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Ryzen2

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Everything posted by Ryzen2

  1. Congrats 🎆 bro

  2. made me vip in new life rabi i gave you informantion

     

  3. Rosolena made me junersist

    1. Aysha

      Aysha

      Stop spamming.

  4. Cyber made me per manger agin in street zm plzzz why I do

  5. 89.44.246.26:27015 come inn this ip accept battle

  6. arbi come in this ip ip and accept battle 89.44.246.26:27015

    1. aRbi~

      aRbi~

      @Ryzen2 dont tag me and then edit my name out -_- 

  7. rusher accept battle

    1. Ryzen2

      Ryzen2

      89.44.246.26:27015 come in  this ip fast

    2. Rusher

      Rusher

      Why What Just Happened?

  8. joker iam doing battle with you arena ok 

  9. 89.44.246.26:27015 come on thi ip

    1. Show previous comments  1 more
    2. Ryzen2

      Ryzen2

      Bro tommorow we play I am bissy

    3. ZoMoRoDa

      ZoMoRoDa

      Come now, I am not opening tomorrow

    4. Ryzen2

      Ryzen2

      Ok canncle battle

  10. hi bro go accept batle and i am giving you ip

  11. Ok I am going to be admin you IAM playing M old school hhh bby lol 

    1. Dr_-_PiKaChU
    2. Ryzen2

      Ryzen2

      Give me chance if you have

    3. Dr_-_PiKaChU

      Dr_-_PiKaChU

      Sorry Bro Go ZmoldSchool

  12. DH2 my favorite 😊
  13. Hyundai Motor India had launched the third-generation i20 in the country on November 5, 2020. The po[CENSORED]rity of the new Hyundai i20 can be gauged from the fact that it garnered around 30,000 bookings in merely 40 days. In case, you are planning to bring home the third-generation Hyundai i20, let me tell you that the premium hatchback reportedly has a waiting period of four to 12 weeks depending on the city. According to a report by CarDekho, the new Hyundai i20 has a waiting period of four weeks in Mumbai, four to six weeks in New Delhi and Chennai, and six to eight weeks in Kolkata. In Bengaluru and Hyderabad, the customers will have to wait for six weeks and four weeks, respectively, to get their premium hatchback. The waiting period is eight to 12 weeks in Patna, four to six weeks in Lucknow and six to eight weeks in Gurugram. The third-generation Hyundai i20 has a waiting period of 12 weeks in Pune. The new i20 is being offered in four variants -- Magna, Sportz, Asta and Asta(O). It is still available in the introductory price range of Rs 6.80 lakh to Rs 11.33 lakh (ex-showroom, New Delhi), which is a bonus for the customers keeping in mind Hyundai Motor India had announced at the launch of the premium hatchback that these prices would be applicable for deliveries only till December 31, 2020. The feature-rich third-generation Hyundai i20 boasts of LED projector headlamps with LED DRLs, projector fog lamps, Z-Shaped LED tail lamps and 16-inch diamond-cut alloy wheels. Its cabin is equipped with some-notch bells and whistles like 10.25-inch HD touchscreen infotainment system, automatic climate control, Bose seven-speaker sound system, wireless charger with cooling pad, blue ambient lighting and electric sunroof. The new Hyundai i20 has three powertrain choices. There is a 1.2-litre Kappa petrol engine that develops 83PS and 115Nm with 5-speed MT, and 88PS and 115Nm with IVT automatic. Then there is a 1.0-litre Kappa turbo-GDi petrol mill that belts out 120PS and 172Nm and has 6-speed iMT and 7-speed DCT automatic choices. Also available is a 1.5-litre U2 CRDi diesel motor that produces 100PS and 240Nm with a 6-speed MT. Earlier this month, Hyundai Motor India had commenced the new i20 exports, with 180 units shipped to South Africa, Chile and Peru. In 2020, the automobile manufacturer had crossed 30 lakh cumulative vehicle export milestone.
  14. RIYADH (Reuters) - Qatar-based TV channel beIN Sports was broadcast in Saudi Arabia on Monday after the two countries reconciled this month, ending a rift of more than three years, a Reuters witness in Riyadh reported. It was unclear if the ban was officially lifted but several cafes and restaurants in the capital Riyadh were using satellite dishes to show games of the Premier League on beIN Sports channels. The Saudi government’s media office did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on whether the policy had changed. Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Competition (GAC) said in July it had permanently canceled the license of the broadcaster, which has been barred from broadcasting in the kingdom since mid-2017 due to a bitter dispute with Qatar. BeIN Media Group said nothing “has materially changed as far as we are aware at this stage”. “Our website is still fully blocked in Saudi Arabia and we have received no official communication from the Saudi authorities to suggest that our license has been re-instated,” a spokesperson of beIN said in a statement sent to Reuters. “However, like everyone, we are hopeful of positive moves by Saudi to allow beIN operations back in the country after 3.5 years. We await to see.” In 2018, Qatar filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization (WTO), saying Saudi Arabia was blocking beIN from broadcasting in the kingdom and said it had refused to take effective action against alleged piracy of beIN’s content by beoutQ, a commercial-scale pirating operation. A WTO panel last year found Saudi Arabia had breached global rules on intellectual property rights by failing to prosecute beoutQ, while supporting Riyadh’s view that it could block the Qatari broadcaster from obtaining legal counsel in the kingdom on grounds of national security. Riyadh has repeatedly said it is fighting piracy and committed to protecting intellectual property. BeIN has said Saudi was its biggest subscriber base and its biggest commercial market in the Middle East and North Africa. A court case, which has been brought by beIN under international arbitration rules and claimed over $1 billion in damages against Saudi Arabia, is still pending. The arbitration will be held in London. A source familiar with the matter told Reuters beIN would withdraw the case once the broadcaster is allowed back in the kingdom, part of a wider political reconciliation between the two countries.
  15. The world faces a "catastrophic moral failure" because of unequal Covid vaccine policies, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said it was not fair for younger, healthy people in richer nations to get injections before vulnerable people in poorer states. He said over 39 million vaccine doses had been given in 49 richer states - but one poor nation had only 25 doses. Meanwhile, both the WHO and China were criticised for their Covid response. An independent panel commissioned by the WHO said the UN public health body should have declared an international emergency earlier, and also rapped China for not taking public health measures sooner. India begins world's biggest Covid vaccine drive Will countries be left behind in the vaccine race? So far, China, India, Russia, the UK and the US have all developed Covid vaccines, with others being made by multinational teams - like the American-German Pfizer vaccine. Almost all of these nations have prioritised distribution to their own po[CENSORED]tions. What did the WHO head say? Speaking at a WHO executive board session on Monday, Dr Tedros said, "I need to be blunt: the world is on the brink of a catastrophic moral failure - and the price of this failure will be paid with lives and livelihoods in the world's poorest countries." Dr Tedros said a "me-first" approach would be self-defeating because it would push up prices and encourage hoarding. "Ultimately, these actions will only prolong the pandemic, the restrictions needed to contain it, and human and economic suffering," he added. media captionA 'bittersweet' moment for India's health workers And the WHO head called for a full commitment to the global vaccine-sharing scheme Covax, which is due to start rolling out next month. "My challenge to all member states is to ensure that by the time World Health Day arrives on 7 April, Covid-19 vaccines are being administered in every country, as a symbol of hope for overcoming both the pandemic and the inequalities that lie at the root of so many global health challenges," Dr Tedros said. So far, more than 180 countries have signed up to the Covax initiative, which is supported by the WHO and a group of international vaccine advocacy groups. Its aim is to unite countries into one bloc so they have more power to negotiate with drug companies. Ninety-two countries - all of them low or middle-income - will have their vaccines paid for by a fund sponsored by donors. "We have secured two billion doses from five producers, with options of more than one billion more doses, and we aim to start deliveries in February," Dr Tedros said. What has the response been? Reacting to Dr Tedros' warning, UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: "The UK is the world's biggest supporter, financial supporter, of the global programme to ensure access to vaccines in all countries in the world." Mr Hancock said the UK had "put the most financial support in these international efforts to ensure everybody has access to vaccines". The UK government has provided £548m ($734m) to the Covax programme. More than four million people in the UK have received their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine, according to government figures. People in their 70s and the clinically extremely vulnerable in England are now among those being offered the jab. Last month, the People's Vaccine Alliance coalition of campaigning bodies said that rich countries were hoarding doses of Covid vaccines and people living in poor countries were set to miss out. It said that nearly 70 lower-income countries would only be able to vaccinate one in 10 people. Canada, in particular, came in for criticism, with the coalition saying the North American nation had ordered