Post by account_disabled on Mar 5, 2024 0:04:30 GMT -5
Facebook wants to give teenagers back some of the ground they've lost on Facebook now that even their grandparents have a profile on the network. That's why I created the app, exclusively for those under 21 years of age. For Facebook it is going back a little to the original purpose of the network, which was to connect people from the same community, but this time the iOS app is focused on video. Instead of writing about what you like and don't like, your profile shows a video so others can get to know you. The new network is aimed at high school youth, in fact, when you register you can select your school and then you will be able to see videos of people from the same or similar school. There is only one condition: to be able to see the profiles of your colleagues, at least 20 have to register and thus, the app will allow you to see more profiles. has sparked enormous controversy among parents and some users, as it requests a large amount of personal information, but lacks privacy settings, making all content public.
Happy Hearts has supported the launch of 130 schools in ten countries: Indonesia with 92 schools, Peru (9), Haiti (9), Philippines Mexico , Thailand America Mobile Number List Colombia and Chile . In 10 years of work, more than 50,000 children from different parts of the world have returned to the classrooms. “I realized that the issue of children in school was super important. That was where she no longer saw that look in the children's eyes, especially that sparkle in their eyes. That was what struck me the most in my heart, it is so important to rebuild a school because it becomes the heart of the community,” mentions. From garbage dump to first class school In 1997, the residents of the Tres neighborhood, made up of teachers and parents, managed to donate land. Without support from the federal government, the community adapted the site to create an education center.
Surrounded by a perimeter mesh, inside maguey trees, grass, and garbage waste, the students attended to take class in a room similar to a hut made up of a tin and cardboard roof. “This land was a garbage dump and now it is practically one of the best schools in the area. We are providing an adequate service for all young people who wish to register,” says David Salazar Solís, director of the José . In , with an investment of 5.1 million pesos, the transformation of the institution began. The school established under the Self-Sustainable Schools Program (PEAS) operated by the insurer SURA México, in alliance with Happy Hearts. Four months later, the property had four teaching classrooms, a computer room, a science laboratory, a counseling room, an office with a warehouse, a school cafeteria, a civic plaza and a concrete perimeter fence, which makes it the best equipped in terms of infrastructure in the Valley.
Happy Hearts has supported the launch of 130 schools in ten countries: Indonesia with 92 schools, Peru (9), Haiti (9), Philippines Mexico , Thailand America Mobile Number List Colombia and Chile . In 10 years of work, more than 50,000 children from different parts of the world have returned to the classrooms. “I realized that the issue of children in school was super important. That was where she no longer saw that look in the children's eyes, especially that sparkle in their eyes. That was what struck me the most in my heart, it is so important to rebuild a school because it becomes the heart of the community,” mentions. From garbage dump to first class school In 1997, the residents of the Tres neighborhood, made up of teachers and parents, managed to donate land. Without support from the federal government, the community adapted the site to create an education center.
Surrounded by a perimeter mesh, inside maguey trees, grass, and garbage waste, the students attended to take class in a room similar to a hut made up of a tin and cardboard roof. “This land was a garbage dump and now it is practically one of the best schools in the area. We are providing an adequate service for all young people who wish to register,” says David Salazar Solís, director of the José . In , with an investment of 5.1 million pesos, the transformation of the institution began. The school established under the Self-Sustainable Schools Program (PEAS) operated by the insurer SURA México, in alliance with Happy Hearts. Four months later, the property had four teaching classrooms, a computer room, a science laboratory, a counseling room, an office with a warehouse, a school cafeteria, a civic plaza and a concrete perimeter fence, which makes it the best equipped in terms of infrastructure in the Valley.