Monday, 1 May 2017

DJ Khaled - I'm the One ft. Justin Bieber, Quavo, Chance the Rapper, Lil Wayne


The next version of WhatsApp locates your contacts in real time on a map, so it works

Soon you will not be able to deceive as easily as previously to your friends by saying that you are in the subway on the way when you have not yet left the house. The next version of WhatsApp includes a function to locate contacts in real time and WABetaInfo has already demonstrated how it works.

First, do not panic. The location of the function will not make our position permanently visible for all our contacts. For beginners, it is disabled by default. In other words, if you do not touch anything, nobody will be able to contact you. For this to happen, the user must activate the location and determine if it wants to be in real time.

The next version of WhatsApp locates your contacts in real time on a map, so it works


next version of WhatsApp locates your contacts

To continue, when we activate lezalicación, this is not available for all our contacts. To activate it, we have to choose the people we want to see, and for how long. In other words, we can share our position with our friends for a few minutes so they can find us better between the streets, then the function will be disabled until we need it.

Photo of Saffiyah Khan defying EDL protester in Birmingham goes viral

A photograph showing a smiling young woman at an incensed English Defenseman demonstrator was widely shared as a symbol of the Birmingham challenge facing the far right.

The image, which was shared several times on social networks, was taken during a demonstration by the far right group in downtown Birmingham on Saturday. It shows a demonstrator EDL Ian Crossland who looks into the eyes of the young woman, who looks at him relentlessly. A police officer seems to restrict Crossland.



The woman represented was identified as Saffiyah Khan, a native of Birmingham. His family has links with Bosnia and Pakistan. She said the photo was taken when she intervened to defend a woman wearing a hijab, who had been surrounded by a group of demonstrators after she called them racists.

"She was a little woman," Khan said. "When I realized that nothing was being done [by the police] and that she was surrounded by 360, that's when I came in." She described the man who confronted her as "an angry man with a little rant".

Speaking to Radio New Zealand, Khan said that the best answers she had from the photography came from people who made contact to tell her how the photo personally affected them. "I've had a lot of stories about the girls [of the population] affected and how they see me as a role model," she said.

The demonstration of the EDL attracted about 100 people and was condemned by leaders of the Labor Party, Liberal Democrat and Conservative Birmingham City Council, who said the group was not and would never be welcome in Their city.

The demonstration attracted a strong police presence, including anti-riot gates. West Midlands police said two people, believed to be counter-demonstrators, had been arrested for alleged violations of the peace.

Twessing the photo, taken by

photographer Joe Giddens 


of the Press Association, Birmingham MP Jess Phillips wrote: "Who seems to have power here, the real Brummy left or the EDL who migrated For the day in our city and could not assimilate? "His tweet had been shared and loved nearly 18,000 times on Sunday night.