Alian Fere Yaweze

Moderators: Juke, Forum Moderators, Server Moderators

Locked
Wenak_Al_kahbe
Posts: 2.0
Joined: March 31st, 2011, 10:38 am

Alian Fere Yaweze

Post by Wenak_Al_kahbe »

Gang name:Alian Fere Yaweze
Gang Description Where you came from:Whhhh really i dont know what this asking me i think this question asking me Where your gang came from:Mhhh my gang came from someone he did this gang then he left me to lead this gang he left the gang because he did not like to stay the gang because this gang always fighting and everyone killing them then i shouted and said:Stop what you do now,Then they said why you screaming then lamented and please you all shoting police and every one and this very dangerous for us and me too then i saw them dont fighting and no problem for us then i said to the Old-Boss i see no one do anything then he said no thanks then i maked everything for this gang and helped everything for this gang and they said who the boss i said we will vote then one said im the boss then one said how we will vote and one said i need you the boss (Me) then everyone said that i only some of them said dont need me,And then became sedition
then i said stop we said vote,And some of them said no,Because we dont need you.And who wants me said:He said we vote right? answer:Right,Ok so we make him the boss.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
hitory Short:
Welcome to the IFX Group™

A Different Perspective

Our goal is to expand the number of perspectives for your project. While this may sound simple, it is surprisingly uncommon.

Consider web site design for example. Today there are plenty of tools to allow an average person to create a web page. With some time a single person can make a web page that contains the desired information plus graphics and maybe some multimedia (i.e. sound, video, etc.) content. With a little more time the web page can be refined to look good on the web person's one display screen and default web browser.

This is what we call single perspective web design. It is very common.

By single perspective web design we mean it looks good on one computer with one monitor and one web browser. But what happens when that same web page is shown on a different computer with a different brand monitor and possibly a different web browser running on a different operating system? More often than not it looks different than it does on your display and may, if it looks significantly worse, reflect in an unflatteringly way on your company, product or service.

Why?

Fonts.
Most first time web page authors think about fonts simply as an artistic way of making the page look pretty. A fancy font may look nice on the author's screen, but what does the web page look like when viewed on a computer where that font is not available? Most operating systems will try to substitute a different font, but unless the web authoring software added specific font substitution instructions, the alternate choice is not likely to look like it was originally intended. If the substitution mistakenly selects a non-alphanumeric font, like Wingdings, the text becomes unreadable.

Color.
There are whole industries built around nothing more than accurate color. It is hard enough to get the exact desired color of ink on paper, but getting two different monitors to show exactly the same color is nearly impossible. This involves a great number of variables including the display technology, size, speed, and even age. The best choice for color is to ensure the important things are high enough contrast to remain visible even in the worst conditions.

Media.
All that flashy video and motion on your web site might look impressive to you, but what does your web page look like when that animation can't be shown? There is no universal standard for video that is guaranteed to work the same on every web browser on every operating system. In fact every video format, web or not, always requires special player software to be installed in the browser or the operating system. What does the web page look like if that player software is not available? Any web site with content that is only available in a multimedia format is effectively invisible to users with disabilities and more importantly for commercial web sites the content is invisible to search engines too. And this doesn't even touch on the bandwidth required to download the media to the user.

By now you may be noticing a common theme. It is relatively easy to create something that looks good from the perspective of one single machine, but it is a whole different thing to make that same web page look good on a lot of different machines.

So what exactly are these different perspectives and why should I care?

Target Audience

In a business setting, this is your primary customer. Unless you can absolutely ensure all of your target audience is using exactly the same setup as your web author, you can be guaranteed they will be using a variety of different (including older) operating systems, different (including older) web browsers and may or may not have any media ability. Large corporations sometimes have internal web content for the company employees that are likely to be using a company owned computer with a common operating system and default web browser. Creating web content for internal distribution is very different than web content for customers outside the company. If your web page looks bad in front of your target audience, it does nothing to attract and might even turn some away.

