Thursday, 5 September 2019

Get the Brand New LG G8 ThinQ!

Get the Brand New LG G8 ThinQ!
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The G8 all by itself is an extraordinary telephone. Evaluated higher than any past G-arrangement leader before it, somewhere in the range of $820 and $850 relying upon the transporter, it's accessible on April 11. (UK and Australian accessibility and costs presently can't seem to be declared, yet $850 is about £650 or AU$1,200.) It has a thin, smooth plan, it's water-safe despite everything it has an earphone jack, which is ideal for extremists reluctant to relinquish their wired earphones

LG G8's bokeh for video needs some work

The G8 takes solid, sharp photos with vibrant colors. Although its photos are comparable to the Galaxy S10E's, there are some differences. The Galaxy S10E's wide-angle camera has a wider field of view, and takes sharper images. Colors on the G8 are a bit deeper and warmer though, which I prefer. Finally, the Galaxy S10E renders portraits a bit more expertly. The falloff between the foreground and background is smoother on Samsung's phone, especially when it comes to resolving small patches around strands of hair, for example.
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Myself 

  • My name is Md Ejaj Ahmed. I am 19 years old. I was born in 18 June 2000. I live mirpur, Dhaka. I passed my S.S.C exam in 2018. Now I am doing diploma on civil engineering. It is my dream to be an engineer. So I am trying my best to fulfill my dream.

Thursday, 29 August 2019

‘Wimbledon’ at Sabina Park


Sabina Park is nudging 90. It’s wrinkled and withering, the characteristic sky blue paint peeling off the patchy walls, revealing the rusting iron rods and wires underneath. The yellow seats of the George Headley Stand and the 10-feet walls, splashed with advertisements, tremble when heavy trucks and SUVs whizz by. The stands are lined with dust and discarded beer bottles. The grand old stadium, at once the rawest and most romantic in the Caribbean, is a metaphorical mausoleum of West Indies cricket — once grand and glorious, now rumbling and ragged.

Sabina Park once had the reputation

Sabina Park once had the reputation of producing some lightening fast tracks. It wasn’t always the case so. The 1960s churned out batting beauties to suit their batsmen; the 70s produced fast and bouncy tracks; the 80s saw some horrendous wickets with variable bounce, and by the 90s the pitch was defanged. In the subsequent decades, just like West Indies cricket, the Sabina Park track became unpredictable. Sometimes fast and bouncy, often slow and dry.
This time around, the buzz around Sabina Park is about this being a green, bowl-first surface. This is what the team has asked, they say. A few days ago, chief curator Michael Hylton told local newspaper Jamaican Gleaner that he’s grooming a Wimbledon-like grass court. “When everyone gets here on August 30, I want them to believe that they are at Wimbledon on the first morning — green, green, green … . That’s what I want them to see, and the team that executes the two disciplines well will get the desired result,” he had said.