How to fix C108 error on nano2?

 

Bronze Member
Username: Rabaab

Post Number: 99
Registered: Nov-06
My nano receiver shows C108 on the display panel on the front side when I turn the switch off and then on it again.
How to fix it and get the receiver working?
Tried to use the recovery Loader file many times but no help.
I need help..
 

Gold Member
Username: Pulpfiktion

Post Number: 1069
Registered: Mar-08
Subash say: Look here.

http://www.abadss.com/forum/1077-cnx-nano-2-help/138591-c-108-nano2.html
 

Gold Member
Username: Runnerguy

Pluto

Post Number: 2626
Registered: Sep-06
Right next to Reay Road, a railway station in Mumbai, India, is a stone-walled shack where a group of men sit huddled together. A mist of smoke rises above then, and the men’s faces grow visibly anxious as they beÂgin to take in bittersweet smell. The men take turns chasing the smoke risÂing up from the deep red resin of the opium poppy as it slowly trickles from one end of the foil to the other.

â€Just as a man loves his wife, he begins to love this drug,†says Aneja, a twenty-eight year old drug user and taxi driver. His friend, in a stupor, hangs lifelessly next to him. The flame on the match Aneja was holding had already reached his fingertips, but he continÂued, â€This is a horrible thing, but, withÂout it, a man’s mind stops working.â€

In this small shack, everyone is forthÂcoming about how opioid addiction has ruined their lives. It was a moment of dissonance to witness a discussion resembling a counseling session alongÂside drug use. â€We can only go withÂout it for twenty four hours and then our whole bodies become weak. One goes crazy without this,†says Paresh, another user in the room.

Drug addiction debilitates individuÂals physically, mentally, and financialÂly. But it has a far-reaching societal impact, especially in Mumbai, a city with over 38,000 intravenous drug usÂers (IDUs) alone, according to a 2006 study published in Sexually TransmitÂted Infections.

A walk near the Mumbai Central railway station revealed how addicts and young intravenous drug users (IDUs), desperate for their next fix, will even turn on their own mothers to extract money. The familial impact of drug addiction is devastating when harassment and verbal abuse turn into physical violence. â€Most men beÂgin committing crimes to pay for their drugs. Maybe 10% of addicts actually work real jobs,†says Paresh.

Once abandoned by their families, addicts resort to petty crime and theft as an everyday means to pay for drugs. When police catch them using or recÂognize a user, they beat them and extort money. One man in the shack claimed that the police beat him so badly because he could not pay a bribe that he had to be hospitalized after his leg had been broken in several places. Drug use is his natural way to deal with the recurring infection on his foot.

Hearing this, Sanjay speaks up about the lack of support for addicts and criticizes local NGOs for profitÂing from the funding they receive. In this room strewn with matches and garbage, Sanjay’s presence would make anyone do a double-take. Clean-shaven and dressed in a crisp shirt, he stands in stark contrast to the unkempt men beside him. He shows me a copy of his diploma from Bombay UniverÂsity, and tells me about his business. Sanjay is quick to point out that he is a recreational user, but he comes to this shack at least once a week. But he is living proof that drug use is a type of equalizer, reducing a successful entreÂpreneur to one of the most marginalÂized groups in society.

He explains how twenty to twenÂty-five users are paid off by NGOs to come and discuss the benefits of the NGO’s services (they did not actually receive) when funding agencies visit. The lack of follow-up at the NGOs abÂsolves them of having to spend more resources on relieving users of their addiction. He claims that some NGOs that receive free needles from a govÂernment needle exchange program actually sell those needles. If proven true, this would implicate NGOs in deÂfrauding the government and funders in addition to taking advantage of the vulnerabilities of addicts.

The destruction of the family unit, police brutality, and corruption in NGOs are not only major societal imÂpacts of drug addiction but also reify the drug problem. Transparency InÂternational ranked India 85th in its 2008 corruption perception index, with police perceived as being the most corrupt all over the world. NGOs and rehabilitation centers can play an enormous role in curbing the societal impact of addiction, but funding agenÂcies should develop novel monitoring strategies to prevent the wastage of resources. Media campaigns exposing police brutality may help empower marginalized victims to come forward. However, solutions to these problems are by no means hard and fast and will require considerable momentum from the public.
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Vol. VI, Issue 1

Healthcare Economics (Fall 2009)
Vol. VI, Issue 1

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Bronze Member
Username: Sky_king

Post Number: 23
Registered: Feb-12
Zulu Nice post
but to make a long story short, do you think Pest Control is on crack?
 