Alternate Audience

Unless your primary customers have disabilities, visually and aurally impaired users are rarely considered when first designing web content. This is like turning customers away at the front door of your business simply because they do not have the same abilities as your web page author. In most companies, an employee that turns away paying customers is soon fired.

Infrastructure

Think about how you find a web page when you do not know the address. You can try to guess the URL (Uniform Resource Locator) address of the company, you can use a web index or you can use a web search engine.

Here are each of the choices and their associated issues.

Guess.
Trying to guess the URL address is most often disappointing because surprisingly few companies own all of the misspellings, plural and singular versions of their name in all of the top level (.COM, .NET, .ORG, etc.) domains. It is impossible all of your potential customers will be able to guess your correct domain name and type it 100% of the time without any typographical errors. Humans make mistakes. Planning ahead to help your human customers even when they make mistakes is good for your business.

Web index.
In the most simple form this is a list of links or bookmarks. Some of the larger web indexing sites put a little more effort into grouping the web links by class, popularity or subject, but this still requires the end user to know the kind of web site before they can find the URL address. What happens when someone from the web index first finds your web page? Do they know the category to use for your web site? What happens if you want to be listed in more than one category?

Web search.
This is the most popular way to find a URL address because it allows you to search with keywords to find things that may not fit into web index categories. Since most people start with a web search, modern web browsers often include a place to directly search without needing to go to the search engine web page first.

Each one of these (target audience, alternate audience, infrastructure) see your web page in a different way with their own unique perspective. The target audience may be the only one that sees the pretty stuff. The alternate audience and infrastructure are likely to only see the text content. If your main content is in flashy animation, video and audio, your content is effectively invisible to everyone that can not see it, including all web indexing and search infrastructure.

How do people find you if you are invisible?

We can help.

It all starts with some perspective and that starts with a little education.

It's all about...

Any physical business knows that success is all about location, location, location.

Any Internet business knows that success is all about imformation, information, information.

If your web site does not contain relevant, original, valuable information, you have nothing to offer. See, it works. There is a nice bit of valuable information for your collection.



The Long And Short Of It.

Some people are too impatient to build real businesses. They repeatedly fall for deceptively convincing get rich quick promotions, always believing this one will be different. Focusing only on the short term view always ends up costing more because it continually runs into unexpected barriers.

We do our best to avoid put it up quick and cheap web sites with no real value that are so common on the web. Instead we do our best to focus on the long term goal. An extra hour or two invested into a good design at the beginning with a hour or two of maintenance invested each month can make days, months or years worth of difference as your company grows. We can help you avoid the barriers.



Our perspective on animation technologies like Flash.

A surprisingly large number of small business owners are unknowingly drawn into paying huge sums of money for web animation. This is unfortunate because that same business owner would never knowingly spend money on advertising or promotional materials that are invisible to a portion of the customer base. This continues to happen just because the business owner is uninformed.

We refuse to create, edit or maintain any media-only (e.g. Flash) web site content for the following reasons.

1. This content is effectively invisible to all search engines. The search engines are in business to help people find you. Help them help you.

2. All but the most simplistic web animation uses proprietary technology that is never universally available. This means part of your customer base may not be able to see the pretty pictures simply because they have an old version of the player, or can't get the player for their choice of operating system.

3. If you thought it is expensive to create that animated content, consider the cost of a minor change. If you don't have all of the source materials used to create that animation, you effectively have to pay again for it to be created new from scratch. Alternatively, an HTML edit to change a price or date is trivially simple and low cost.

We choose instead to help educate our customers so they can save money and get a much higher level of effectiveness out of their web content while keeping the ability for rapid changes and updates at very affordable rates.



Excape the Flash Trap

If you have one of those expensive and invisible animated web sites, we can help turn that site into highly compatible and easy to maintain HTML that is friendly to the search engines and attractive to all of your customers.



