BREAKING NEWS

Entertainment

Fashion

Music

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Trey Songz - NaNa (Official Music Video)

 Video Trey Songz - NaNa.

Trey Songz -NaNa Lyrics.

Put your hands in the air (in the air) AHH
Trigga
Put your, put your hands in the air
MUSTARD ON THE BEAT HO
Ooh nana
Look what you did start it
Ooh nana



Why you gotta act so naughty
Ooh nana
I'm ''bout to spend all this cash
Ooh nana
If you keep shaking that oh yeahh!
Ooh nana
Put your hands in the air if you're loving tonight
Ooh nana
Keep your hands in the air if you're spending the night
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say it like
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say
Baby I'm the one you like yeah
I'mma get you what you like yeah
Oh yeah
I'mma give it to you right yeah
Best time oh your life, yeah, oh yeah
Baby when you ready tell the waitress get the check
Girl I know you ready I don't even gotta check
You been through the worst let me show you who the best
You know I'mma get you right, curve them boys to the left, like
Ooh nana
Look what you did start it
Ooh nana
Why you gotta act so naughty
Ooh nana
I'm ''bout to spend all this cash
Ooh nana
If you keep shaking that oh oh (yeahh)
Ooh nana
Put your hands in the air if you're loving tonight
Ooh nana
Keep your hands in the air if you're spending the night
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say it like
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say
You the one who's hella bad, yeah
You the one they never had, yeah, oh yeah
All the problems you did have
Leave them broke fellas in the past, yeah, oh yeah
Girl you have good, but I could give you better
I'll have you thinking bout forever
I'mma make you say
Ooh nana
Look what you did start it (look what you done started)
Ooh nana
Why you gotta act so naughty (acting a foul)
Ooh nana
I'm ''bout to spend all this cash
Ooh nana
If you keep shaking that oh oh (yeahh)
Ooh nana
Put your hands in the air if you're loving tonight
Ooh nana
Keep your hands in the air if you're spending the night
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say it like
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say
I'm feeling lucky tonight
Everybody say
When we leave this party, you gon' love me tonight
Everybody say
Ahh, ah
You feeling lucky tonight
When we leave this party, you gon' love me tonight
OHH, oh, oh
Ooh nana
Put your hands in the air if you're loving tonight
Ooh nana
Keep your hands in the air if you're spending the night
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say it like
Ooh nana now na na na
Everybody say
Hands in the air
Na na na
Hands in the air
Na na na
Hands in the air
Na na na

© Mdau Fans | Infotainment site

Rapper Lil Wayne Confirms Solo Retirement After Tha Carter V

Lil Wayne says only $25-35 million would motivate him to record another solo album.
The Cash Money phenom and YMCMB leader sat down with MTV News recently and reiterated a goal he announced for himself back in 2012, when he said that Tha Carter V would be his final solo album.



/



"Twenty-five to 35 million [dollars] would get me to do another solo album after this," Wayne said in an interview posted online Wednesday (March 12). "I didn't smile when I said it ... and it's definitely the final Carter album."


However, he promises fans that he's not entirely stepping down from his role as a rapper, and will get in the booth, "Whenever I have to pitch in for a Young Money album, a Like Father, Like Son album, and something like that, and maybe something out the blue."

Wayne recorded his first album, a collaboration with B.G., in the early 90s, at age 11. He's released ten solo albums and numerous mixtapes since, and has performed countless features, not to mention the touring and press that goes along with recording.

He most recently helmed the release of Young Money's latest compilation, Young Money: Rise of an Empire, which dropped last Tuesday (March 4). This empire (and the album) boasts the likes of Drake, Tyga, and Nicki Minaj, and extends to his Trukfit clothing and the One Family Foundation nonprofit.

In 2012 and 2013, Wayne suffered from back-to-back health scares when he had multiple seizures that he later revealed were a result of the epilepsy he's had since he was younger.
Tha Carter V, his eleventh solo LP, is tentatively scheduled to drop May 5.

