax laws and upend the international tax system in the process." Apple and the Irish government say they will appeal the ruling. The trouble is that when companies can use financial engineering to pick and choose precisely where they're taxed, it creates a financial black hole in two ways. First, you can't see quite where the money has gone once it enters such a setup; finding out what Apple does with its revenues is a challenge for anyone who is not well-versed in the language and methods of tax arrangements, with revenues appearing to flirt back and forth between near-identical corporate entities. And second, while in the beginning it is small islands such as Bermuda and the Channel Islands that compete to be the tax haven of choice, over time the financial gravity pulls in larger countries such as Ireland.
  7. The US and China - together responsible for 40% of the world's carbon emissions - have both formally joined the Paris global climate agreement. After arriving with other leaders of G20 nations for a summit in the city of Hangzhou, Mr Obama said: "History will judge today's effort as pivotal." CO2 emissions are the driving force behind climate change. Last December, countries agreed to cut emissions in a bid to keep the global average rise in temperatures below 2C. What is climate change? What does the climate deal mean for me? The Paris deal is the world's first comprehensive climate agreement. It will only come into force legally after it is ratified by at least 55 countries, which between them produce 55% of global carbon emissions. Members of China's National People's Congress Standing Committee adopted "the proposal to review and ratify the Paris Agreement" on Saturday morning at the end of a week-long session. Analysis: BBC environmental analyst Roger Harrabin This is a big step towards turning the Paris climate agreement into reality. Other nations will still tussle over their own ratification, but this will put pressure on G20 nations over the weekend to move faster with their pledge to phase out subsidies to fossil fuels. But even if enough other players step forward to make the Paris deal law, huge challenges lie ahead. Before China made its announcement, the 23 nations that had so far ratified the agreement accounted for just over 1% of emissions. The UK has yet to ratify the Paris deal. A spokesman for the prime minister told BBC News that the government would ratify as soon as possible - but gave no date. The White House issued a statement on Saturday morning announcing the US move. In a speech in Hangzhou, Mr Obama said the Paris deal was the "single best chance that have to deal with a problem that could end up transforming this planet". He praised US and Chinese leadership on the climate issue, saying: "We are moving the world significantly towards the goal we have set."
  8. Samsung Electronics is recalling ITS flagship smartphone Galaxy Note 7 and Said That Battery problems were behind phones catching fire. The decision Follows reports in the US and South Korea of the phone "exploding" during or after charging. The South Korean company HAD Already Said customers who bought the phone would be reliable to swap it for a new one. Samsung HAD Been Said it difficult to work out Which Were phones AFFECTED Among the 2.5 million Note 7s sold. "There was a tiny problem in the manufacturing process, so it was very difficult to figure out, '' the president of Samsung's mobile business Koh Dong-jin Told reporters. "It will cost us so much it makes my heart ache. NEVERTHELESS, the reason we made this decision is what is Most Important Because customer safety is," I Said. The firm Said it would take two weeks to preparing acerca replacement devices. According To Samsung, the phone has-been Launched in 10 Countries so far but With Different companies supply supplying the batteries. The recall comes just one week ahead of an expected presentation of a new iPhone model from ITS main rival Apple. Analysis: Zoe Kleinman, BBC technology reporter This is an extraordinary decision for a tech giant to make based on so few Reported incidents - Samsung says it is aware of only 35 cases worldwide. It's bad timing so soon after a big product launch and Samsung's That Especially Given rival Apple is Understood to be preparing to unveil a new iPhone. However, the firm says it has discovered a Problem with the battery cell and is halting sales while it inspects ITS suppliers. People Who Have Already bought the device - Which is only available to pre-order in the UK - will be issued with a replacement. Stories about exploding smartphone batteries do make the news from time to time - lithium ion batteries are flammable but very Widely used. Reported 'explosions' Over the past few days, Several users reported almost Have Their catching fire or exploding phones while charging, and Samsung Said It had confirmed 35 cases Such. A YouTube user uploaded a video under the name Ariel Gonzalez on 29 August of a Galaxy Note 7 With rubber casing burnt and damaged screen. I Said the handset "caught fire" shortly after I unplugged the Official Samsung charger, less than a fortnight after purchasing it. Further images of a burnt Galaxy Note 7 Were uploaded to Kakao Story, a po[CENSORED]r social media site in Korea, on 30 August. A user wrote. "There was another blast of the Galaxy Note 7. It was my friend's phone A Samsung employee checked the site and I is currently are in talks over the compensation With Samsung You should use ITS Original charger just in case and leave. the phone far away from where you are while charging. "
  9. Bro !!

    Ya eres global moderator whaaaa,,,

    Sos todo un crack, felicitaciones y de paso avisa para khe me den :) 

    1. -DarkJesús-

      -DarkJesús-

      Gracias mi amor <3 

      Donde esta askf para que presione alt+f4 para que siga poniendo musica

    2. Playboy™

      Playboy™

      Esta en streetzm

  10. Follow when you think you can not more, it is what makes you different from others

  11. Build your dream or someone else will hire you to build theirs.

  12. - GTA V - Just Case 3 - NBA 2K16 - Dying Light - COD III - COD AV - Cs Nexon Zombies - LOL - Far Cry 4 - Assassins Creed' Black Flag
  13. Just Cause 3 makes no apologies for its outrageous nature. It's a power fantasy in every sense of the phrase, placing you in a world rife with destructible environments and giving you creative instruments with which to destroy them. There are intermittent technical problems, and scripted moments detract from the freedom found elsewhere, but in the end, Just Cause 3 provides a spectacular, explosive sandbox experience. The plot revolves around returning protagonist Rico Rodriguez, who's arrived in the fictional Republic of Medici during the height of Sebastiano Di Ravello's military dictatorship. The story here is forgettable, but delivers an effective invitation: dozens of military installations cover the world map, and it's your job to blow them up for the rebel forces. Rodriguez himself is a mashup of masculine action stars and comic book characters, so it makes sense that I often felt like a superhero in his shoes. By supplying you with a wingsuit, parachute, and grappling hook, Just Cause 3 gives you an effective means of transportation, as well as a smooth, nuanced traversal system. When Just Cause 3 is consistent, however, it's a stunning display of cause and effect, as watchtowers topple into fuel tanks, which blow up nearby helicopters, which sail into oncoming vehicles. I often spent hours setting up outlandish chain reactions, or trying new gear mods, knowing full well I wasn't making any progress in the traditional sense. I was content to just sit back and marvel as it all happened. But there's a more thoughtful undercurrent as well. Despite the explosions and instant gratification throughout, Just Cause 3 also encourages experimentation and foresight, planning and careful approaches. The results are as rewarding as they are entertaining. Editor's Note: The majority of our time with Just Cause 3 was spent with the PC version, followed by several hours on both PS4 and Xbox One. Based on the review builds provided, the game performed better on PC, with higher and more stable frame rates, fewer bugs, and better looking environments. However, the problems did not affect the overall experience enough to impact individual scores.
  14. Happy Birthday for Mr.Love the best administrator from csbd ! Good Luck with your family!!! best regards ... Playboy
  15. Server don't will open, bcs i can't pay for addons you can close this
  16. Joc: Counter Strike 1.6 Nume dorit (in cazul in care serverul va ramane in comunitatea noastra): RazerBladeZM.CsblackDevil.Com Numar de sloturi: 32 Mod de joc: Zombie_plague Contact proprietar, administrator ( Y!M / Skype): Skype: Carlos.csbs11, PM or ts3 Playboy Caut: I need 1 owner who can pay + 1 co owner with boost !

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CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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