Content Creation

Writing should be the main purpose of any web page. Well known multimedia web sites like YouTube have much more text than video. Keep in mind that virtually all of the text is written voluntarily. Look for your own content.

Every great work starts with something simple. Sometimes all you need is an idea or a strong phrase to get started. Once that first stone is set in place with a second and third stone to keep it company, you are well on your way to a much larger structure.

This is why we suggest starting small and simple. It doesn't need to be anything more than writing down a few thoughts or ideas when something sparks your interest. Describe what makes you, your service or your product different. Then go back a little later after you collect enough ideas and see if there is a theme to connect the dots. You may find that your great work has already started.



The Problem With Wide Text

Do you have a nice big wide-screen monitor with a very high resolution? Do you ever wonder why so many web pages are displayed in a relatively narrow width when you have all this space on your screen? This is a lesson learned a very long time ago by news publishers (yes, the ink on paper stuff) that shows the human eye quickly fatigues from excessive side-to-side movement. This is why every news paper in the world is divided into narrow columns no matter the physical paper size. If the column is narrow enough and held at a comfortable distance, the side-to-side movement can be minimized which makes it easier for the reader.

Here is an example of what this feels like.

Example 1
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Suspendisse pharetra, felis id eleifend nonummy, dolor arcu fringilla sapien, vel ultrices metus odio a augue. Aliquam erat volutpat. Duis dolor lectus, laoreet sit amet, pulvinar nec, congue sed, ipsum. Maecenas quis sem eu enim adipiscing egestas.
Example 2
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Suspendisse pharetra, felis id eleifend nonummy, dolor arcu fringilla sapien, vel ultrices metus odio a augue. Aliquam erat volutpat. Duis dolor lectus, laoreet sit amet, pulvinar nec, congue sed, ipsum. Maecenas quis sem eu enim adipiscing egestas.

These two boxes contain the exact same text. Which one is less effort for the reader?



Contact Information

Every web site should have some way for the user or customer to contact you. Depending on your business this may include physical (voice phone or street address) or electronic (fax phone or email address) contact information. Unfortunately few business owners consider how their business looks when viewed just from the online perspective as many of their online customers are likely to do.

Consider the email address on your web site for example.

Have you noticed the number of business web sites that use their own company domain name but the contact email address is hosted elsewhere (a cable company, phone company, Google, Yahoo or AOL)? This is like saying your business is too small to afford a phone, so it rents an extension off of some other company's phone. Even if that is exactly the situation, openly displaying this to the public never helps. No matter how cheap that email service may be, it can never overcome the unprofessional appearance especially when your web site already has your company domain name.

We prefer to skip the whole email issue altogether for two main reasons.

The first is the huge onslaught of spam targeted at any email address that appears on a web site. There are many different ways to attempt to thwart the email address harvesting, but to some degree all of them only cause problems for legitimate users and do little or nothing to prevent the spam.
The second is that it is growing to be impractical to force a web user to open up their email program, retype or copy your address and then send it to you. This mostly worked in the early days of the Internet when all email was handled by an email program. Now users are just as likely to use a web browser to read and write email, possibly the same web browser viewing your web page.
So why not simply provide a box on your web page where the user can type a message to you without all the email stuff getting in the way? No need for the user to switch to a different program, or a different web site to contact you and no risk of looking unprofessional in public.



Page Counters

Page counters that show the number of visitors on your commercial web site are generally a bad idea. This is most likely to cause one of two negative reactions in your visitors.

The first is if they think the page count number is too low, which is always a relative number that only the customer knows. In this case they are most likely to equate a low page count to a restaurant with no cars in the parking lot. No matter how good that restaurant may be, the sign of low popularity is a very real barrier to attracting new customers.

The second is if the number is too high, which again is always a relative number that only the customer knows. In this case the customer may view your company as too busy to provide personal attention to each customer. This is even more true for customers with money that seek higher than average quality in the products and services they buy.

