WESTERN UGANDA EXCURSION - KIBALE NATIONAL PARK - TOORO KINGDOM - Vienna College Namugongo EOS1
Tooro is one of the five traditional kingdoms located within the borders of Uganda. The current Omukama of Tooro is King Rukidi IV.
The people native to the kingdom are the Tooro, and their language is likewise called Tooro and well known for the primate , cultural and the best mountaineering activities on Mt.Rwenzori.
Big 5 Tourism Group Ltd we merit in what your dream destination should be to your experience.
15 Reasons Why Uganda is financially struggling
15 reasons why UGANDA is financially struggling.
Welcome back to this week's special analysis on why Uganda is falling behind as other East African countries are developing at a high rate.
We started asking ourselves why are Uganda is poor and why is falling to catch up with its neighbors (Kenya & Tanzania)?
While researching for this video one thing's clear, every country in the east Africa is glowing, some faster than others.
This is important to keep in mind because compared to 50 years ago even the poorest of the poor have seen some massive improvements
We begin by breaking everything down to identify 10 differentiating factors that are slowing these Uganda on its way to escape poverty. At the end, you will realize how all these are related with one another and how Ugandans are self-sabotaging their long-term growth for personal and temporary game.
Here are 10 are reasons why Uganda is financially struggling compared to other east African countries.
1. number one. A lack of transportation infrastructure. Roads, Bridges, Highways tunnels, railways, airports and sea terminals.
These are the foundation on which trade is built and trade is the main driving force behind economic growth.
You bring products into the country and you export your own. Transportation is very vital to the long-term financial success of any country and this is not a secret. These allow people to transport goods throughout the country, to exchange products and increases the overall ability of everyone to add value
Now you can take your by scooter or car and travel to a nearby city for work that pays, buy or sell your products in the market for a bigger profit.
You can take your children to school and if the situation arises, you can reach the hospital and time.
The impact of lack of transportation and the structure into the economy, affaects almost every aspect of life.
Almost every Politician in Uganda always promise better infrastructure but always fail to deliver it! because there's a lot of money to be made here!
They offer these high value contracts to companies that will benefit them, hence robbing the population twice!
Once because the constituency money end-up into the pockets of the few and then twice because of the potential earnings for the successful program that would have generated for the community!
If this is the case in your constituency too, please like this video it tells us that we're on with our research!
2. number two. Location in the tropical region.
Here's the thing. for a very long period of time, the main economic driver of the country was agriculture. Because of their geographic rich in.
Some districts in Uganda have to deal more with in rendering their soil that are less fertile, hence leading to fewer crops. Thus low economic growth.
The rise of livestock is directly impacted by fits with good agriculture humans have been able to use livestock to work the fields and freedom for protein and trade.
Hot climates like that in Karamoja are breeding ground for insects like mosquitoes and the famous Steste fly which is one of the biggest drawbacks in raising productive livestock.
These bite those animals and humans and making them sleepy and feeling ill.
It doesn't help that Uganda is a landlocked country, because of too much heat, there are few lakes and Rivers which traditionally help in water transport of goods as well as providing natural hydration.
Uganda as landlocked country, needs an incredibly effective governance to counterbalance these natural disadvantage with infrastructure projects.
A good example is Switzerland which is currently the richest a landlocked country not only these tropical country.
But with a rise in temperature and climate change things are about to get a lot worse for Uganda, the economic gap between the richest and poor people in terms of per capita income in Uganda, is now about 25% larger than it was before.
According to a new study from Stanford university, “climate change is helping to make rich countries richer and poorer”
3. number three corrupt government
Here we are about to go into everyone's favorite topic. Corruption. The why Uganda never move ahead at the same pace with other East African countries like Kenya and Tanzania as everyone wishes it to be.
Statistically speaking, the top 20 poorest countries in the world are also the most corrupt.
On the flip side, of the richest countries in the world are the least corrupt.
Why does this make such a big difference? it's because when corruption doesn't exist the institutions that make up the country run effectively, People end up in positions of power based on merit.