enough vaccine doses to protect each Canadian five times. In December, Karina Gould, Canada's minister of international development, denied allegations the country was hoarding vaccines, saying any discussion of a surplus was "hypothetical" as the doses had not been delivered. She said Canada was providing C$485 million ($380 million; £280 million) to help developing countries cope with Covid-19. What about the criticism of the WHO and China? In their interim report, the panel of independent experts said both China and the WHO should have acted faster during the early stages of the coronavirus outbreak. The document said that Beijing should have acted more forcefully to localise the initial outbreak in the city of Wuhan first detected in late 2019. The experts also criticised the WHO for only declaring a global emergency on 30 January 2020. "The global pandemic alert system is not fit for purpose," the report said. "The World Health Organization has been underpowered to do the job." The panel of experts was led by former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark and former Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
  16. Five days into the new year, and TikTok’s hottest 2021 trend is teens using enterprise software to go viral. As if the coronavirus pandemic hadn’t already blurred the lines between work and home enough, students and teens are going viral on TikTok after making Notion boards that mimic teen Tumblr feeds. Some users filled their Notion headers with vibey coffeehouse photos or pictures of anime or other characters that inspire them. Navigating around Notion’s website, many people wouldn’t expect to see a bunch of teenagers using the software as replacements for their school planners. The site features tweets from folks like XOXO Festival organizer Andy Baio and other Silicon Valley pseudo-celebrities touting how they use the trendy app to keep their tech teams organized as marketing. It’s pretty clear who the app’s main audience is! But this week, Notion absolutely blew up on TikTok. In one video, the account @cur.tas gained over 1.1 million views in less than two days, showing off their Notion setup. They imported GIFs and images of anime characters and the Lofi Study Beats girl into their templates, mirroring po[CENSORED]r studyblr and studytok aesthetics that have grown po[CENSORED]r on platforms like Tumblr and TikTok over the last few years. Think Donna Tartt’s The Secret History meets productivity tips — that’s the studyblr aesthetic in 2021. Scrolling through the video’s comments, dozens of users were begging the account to make a tutorial explaining how they set up their Notion. Other users, like @promeat, duetted the video setting up their own Notion accounts. After posting their original video learning how to use the app, @promeat made another video showing people their “daily Notion routine,” explaining what they do when they log in to the app every day. When asked about the growing po[CENSORED]rity of the app, a Notion spokesperson said, “We’re amazed watching it!” but didn’t comment further. As someone who used to spend a lot of time as a high schooler scrolling through the studyblr hashtag on Tumblr, I get the appeal of Notion to young people. Like Tumblr, Notion is a blank slate, providing users with plenty of different templates to build and customize into what best suits their needs (and aesthetics). Outside of customization, the coronavirus pandemic could play a significant part in why Notion has taken off with the youth. I’m sure hardly any of these teens are walking into physical classrooms anymore. I imagine it’s hard to keep your life and schoolwork in order when your only classroom is your dining room table. Enterprise software has been working its way into personal life and relationships for some years now. In 2019, The Atlantic wrote about how parents were beginning to use enterprise software and apps like Asana and Trello to assign their children chores. Maybe as more and more of our work lives merge together with our personal ones, enterprise software like Notion might get a little more fun.
  17. AMD might have brought its RX 6800, RX 6800 XT, and RX 6900 XT graphics cards to market by now, but that doesn't mean the chef is done cooking up new recipes. In that light, three new entries (1, 2, 3) have surfaced in the USB-IF, as spotted by Komachi, pointing to a handful of new GPUs. There isn't much information to go on right now, so take the news with a pinch of salt until more details emerge. The entries name the GPUs XL, XT, XTX, XTXH, XLE, and Nashira Point. However, key information is still missing, as we don't know whether the information points to existing GPUs or new models. For context, the RX 6800 XT carries a Navi 21 XT GPU, the RX 6800 carries the Navi 21 XL, and the all-mighty RX 6900 XT carries the Navi 21 XTX GPU. This would leave the XTXH and XLE GPUs in the open, assuming these entries are for the Navi 21 family. If they're for the Navi 22 family, then it's very possibly a pointer to the RX 6700 and RX 6700 XT, among others. The same principle applies to the Nashira Point codename -- at this time we simply don't have enough details to say which product (family) it refers to. As a result, all we can do with this information is tell you that new products are on the horizon. The RX 6700 XT's BIOS has already been leaked late last year, and it pointed to some serious overclocking potential. With AMD's historic tendency to announce products at CES, it wouldn't come as a big surprise to see some official news next week.