If you must use page counters, only use them to track activity on specific pages in your web site. Unless you have a specific purpose for the page count, never show the number directly on a page where the user can casually see. And especially do not advertise the date when the counter was started anyplace where a customer can see. This kind of information is only for the web site owner.

Instead of page counters it is much better to use any number of web server log file analyzers to gather traffic patterns and generate detailed traffic reports not possible with a simple page counter. Armed with these reports you can invest time and energy in the places where your customers are spending their time and customizing your web content to better fit your customer's point of view.



Menu Navigation

Every web site with more than one page needs to have a menu. Easy navigation is required to keep a user on your web site. Unfortunately a large number of otherwise professional web sites use graphic images of words (instead of actual text) and scripting for menu navigation. This is only made worse when the images have no alternate text or other clues to help users that can't see the graphics. This can be a fatal mistake when your competitor is using a modern text menu.

Here are some things to keep in mind.
Not every web browser has scripting enabled at all times. Security conscience users have web scripting disabled by default to protect against infection. We recommend NoScript for users that want a safer web experience. If your menu is invisible or impossible to use without scripting, you just sent users that care about security to your competition.
Not every web user can see graphics. This is not just visually impaired users, but also applies to users with very limited, unreliable or expensive bandwidth. If your site navigation is impossible to use without the graphics, you may have lost a customer.
Not every display device has the same color depth or contrast. What looks fine on your high end display may be totally unreadable at a lower color depth. If your menus are only available as images, the user is unable to use an alternate method to read the text to find what they want.
We work hard to make sure the navigation is well structured and easy to use for all of your users. Check out our menus on this web site. No images or scripting used here.



Why We Do Not Push Facebook

It's all about time. Facebook is important for businesses only if the business is dedicated to keep it current, interactive and respond to fans comments especially the negative ones for reputation management. Nothing hearts a business more than putting a page (Facebook or not) out there only to forget about it. From the customer perspective there is very little difference between a company that is too busy to update their page and one that is going out of business.

Think of this in terms of a brick and mortar store front. Would you rather the store owner spend time fixing up their own place to make it nicer and more inviting for customers or would you rather they spend that same time fixing up a booth located in a convention or worse, inside some other business? Time is always a limited resource. Choosing where to invest that time for the best return can make the difference between average and great.

In the case of a small business with limited time and people resources, investing all of your time and effort first into your own web site by creating new content, adding real value and keeping everything current is much more effective in the long term. This is primarily because your own web site should be the first place where customers go to interact with your company without distraction or outside influence.

The same rules go for everything outside of your own web site. It doesn't matter if the name is Facebook, Twitter, blogging or "some other social media site. If you can commit time to adding your value to their web site, why not invest that same time into your own web site first?
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Why you should be a gang leader:
In the ensuing years, Wenak_Alkahbe classic 1986 tale of an older Batmanreturning to fix the problems of Gotham City has taken on the name of the collection edition, “Batman: The Dark Knight Returns.” However, at the time the comic was released, the four book series was simply labeled “Batman: Dark Knight,” with each of the four individual books given their own sub-title. The first book, detailing Batman's' determination, after a 10 year retirement, to once again don the cape and cowl and bring justice back to the streets of Gotham, was titled “Batman: The Dark Knight Returns.”

However, while Batman may have returned in the first issue, it was not until the battle in the second issue that you could say, as the book's title puts it, “Batman: Dark Knight Triumphant.”

Perhaps the biggest source of terror in Gotham was a gang calling itself the Mutants, consisting of the most vicious and violent criminals you could imagine. Miller makes a point of depicting them performing random acts of murder just to show how truly wretched the state of living was in Gotham.