UGANDA
Raúl - ADRIÁN CASTIÑEIRAS
Sara - PALOMA OTERO
Claudio - XOEL FERNÁNDEZ
Carla - SUSANA SAMPEDRO
Javi Rastas - FRANCESC CORBERA
Dirección - FERNANDO TATO
Ayudante de Dirección - OZO PEROZO
Dirección de Fotografía - JUAN MORGADE
Producción Ejecutiva - ADRIÁN CASTIÑEIRAS, FRANCESC CORBERA
Dirección de Producción - BORJA C. VARELA
Jefe de Sonido - PABLO VIÑA
Pertiguista - CHEMA SILVA
Dirección de Arte - FRAN CORRAL
Producción - NATI ISORNA
Argumento original - FERNANDO TATO, JOSÉ DÍAZ FERNÁNDEZ
Guión - FERNANDO TATO, ADRIÁN CASTIÑEIRAS
Maquillaje y Peluquería - CARMEN YÉBENES SOTO
Meritorias Make Up y Peluquería - DIANA TOJO CORRAL, PAOLA SEGADE DIÉGUEZ
Eléctrico - PABLO GAYO
Grafismo - CATARINA MOSQUERA
Cámaras - LUCAS TERCEIRO, JORGE CASTRO
Postproducción de Sonido - PABLO VIÑA
Montaje y Etalonaje - LUCAS TERCEIRO
Making Of - SIMÓN CASAL, LUCAS TERCEIRO
Banda Sonora - Uganda, Don´t kill the bird, Marry me, escritos, grabados y producidos por ADRIÁN SOLLA
Música Aquella ropa tan extraña escrita por FERNANDO TATO
Producido por ADRIÁN SOLLA
Mezclado por RUBÉN MONTES en DISQUESÍ ESTUDIOS
FERNANDO TATO - Voz
SUSANA SAMPEDRO - Voz
ADRIÁN SOLLA - Teclados
ANDONI ARCOS - Guitarras, Bajos y Teclados
CHUCHO GONZÁLEZ - Batería
Agradecimientos
CRISTINA VILLAVERDE
EDU VIDAL
ADRIÁN GÓMEZ
LUCÍA PORTO
PABLO ALDREY
ALICIA DÍAZ
CARLOS BEIRÓ
JAIME PÉREZ
ILLANA COSSIO
BREIXO PÉREZ
ÁNGEL NIMO
MARCOS RODRÍGUEZ
JESÚS FONT
DESIRÉ PILLADO
NOELIA PAMPÍN
MARTA DOVIRO
PAULA CEREIXO
CAROLINA OTERO
MARTA GONZÁLEZ RIVAS
LÍA CHACÓN
PAULA TERCEIRO
CAROLINA TERCEIRO
SONIA OTERO
BELÉN OTERO
PEDRO TIZÓN
LA PIPA DE LA PAZ
CEGA AUDIOVISUALES
FILAMENTO ILUMINACIÓN
AUTOS BREA
KRAKEN FILMS - 2018
History of the Internet | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:04:08 1 Precursors
00:05:49 2 Development of wide area networking
00:06:24 2.1 Inspiration
00:09:14 2.2 Development of packet switching
00:10:47 2.3 Networks that led to the Internet
00:10:57 2.3.1 NPL network
00:12:11 2.3.2 ARPANET
00:15:28 2.3.3 Merit Network
00:17:01 2.3.4 CYCLADES
00:17:44 2.3.5 X.25 and public data networks
00:20:14 2.3.6 UUCP and Usenet
00:21:53 2.4 Merging the networks and creating the Internet (1973–95)
00:22:07 2.4.1 TCP/IP
00:26:14 2.4.2 From ARPANET to NSFNET
00:30:49 2.4.3 Transition towards the Internet
00:33:10 2.5 TCP/IP goes global (1980s)
00:33:21 2.5.1 CERN, the European Internet, the link to the Pacific and beyond
00:36:34 2.5.2 The early global digital divide emerges
00:37:09 2.5.2.1 Africa
00:39:26 2.5.2.2 Asia and Oceania
00:40:46 2.5.2.3 Latin America
00:41:14 2.6 Rise of the global Internet (late 1980s/early 1990s onward)
00:44:36 2.6.1 World Wide Web and introduction of browsers
00:46:57 2.6.2 Use in wider society 1990s to early 2000s (Web 1.0)
00:52:40 2.6.3 Web 2.0
00:56:09 2.6.4 The mobile revolution
00:57:42 2.7 Networking in outer space
01:00:14 3 Internet governance
01:01:18 3.1 NIC, InterNIC, IANA and ICANN
01:06:36 3.2 Internet Engineering Task Force
01:09:32 3.2.1 Request for Comments
01:11:05 3.3 The Internet Society
01:12:27 3.4 Globalization and Internet governance in the 21st century
01:14:48 4 Politicization of the Internet
01:15:59 4.1 Net neutrality
01:19:01 5 Use and culture
01:19:10 5.1 Email and Usenet
01:22:08 5.2 From Gopher to the WWW
01:26:30 5.3 Search engines
01:29:35 5.4 File sharing
01:32:06 5.5 Dot-com bubble
01:34:05 5.6 Mobile phones and the Internet
01:36:17 6 Web technologies
01:37:14 7 Historiography
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Voice name: en-AU-Wavenet-D
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- Socrates
SUMMARY
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The history of the Internet begins with the development of electronic computers in the 1950s. Initial concepts of wide area networking originated in several computer science laboratories in the United States, United Kingdom, and France. The U.S. Department of Defense awarded contracts as early as the 1960s, including for the development of the ARPANET project, directed by Robert Taylor and managed by Lawrence Roberts. The first message was sent over the ARPANET in 1969 from computer science Professor Leonard Kleinrock's laboratory at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) to the second network node at Stanford Research Institute (SRI).
Packet switching networks such as the NPL network, ARPANET, Tymnet, Merit Network, CYCLADES, and Telenet, were developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s using a variety of communications protocols. Donald Davies first demonstrated packet switching in 1967 at the National Physics Laboratory (NPL) in the UK, which became a testbed for UK research for almost two decades. The ARPANET project led to the development of protocols for internetworking, in which multiple separate networks could be joined into a network of networks.
The Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP) was developed by Robert E. Kahn and Vint Cerf in the 1970s and became the standard networking protocol on the ARPANET, incorporating concepts from the French CYCLADES project directed by Louis Pouzin. In the early 1980s the NSF funded the establishment for national supercomputing centers at several universities, and provided interconnectivity in 1986 with the NSFNET project, which also created network access to the supercomputer sites in the United States from research and education organizations. Commercial Internet service providers (ISPs) began to emerge in the very late 1980s. The ARPANET was decommissioned in 1990. Limited private connections to parts of the Internet by officially commercial entities emerged in several American cities by late 1989 and 1990, and the NSFNET was decommissio ...