  18. MOSCOW The Russian subsidiary of Japan's Honda Motor Co says it will stop supplying new cars to official dealers in Russia in 2022 as part of the company's efforts to restructure its operations. The company said it would keep its presence on the Russian market with motorcycle and power equipment sales, and retain its activities related to the after-sales service of its vehicles. Honda, which has no plants in Russia unlike other Japanese carmakers such as Toyota and Nissan, sold 79 vehicles in Russia last month, a 50% drop from a year earlier, according to the Association of European Businesses. Its sales from January to November were down 15% to 1,383 vehicles. More than 1.3 million new cars were sold in Russia during that period.
  19. Manchester United manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer says there will be "no excuses" if his team lose their fourth semi-final in 12 months. United play Manchester City at Old Trafford on Wednesday in a rematch of last season's Carabao Cup semi-final. Pep Guardiola's men triumphed on their way to winning the trophy for a third successive year. Solskjaer's side also lost in an FA Cup semi-final to Chelsea and to Sevilla in the Europa League last four. "We have developed a lot in the last 12 months from last season's EFL Cup semi-final," he said. "It is not just a case of learning how to win them, it is earning the right to go all the way. But we are confident and we are in good form. There are no excuses." United have won eight out of their last 10 Premier League games, a run that, following Liverpool's surprise defeat at Southampton, means they will go top of the table if they avoid defeat at Burnley on 12 January. Within that unbeaten run, there was a drab, goalless draw with City at Old Trafford. There are 'no excuses' - Solskjaer on Carabao Cup semi-final against Man City Manchester rivals play out dismal draw That game does form part of a decent record for Solskjaer in meetings with Guardiola. In their six encounters, the Norwegian has come out on top on three occasions, opposed to two successes for the former Barcelona boss. And, with suspended forward Edinson Cavani the only significant absentee, United are justified in fancying their chances, even if City go into the game on the back of their best performance of the season at Chelsea. "You never know what kind of system Pep's going to come up with but you know you've got to defend really well against City," Solskjaer said. "It's hard to keep the ball in their half because they find a way of overloading, so you've got to be brave and compact and trust your players." Solskjaer is aware of the extra scrutiny top-flight football is now under given the new lockdown measures that have been imposed on virtually all members of society. He says clubs have to accept the privileged position they are in and ensure there is no reason for the government to revisit it. "It is a difficult situation for everyone," he said. "It is hard. "We are privileged to be able to play and hopefully we can continue. It is a release to watch games but we have to work hard to stay within the guidelines. We are doing our best to keep the show on the road." Solskjaer's Klopp penalty response After Liverpool's defeat by Southampton on Monday, Reds manager Jurgen Klopp made reference to the number of penalties United have been awarded under Solskjaer. Klopp was annoyed at referee Andre Marriner's failure to give his side a spot-kick for what he thought was a foul on Sadio Mane. Liverpool host Manchester United in the Premier League on 17 January. As the Liverpool boss was correct in saying his own side had been awarded fewer penalties (30) during his five-and-a-half years in charge at Anfield than Solskjaer (32) has had in his two, the Old Trafford chief was not in a position to argue. But it didn't seem to bother him too much. "It's a fact, probably," he said. "I don't count how many penalties they have had. If they want to spend time on worrying about when we get fouled in the box - I don't spend time on that. "I can't talk about why they say things like this. Last year in the FA Cup semi-final Frank Lampard spoke about it and we had a nailed on penalty that we didn't get so maybe it's a way of influencing referees. I don't know. When they foul our players inside the box it is a penalty."
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