"It seems like it will be impossible for me to work this hard again for anything else," he said.

Retirement has been on Weezy's mind at least since 2011, when he told Angie Martinez and the Hot 97 listeners that by the age of 35, he'd be done as a solo artist. He'll be 32 this year.
"I have four kids," he said back then. "I would feel selfish still going to the studio when it's such a vital point in their lives."

© Mdau Fans | Infotainment site

Kim Kardashian’s Bikini Body - Star Shows Off Cleavage In Instagram Photo

The fact that Kim can fit into her 16-year-old sister’s teeny bikini just shows how much she’s slimmed down since giving birth to baby North West eight short months ago. She looks amazing!

And Kim totally made the skimpy black bikini her own, showing off her considerable curves and rocking ENORMOUS cleavage — maybe her biggest cleavage ever! The Keeping Up with the Kardashians star couldn’t resist posting a mirror selfie to her Instagram — she’s sexy and she knows it!

Kim Kardashian Looks Pretty In Pink In Miami
Kim has been showing off some gorgeous looks in Miami! She was a little more covered up when she stepped out with her sister Khloe Kardashian earlier on March 12.

Kim wore a pretty pink vintage Alaia dress and a Kardashian Kollection cropped jacket of the same peachy color. We love how her Kardashian Kollection top stops at her waist to reveal her toned figure. We also love this color on Kim — it totally compliments her newly dark locks and tan, glowing skin.

What do YOU think, HollywoodLifers? Does Kim look sexy in Kylie’s bikini? Let us know!

© Mdau Fans | Infotainment site

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Rick Ross - Supreme (Music Video)

Rick Ross continues to drop new music and visuals for his Mastermind Album, check out “Supreme” video below.  I also added a Billboard magazine photoshoot Q&A with Rick Ross below.

Friday, March 7, 2014

Great Walls of America 'could stop tornadoes'

Building three "Great Walls" across Tornado Alley in the US could eliminate the disasters, a physicist says.

The barriers - 300m (980ft) high and up to 100 miles long - would act like hill ranges, softening winds before twisters can form.

They would cost $16bn (£9.6bn) to build but save billions of dollars of damage each year, said Prof Rongjia Tao, of Temple University, Philadelphia.

He unveiled his idea at the American Physical Society meeting in Denver.
However critics say the idea is unworkable, and would create more problems than it solves.
Threat over 'forever'
 
Every year hundreds of twisters tear through communities in the great north-south corridor between the Rocky and Appalachian Mountain ranges.

The proposed walls would not shelter towns - they would not be strong enough to block a tornado in motion.
Instead, they would soften the clashing streams of hot southern and cold northern air, which form twisters in the first place, Prof Tao said.

"If we build three east-west great walls, one in North Dakota, one along the border between Kansas and Oklahoma, and the third in the south in Texas and Louisiana, we will diminish the threats in Tornado Alley forever," he said.

As evidence, he points to China - where only three tornadoes were recorded last year, compared to 803 in the US.

China too has flat plain valleys running north-south, but the difference is they are broken up by east-west hill ranges.

Although only a few hundred metres high, they are enough to take the sting out of air currents before they clash, Prof Tao believes.

Hotspot Back in the US, he notes that the flat farmlands of Illinois experience wildly varying risks of twisters.
"Washington County is a tornado hotspot. But just 60 miles (100km) away is Gallatin County, where there is almost no risk," he told BBC News.

"Why? Just look at the map - at Gallatin you have the Shawnee Hills."
These act like a barrier 200-250m (820ft) high, protecting Gallatin, he says.
"We may not have east-west mountain ranges - like the Alps in Europe - we can build walls."

