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Two column layout (can be reduced to one, could be thought of as three if you count the vertical toolbox on the right) that provides simple presentation with extensive customization; not just for the developer, but for the user. The toolbox showcases the power of stylesheet switching. Users can pick their own color, font type, font size, and even dictate what style of layout they view your web page in. Navigation is kept brief and easily accessible at the top of the page, allowing for a wider area in the content region. A min/max width allows you to control your layout, but remain flexible for low resolution users.

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Items by anonymous

Comments for Blog.Mavuno

  • Comment on Be The One by Anonymous

    Posted: February 6, 2012, 2:08 pm by Anonymous

    Thank you. I really needed to read this.

  • Comment on Don’t Survive: Thrive! by anonymous

    Posted: January 9, 2012, 8:13 am by anonymous

    Right on point Pastor M,
    I was on the verge of giving up some dreams, thought i have fought for long enough and i might as well settle in………..but now i know better, I will fight expecting great achievement & excellence.

  • Comment on Addicted by anonymous

    Posted: October 25, 2011, 12:23 pm by anonymous

    Pst Kyama this is hard for me missed this particular service but have a brother in law suffering an addiction has got a girl pregnant and the parents do not know. He wants a job and assures us he will not relapse but it happens. We tried having him start attending AA but it is still not working. Help

  • Comment on Never Work For Money! by anonymous

    Posted: September 12, 2011, 11:26 am by anonymous

    this months series has touched me in a great way, am not new to mavuno in fact am one of the members who relocated from parent nrb chapel, problem is i have never realy been a member i have watched people i personally introduced to mavuno do mizizi ombi hatua and the like and really grow in church while personally i have never even done mizizi. everything that happened in my life kinda prepared me for this series and time. i have hopped from job to job both locally and abroad and the amazing thing is that i have never kept a job for more than 15 months. at only 30yr considering that i finished my uni studies in 2005 i have been in 6 jobs in six yrs. 2 of them abraod, 2 kenyan bluechips lets just say jobs that would be a dream of any person yet i never lasted in any of them.
    to bring my story to perspective i didnt leave these jobs willingly but either coz of discontent of the way things were done while some of them i was fired for the bad choices i made.

    then i thot why me? i realized all along never had any real friends to talk to and create positivity around me. this made me make wrong choices some of which cost me dream jobs
    thats when it dawned on me that i wasnt alone i decided to start a program that matches young people with mature responsible professionals to act as mentors and provide positive friendship if only not to let them experience the same predicament like i did. i called it ‘mentor a youth program’ even this i was doing at a snail pace and only worked when i got time to.

    it was only until last sunday when i attended church for the second part of the series that i realised that all that was happening earlier was to simply prepare me for this assignment that God wants me to do. in a strange twist of event my wife who initially was not very enthusiastic about the whole mentorship thing has come around and is more energetic than myself. needless to say that i could only have gotten so far without her support.

    thanks alot pastor M for mulika-ing me during this series am now very clear on what my assignment is and will follow it with all my heart for the good. its good to be back in mavuno after so many months i have since enrolled for mizizi and planning to do ndoa to formalize stuff….and lea for the sake of our two kids.
    God bless you pastor M and all the Mavuno pple

  • Comment on Setting The Direction by Anonymous

    Posted: February 8, 2011, 9:03 am by Anonymous

    Pastor,I want to thank God for using you to confirm several things in my life.Listening to sunday’s message, i am determined by the grace of God to be one of Africa’s blacksmiths.I have just quit my job to join my husband in the family business & i can identify when you said that many of us would rather continue working in big multinationals rather than join the ‘kamau & son’s’.I do know that that was one of my struggles, the comfort & prestige of working for a big company .I am now joining the kamau & son’s & i believe that business will not only grow astronomically,but that it will be at the forefront of solving the problem of unemployment in this nation!

  • Comment on The Father Blessing by anonymous

    Posted: October 26, 2010, 4:15 pm by anonymous

    hey pastor S, my name is anonymous and i am confused.. I have the best father in the whole wide world who has always been there for me, who has loved me unconditionally and told me am beautiful and what confuses me is the person i have become. when i was growing up i was like the ugly duckling and when i matured i sprouted into a beautiful girl. men sought me and in order not to dissapoint them i engaged in sexual relations with them and now, i am 23 and have slept with 15 men. i got pregnant twice by different men and aborted both times.. now i am in a relationship where i am some how frustrated because i expect the man to love me unconditionally but he keeps blaming his actions on the fact that he had no personal relationship with his parents and he is just hard core. i am sleeping with him but i am not happy at all. i know i am sinning but i dont know how to get out.. i need help.. please pray for me….. thanx and God bless.

Comments on fewt@blog:~$ _: I give up..

  • Desktop Linux has proven time after time to be a c...

    Posted: July 23, 2010, 1:01 am by Anonymous
    Desktop Linux has proven time after time to be a complete disaster. It's a shame so many people have wasted their time and their talents on something that doesn't have a future. And it will never have one, unless their zealot users wake up and decide things have to change... which is pretty unlikely.

    Thanks for your work anyway.
  • Well, I guess its my turn. I have a 1005HA-P and ...