Gold Member
Username: Pulpfiktion

Post Number: 1074
Registered: Mar-08
BBC story......

Japan is marking the first anniversary of the devastating earthquake and tsunami which struck the north-eastern coast, killing thousands.
The magnitude 9.0 quake, the most powerful since records began, also triggered a serious nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant.
Thousands of people were evacuated as radiation leaked from the plant.
Memorial services have been planned and a minute of silence will be observed at the exact moment the quake hit.
The main memorial ceremony will be held at Tokyo's National Theatre and will be attended by Japan's Emperor Akihito and Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.
The 78-year-old emperor had heart surgery three weeks ago and reports say he will attend 20 minutes of the hour-long ceremony with Empress Michiko.
Warning sirens will sound across the north-east of the country on Sunday at the precise time the quake struck. Bells and prayers will also reverberate across the country as the minute of silence is observed.
Japan's Kyodo news agency also reported that some trains in and around Tokyo will stop to mark the moment.
Nuclear fears
The earthquake hit at 14:46 local time about 400km (250 miles) north-east of Tokyo on 11 March 2011.
Shortly after the quake, an immense surge of water enveloped the north-eastern coast as a tsunami swept cars, ships, and buildings away, crushing coastal communities.
The twin natural disasters claimed more than 15,800 lives, and more than 3,000 people remain unaccounted for.
Continue reading the main story
â€Start Quote
Even though one year has passed, nothing has really changedâ€
Tatsuya Suzuki Survivor
• Grief of Japan's tsunami survivors
In the Fukushima prefecture, where the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is located, the impact of the disaster was particularly acute.
Radiation leaked from the plant after a series of fires and explosions damaged four of the plant's six reactor buildings, with serious failures in the plant's cooling system being at the heart of the problem.
A 20 km (12.5 mile) exclusion zone around the plant was put in place making tens of thousands of people homeless. Radiation means the area around remains uninhabitable.
The plant is in cold shutdown now and Prime Minister Noda has promised that over the decades to come it will be decommissioned and he has also pledged to rebuild the devastated towns along the coast.
Slow recovery?
But correspondents say that Japan is still dealing with the economic and political fallout of the disaster. Japan's prime minister at the time of the disaster, Naoto Kan, resigned months later.
Parts of the north-eastern coast are still badly damaged
He had been criticised for failing to show leadership during the nuclear crisis after the quake. The nuclear crisis also revealed serious flaws in the nuclear industry's regulatory systems and safety standards.
Although much of the debris has been cleared, survivors from the devastated north-east have complained about slow recovery efforts.
One day before national commemorations, the families and loved ones of victims began to pay their respects at the graves of those they have lost.
In Iwaki City in Fukushima, thousands of candles were lit, ceremonial bells were rung and monks chanted.
Anti-nuclear protests are also scheduled to be held in Tokyo, Fukushima and other parts of the country to coincide with the anniversary.
 

Gold Member
Username: Mrgreg

Post Number: 1392
Registered: Dec-07
Who the fu*ck cares.Pest why don't you go there and help them clean up the mess instead of posting this useless sh!t.
 

Diamond Member
Username: Nydas

Post Number: 22785
Registered: Jun-06
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
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Ozawa portrait hung at Diet with other old-timers

A portrait of former DPJ leader Ichiro Ozawa is hung in the Diet to honor his more than 25 years of public service, as the specially indicted kingpin stands trial over election finance charges.
Interfaith prayer meet for victims held in N.Y.
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Chernobyl charity chief encourages residents
Prosecutors seek noose for alleged triple boyfriend killer
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Mom who starved her kids faces life
Farm chief may have norovirus
Cold low brings snow, heavy blow
New rules set for retrieving war remains in Philippines
Worries on Guam linger despite reduced U.S. forces buildup
Panel advises keeping nursing test in Japanese
 

New member
Username: Xerxes

Post Number: 2
Registered: Feb-12
Wise men speak because they have something to say; Fools because they have to say something.
 

Diamond Member
Username: Nydas

Post Number: 22787
Registered: Jun-06
Thank you Fool Xerxes, for introducing yourself.
 

Silver Member
Username: Chaff

Post Number: 988
Registered: Feb-10
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