How can I get mtn cheating code of I want to make more calls
Posts: 6,843
Threads: 4
Joined: Mar 2015
MTN Eazi Recharge is an innovative service that allows you to buy MTN PayAsYouGo airtime as well as MTN SMS and Internet bundles whenever and wherever you need it.
With MTN Eazi Recharge, you can buy MTN PayAsYouGo airtime using your cellphone and your ABSA, Nedbank or Standard Bank debit, cheque, or credit card. You can buy MTN PayAsYouGo airtime both for yourself or for another MTN subscriber.
All you need to do is register your card once, via an MTN menu on your cellphone. Once you have registered your card you can then use your cellphone to buy airtime directly from MTN.
MTN Eazi Recharge makes airtime and bundle recharges available to you 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, so you can recharge with MTN PayAsYouGo airtime anywhere and anytime.
Register your ABSA or Standard Bank or Nedbank Debit Card, or your MasterCard or VISA Credit Card today.
Buy airtime whenever and wherever you need it with MTN Eazi Recharge.
Am kindly work with networking i also know more thinks about computer
Posts: 810
Threads: 0
Joined: Jul 2016
Computer network
A computer network or data network is a telecommunications network which allows computers to exchange data. In computer networks, networked computing devices exchange data with each other using a data link. The connections between nodes are established using either cable media or wireless media. The best-known computer network is the Internet.
Network computer devices that originate, route and terminate the data are called network nodes.[1] Nodes can include hosts such as personal computers, phones, servers as well as networking hardware. Two such devices can be said to be networked together when one device is able to exchange information with the other device, whether or not they have a direct connection to each other.
Computer networks differ in the transmission medium used to carry their signals, the communications protocols to organize network traffic, the network's size, topology and organizational intent.
Computer networks support an enormous number of applications such as access to the World Wide Web, video, digital audio, shared use of application and storage servers, printers, and fax machines, and use of email and instant messaging applications as well as many others. In most cases, application-specific communications protocols are layered (i.e. carried as payload) over other more general communications protocols.
History
See also: History of the Internet
The chronology of significant computer-network developments includes:
In the late 1950s early networks of computers included the military radar system Semi-Automatic Ground Environment (SAGE).
In 1959 Anatolii Ivanovich Kitov proposed to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union a detailed plan for the re-organisation of the control of the Soviet armed forces and of the Soviet economy on the basis of a network of computing centres.[2]
In 1960 the commercial airline reservation system semi-automatic business research environment (SABRE) went online with two connected mainframes.
In 1962 J.C.R. Licklider developed a working group he called the "Intergalactic Computer Network", a precursor to the ARPANET, at the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA).
In 1964 researchers at Dartmouth College developed the Dartmouth Time Sharing System for distributed users of large computer systems. The same year, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a research group supported by General Electric and Bell Labs used a computer to route and manage telephone connections.
Throughout the 1960s, Leonard Kleinrock, Paul Baran, and Donald Davies independently developed network systems that used packets to transfer information between computers over a network.
In 1965, Thomas Marill and Lawrence G. Roberts created the first wide area network (WAN). This was an immediate precursor to the ARPANET, of which Roberts became program manager.