    Posted: December 7, 2009, 2:21 pm by Anonymous
    Well, I guess its my turn. I have a 1005HA-P and am running Ubuntu NBR 9.04. I am in rural Uganda with sloooow internet, but was able to get things up and running using instructions at the following link. I recommend people take a look at it:

    http://www.jfwhome.com/2009/08/06/perfect-ubuntu-jaunty-on-the-asus-eeepc-1005ha-and-1008ha/

    Those instructions called for, among
  • Of course that it's possible to do good SW, but co...

    Posted: December 5, 2009, 2:45 pm by Anonymous
    Of course that it's possible to do good SW, but company/community must have good release process. And only one really successful is this one [www.openbsd.org]

    They have snapshot every day or second day for i386/amd64 and it's way better, stable, secure and usable then any other OS in stable release on the market
  • Linux is for servers, and embedded systems. Anythi...

    Posted: October 28, 2009, 10:39 pm by Anonymous
    Linux is for servers, and embedded systems. Anything but desktop, laptops, or consumer devices. Linux is totally hopeless there. That's the ugly truth I learnt a few years ago, and nothing after that point has made me question that belief.

    And yeah, for all my old hatred of Microsoft and their shitty Win9x operating systems, Windows 7 is more than quite good.
  • A little late, but a good write-up. Nice to see s...

    Posted: October 28, 2009, 1:10 pm by Anonymous
    A little late, but a good write-up.

    Nice to see some sanity in the Linux world for a while.
  • Congratulations for your decision for switching to...

    Posted: October 27, 2009, 11:15 am by Anonymous
    Congratulations for your decision for switching to Debian. I appreciate Eeebuntu on my 1000H, and think Debian is a more mature base than Ubuntu will ever be.

    Keep up your good work :-)
  • Please add me to the .022% who wanted to say "than...

    Posted: October 21, 2009, 2:15 pm by Anonymous
    Please add me to the .022% who wanted to say "thanks". Thanks for making a great utility. Sorry that Canonical is screwing up so bad. I thought that they might have learned their lesson after 9.04's pulseaudio thing.
  • Have you considered joining forces with the FluxFl...

    Posted: October 20, 2009, 1:08 am by Anonymous
    Have you considered joining forces with the FluxFlux developer? (PCLinuxOS-based)
    http://fluxflux.net/fluxflux-eee/index-en.html

    Or having a bite at ASUS' own source (whatever it is) [www.h-online.com]

    At any rate, it sounds like you'd be throwing away a lot of competence... Hopefully
  • Sorry that it got so far and that it made you end ...

    Posted: October 19, 2009, 7:36 pm by Anonymous
    Sorry that it got so far and that it made you end up totally frustrated. I use your code on my 900 and it worx just great compared to 8.04 lts i had on it before. Nevertheless, we lose a truly devoted programmer with you. Thanx for your work and support throughout the past year. greetz and all the best

Comments for Mentalacrobatics

  • Comment on Silver linings: Kenya Election 2007 by anonymous

    Posted: January 16, 2008, 4:21 pm by anonymous

    Well lets hope that whatever ODM chages they willbe able to live with when its their turn to be in power…or will they find the same laws they have ‘changed’ unsutable for them when in power? just thinking out loud. This doees not mean that they shouldn’t change anything but they should be careful not to go to extremes..

  • Comment on Kibaki’s meeting with Tutu - Kenya Election 2007 by Anonymous

    Posted: January 4, 2008, 10:02 pm by Anonymous

    You know, when I take a step back, stop reading the papers or news, and just relax, I fail to see why we should not have the best of both worlds. I mean come-on, Kenya as a nation has achieved a lot in the last 5 years. That is one thing Kibaki has to be congratulated on. Raila as a person stands for the well-being of the poor. Why can they not both work together? Sure this last few months and esp this last week we have witnessed the worse of both sides. But I will take the last five years over the last week. Kibaki and Raila, you together can solve Kenya’s problems.

    Additionally, most of Kibaki’s close allies lost. Do we not realise that they will not reappear in the new government. Does this not give Kibaki a chance to break lose from the noose that tied him down. He has been a good business leader for Kenya. Raila can be a good social leader. Together we can have a Kenya we all dreamed about.

    300+ lives lost in a week is nothing something we can be proud of. However, we can be proud of the fact that we as a nation can come out stronger from this. Those families torn apart will hopefully receive the social and economic help they deserve.

    I say lets move forward, stop the violence and this clamour for a new poll. We focus of building a Kenya we all dream of and deserve. Raila you have the majority in parliament. Now you can be a statesman and pass all those well meaning bills so this is not repeated in the future. Power can come in many different forms, not just through the presidency.

  • Comment on Tension as we wait - Kenyan Election 2007 by anonymous

    Posted: December 29, 2007, 9:19 pm by anonymous

    Mentalacrobatics

    EXCELLENT REPORTING

    You have no idea.

    As a Kenyan abroad who is trying juu chini to scamper whatever news I can get given that the “usual suspects” aka Nation et al have suddenly gone deaf your blog is such a relief. Keep up the great work.

  • Comment on My MamaMikes Story by anonymous

    Posted: November 26, 2007, 3:07 pm by anonymous

    Oh my God.

    That was better than Shakespeare in love.

    I almost ordered a cake for one of my frenemies in Kenya but then thought ah, why? I guess when I visit Kenya thats how I will order the stuff for me myself and I.
    Very heartwarming.