Batman finds out where a gathering of the Mutants was taking place and shows up in his new, tank-like Batmobile, taking the gang apart with machine guns filled with mercy bullets. The powerful hulking leader of the Mutants challenges Batman to face him man-to-man, and a prideful Batman accepts his challenge. So Batman and the much younger, stronger thug engage in a truly brutal display of hand-to-hand combat with the end result being an almost certain defeat for Batman. Luckily for Batman, neither he nor the gang leader counted on the intervention of Carrie Kelly. Kelly, a young girl who had recently taken to wearing a homemade Robin costume after Batman saved her from some Mutants, manages to distract the gang leader before he can finish Batman, giving Batman enough time to use one of his gadgets from his utility belt to knock the gang leader out before Batman passes out himself. Kelly gets Batman to the safety of the Batmobile and the pair escapes.

While the Mutant leader is arrested, Batman manages to ask Commissioner Gordon for one last favor. First he has Carrie spread the word amongst the Mutants that they would be having another meeting. Next, Batman has Gordon release the Mutant leader. The gang leader then, naturally, meets up with his gang – however, Batman is waiting for him. This time, Batman is not foolish enough to fight him directly, but instead uses the shadows and all the tricks he learned over the years to cripple the gang leader in front of all the gathered Mutants.

Having defeated their leader, Batman now has the undying allegiance of all the Mutants, who soon begin wearing bat-shaped makeup on their faces and re-name themselves the Sons of the Batman.

For awhile, at least, the Dark Knight was triumphant.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How established you/your gang and your gang members are on the server, etc:

You get involved in a gang just to take your caste forward’
Summer 2008, and the mill town of Dewsbury hits the news, linked with violence among Asian gangs, drugs and religious extremism. Photographer Nick Danziger and writer Will Pavia went there to try to unravel the identity crisis – British? Muslim? Or British Muslim? – lying behind the headlines
Late one evening this summer, a taxi slips on to an empty dual carriageway. The driver leans back in his seat. “They came here to work and they didn’t like it at first,” he says. “They wanted a shag and they made the mistake of bringing their women over. Then they were stuck here and they got used to it. My grandfather tried to go back before he died and he couldn’t stick it.”

His grandfather was a Pashtun from northern Pakistan, one of thousands of workers who journeyed from the Indian sub-continent to West Yorkshire in the Fifties and early Sixties, answering the call for labour from the wool mills. The taxi driver has three children. One is safely established in a respectable career, the other two are works in progress. “I don’t mind my kids having the odd drink,” he says. “But getting p***** like the lads I pick up... And the drugs! Muslim kids on drugs! Twenty years ago, if there was one Asian Muslim in Leeds Prison it would’ve been a scandal. Now, it’s full of Asians. It’s like they’ve adopted the worst bits of British culture.”

We are on the way to Dewsbury in West Yorkshire, on a five-day trip to meet some of the worrisome youths of this latter British Asian Muslim generation. It ought to be said right now that on the way into this subculture of gangs and knives and drugs, I met many charming, well-adjusted teenagers and young professionals. But they were not the ones I had come to see.

“Are you CID?” the taxi driver asks. A lot of people asked this. I thought it unlikely that the police would send hapless white men with note pads to infiltrate Asian gangs, but it was a particularly fraught time in a particularly anxious town.

Following the murder in May of Amar Aslam, 17, in a local park, a young Asian man and four teenagers were awaiting trial – it takes place in November. And a further Dewsbury teenager was already in court for his alleged connections to a group accused of plotting “violent jihad”. Alongside suspicions that religious extremists lurked among Dewsbury’s youth were broader concerns that the town was developing self-segregated Muslim enclaves.

Arriving in Dewsbury on a sunny Tuesday morning, the market is spread over the central square. Veiled women brush past shirtless white men in the corridors between stalls. It is the sort of sight that gives Chief Superintendent Barry South, head of the local police division, a sense of optimism. When I ask him, a few days later, about the progress of racial integration in Dewsbury, he says: “We have two or three prominent supermarkets. Look at the mix of people in those supermarkets.”