"We've already been doing computer simulations and next we aim to build physical models for testing [in wind tunnels]."
Rather than create an eyesore, the walls could be "attractively" designed, says Prof Tao.
He cites the Comcast skyscraper in Philadelphia - also about 300m high, and built with a reinforced glass exterior.
"Our tornado wall could even be built of glass too. It could be a beautiful landmark," he told BBC News.
"I spoke to some architects and they said it's possible. It would take a few years to finish the walls but we could build them in stages."
Prof Tao has yet to approach government or environmental agencies with his scheme, but the reaction from meteorologists has been highly sceptical.
Harold Brooks, of the National Severe Storms Laboratory, said the great walls "simply wouldn't work".

Donna Tartt and Margaret Atwood vie for book award

Margaret Atwood, Donna Tartt and Booker winner Eleanor Catton are among the novelists longlisted for this year's Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction.

The award, formerly the Orange prize, honours women writing in English.
The 2014 nominees include four British writers and seven US authors, as well as novelists from countries including Ireland, Canada and Nigeria.

Judge Helen Fraser called the 20-strong longlist "intensely readable, gripping, intelligent and surprising".

"The judges feel that this is a fantastic selection of books of the highest quality... that you would want to press on your friends, and the judges have been doing just that," said Fraser.

The judging panel, chaired by Fraser, includes Professor Mary Beard, newsreader Sophie Raworth and columnist and author Caitlin Moran.

Tartt's The Goldfinch is her third novel. The American author won international fame with her 1992 debut The Secret History.

Canadian novelist Margaret Atwood is longlisted for her fourteenth book, Maddaddam, while New Zealand-born Catton's second novel The Luminaries won the Booker prize in October 2013.

The list also includes two previous Orange Prize winners: Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, shortlisted for Americanah and US author Suzanne Berne, for The Dogs of Littlefield.
Fatima Bhutto, niece of the late Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto, is longlisted for her debut novel The Shadow Of The Crescent Moon.

Also in the running is The Strangler Vine, the debut novel from MJ Carter, who has previously written biographies under the pseudonym Miranda Carter.

Other debuts on the longlist include Lea Carpenter's Eleven Days, Hannah Kent's Burial Rites, Audrey Magee's The Undertaking and Eimear McBride's A Girl is A Half-Formed Thing.
Last year saw US author AM Homes beat the double Booker-winning author Hilary Mantel to the prize with her satire May We Be Forgiven.

Homes became the fifth American writer in a row to win the £30,000 annual prize. The last British author to win was Rose Tremain, for The Road Home, in 2008.

Liqueur company Baileys took over sponsorship of the award last year. The prize was founded in 1996, and was sponsored by communications company Orange until 2012.

The shortlist will be announced on 7 April, and the winner revealed at London's Royal Festival Hall on 4 June.

Bad guys v the data defenders: Let battle commence

Big data analytics is making it easier to spot the bad guys looking to infiltrate business defences.
And these days, businesses need every weapon at their disposal, as bedroom hackers give way to organised criminal gangs. 

Lose your data and you can lose your reputation, customers, and even your business.
This week, US retail giant Target Corporation, which suffered a massive theft of customer data last year, offloaded its chief information officer, Beth Jacob, as part of a major overhaul of its security practices.

Stolen details of about 360 million customer accounts are now available on cyber black markets, according to security firms.

External data leaks affected more than 160 million people in 2012, according to KPMG's Data Loss Barometer, a rise of 40% on the year before.

And hacking accounted for 67% of the data loss by number of incidents.
Small needle, big haystack
 
"Big data is about pushing the needle out of the haystack irrespective of how big the haystack has become or how small the needle is," said Gordon Harrison, an industry consultant at data analytics specialist SAS.

Haiyan Song, vice-president of security at big data analysis firm Splunk, said analysing reams of data to spot security breaches had become essential because of the changing tactics of the criminals.

Hi-tech thieves have changed their tactics because security companies have got so good at spotting malware. Instead, the bad guys are relying on more subtle tactics and strive to slip inside a company unnoticed.

Big data analysis tools could help pick them out of the crowds of data, said Ms Song.

Photos

Photos
 
Back To Top
Copyright © 2014 weGamba Family Information. Designed by OddThemes