He seemed to regard shopping as the great hope for social cohesion, the one ideology that binds us. Looking around Dewsbury Market that day, I am hopeful, too. There are three stalls selling cloth for veils and shalwar kameezes: two are run by white non-Muslims. Another stall is selling T-shirts proclaiming the owner to be a member of the “British Drinking Team”. The Muslim manager of a fish and chip shop – Muslim fish and chips! – has bought one, because they were only £1, but conceals the message beneath his apron: a compromise between Yorkshire thrift and his faith’s prohibition of alcohol.

Just as I am coming to believe in the power of retail integration, I meet a sceptic, a middle-aged white lady who asks not to be identified, and talks quietly as groups of women pass by chattering in Punjabi. “How can you be integrated when you don’t go anywhere, you don’t join anything and you don’t speak to anyone?” she says. “You can’t have integration when your religion stops you.”

But if the view from outside Dewsbury’s Muslim community is of a closed-off Islamic monoculture, the view from within is far more confusing. Instead of one community you find many. Leaving the market, we go to meet Shahid (not his real name), a well-travelled, well-educated young man in his twenties who grew up in Savile Town, south of Dewsbury. “You have Gujaratis, Kashmiris, Punjabis, you have Pashtuns from Pakistan and Afghanistan,” he says. “Now you have Sunni Iraqis and Shia Iraqis and Kurds. You have all these different communities. Half of them have their own f****** mosque.

“Each mosque says you can’t go and pray in the other or you are kafir [an unbeliever],” he adds. “We’re in a situation where we have two Eids – the festival begins on different days in different mosques.”

If the religious leaders of Dewsbury are divided by clan, then the youth have fractured along similar lines. “J”, 24, grew up on one of the toughest estates in Dewsbury. “You know castes?” says “J”. “There are lots of them and they don’t like each other. You get involved in a gang just to take your caste forward. You are going to kick the f*** out of someone just to advance your caste.”

Biradari, the ancient caste system, arrived from rural Pakistan with the first wave of migrants, to be reconstructed on the streets of West Yorkshire. In Young, British and Muslim, Philip Lewis, a lecturer at Bradford University, notes that such ties have often become stronger in Britain: “Groups suppressed in their home country are free to organise themselves and assert their political and cultural identity.”

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In game name/forum name

Leader: Wenak_Alkahbe / Wenak_Al_kahbe
Rank 3: Cesar_King / King
Rank 3: Danny_Drugz / Trucker
Rank 2: Johnny_Crack / Crick

Desired Skins
Male skin:
http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_93.png
Get them from here:
Rank 1: http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_48.png
Rank 2: http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_52.png
Rank 3: http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_98.png
Rank 4: http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_127.png
Rank 5: http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_144.png
Rank 6:http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_179.png
Rank names:
1:Mobtade
2:Lahek
3:Katil
4:Mokatil
5:Nakit
6:Motahakkem
7:King
Leader Skin:http://wiki.sa-mp.com/wiki/Image:Skin_177.png
Where the HQ:
http://img13.imageshack.us/i/samp020wj.png/
http://img819.imageshack.us/i/samp021zg.png/
Last edited by Wenak_Al_kahbe on April 1st, 2011, 7:07 am, edited 2 times in total.
User avatar
stenchman
Posts: 313.0
Joined: August 18th, 2009, 5:18 pm

Re: Alian Fere Yaweze

Post by stenchman »

is this genuine or am i getting trolled
Big_Poppa
Posts: 18.0
Joined: November 21st, 2009, 1:04 pm
Game Name(s): Fiorio Fettuccine
Location: Skopje,Macedonia

Re: Alian Fere Yaweze

Post by Big_Poppa »

Getting official, straight away. I can smell it.
Not.
:dogout: you tard.
Image
User avatar
Drake_Einstein
Posts: 34.0
Joined: February 7th, 2011, 12:02 pm
Location: Israel.

Re: Alian Fere Yaweze

Post by Drake_Einstein »

/Unsupport
Yakuza - KaiKei
Locked