Installing spoonwep2 and spoonwpa on BackTrack 4 Incase you need more visual help on installing spoonwep and spoonwpa, you can watch the video. First you'll need to download Spoonwep2 and Spoonwpa in the /tmp/ dir. [Tuto] Comment installer Backtrack 5 sur Windows 7? Pirater presque n'importe qu'elle wifi avec cette application!! - Duration: 2:28. Game astuce 267,128 views.
Image: Oisin Keniry/INPHO
Image: Oisin Keniry/INPHO
Cork City 1
Bohemians 0
Denis Hurley reports from Turner’s Cross
AS ACTION MOVED into the 89th minute with Cork City and Bohemians still scoreless at Turner’s Cross, it looked as if the Rebel Army would be overtaken at the top of the Premier Division.
However, the City fans’ hope is a light that never goes out and they were rewarded by a charming man as sub Gearóid Morrissey marked his first appearance since 30 April with an all-important goal.
When Shane Griffin sent a free kick from the right into the danger-zone, Graham Cummins kept the ball alive and Morrissey was able to fire to the top corner of the net.
It was a joyous moment at the end of a frustrating night for City as Bohs played well. They might have led early on as Ian Morris met a Kevin Devaney free kick but Barry McNamee blocked on the line, though City looked to have got on top as the half wore on.
They nearly led as Bohs defender Derek Pender headed against his own post from a McNamee corner and then Shane Supple did brilliantly to deny Cummins.
Kieran Sadlier shot over from close range early in the second half but Bohs were still in it and thought they had led when Dylan Watts slotted past Mark McNulty from a Devaney pass, but the flag was up for offside.
Time was running out for City, though Bohs had a let-off as Supple had to prevent what would have been a Keith Buckley own goal. The keeper could do nothing to keep out Morrissey’s effort, though.
Bohs sub Dan Byrne might have scored an equaliser in injury time, but McNulty saved brilliantly to ensure City took the points.
Cork City: Mark McNulty; Colm Horgan (Gearóid Morrissey 60), Conor McCarthy, McLoughlin, Shane Griffin; Barry McNamee (Josh O’Hanlon 78), Jimmy Keohane; Sheppard (Steven Beattie 20), Garry Buckley, Kieran Sadlier; Graham Cummins.
Bohemians: Shane Supple; Derek Pender (Danny Grant 74), Rob Cornwall, Dan Casey (Dan Byrne 88), Paddy Kirk; Oscar Brennan, Ian Morris; Keith Buckley, Dylan Watts (Eoghan Stokes 90), Kevin Devaney; Dinny Corcoran.
Referee: Neil Doyle (Dublin).
![Installer Installer](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_9Ss_t44Ei0g/S5vOVYrlrBI/AAAAAAAAAoA/oZ7Ko2stWE4/s400/spoonwep.png)
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Recently, a large retail chain approached CDW for help incorporating mobile devices into its business model. The company was building a new set of mobile apps that would both assist customers ordering services and help employees do their jobs. But business leaders were wary of managing thousands of new devices throughout their scattered franchise locations.
From provisioning devices at the beginning of the lifecycle to disposing of them at the end, company leaders wanted no part of most of the tasks involved with mobile device ownership. They were interested only in the aspects that would boost their business, and wanted someone else to take care of the rest.
As mobility becomes more pervasive, we’re seeing this attitude more and more among retailers, who are increasingly opting for subscription-based deployment models. Here are three chief benefits to Device as a Service for retailers:
1. Innovative Customer Experience
With more competition every year from online retailers, brick-and-mortar stores face mounting pressure to deliver customer experiences that set them apart. And most retailers employ far fewer floor staff than they did even 15 years ago, creating a need for IT solutions to help fill this gap.
With the right apps, mobile devices can assist with product lookup and employee training, in addition to more advanced use cases such as clienteling (establishing relationships with customers based on data about their preferences and behaviors) and endless aisle (placing on-the-spot orders and having products delivered directly to customers’ homes). A subscription model ensures that mobile devices are always current and in working order, providing a consistently high level of service for customers.
2. Faster Refresh Cycles
Back when retail sales associates were armed only with scanners, stores could get away with replacing technology every five years or so. Not anymore. The rate of innovation in the mobile space is extremely high, and retailers must keep up if they want to capitalize on new use cases and establish a competitive advantage in the marketplace.
Most Device as a Service contracts run for 24 or 36 months, helping companies spread out the cost of their investment and supply their employees with the latest in mobile technology.
3. Improved Management
Enterprise mobility management (EMM) extends beyond the need to protect sensitive data. While safeguarding payment data and other valuable information is obviously a top concern for retailers, mobile devices also create management needs ranging from fixing and replacing the hardware to updating operating systems and pushing out new apps.
These management tasks can be a major pain point for retailers, whose mobile deployments often take place in widely distributed environments. Exerting control over thousands of devices across a broad geographical area can be complicated and expensive, limiting the ability of a retailer to create consistent and reliable solutions. A subscription device model centralizes management, ensuring that users have the right tools, with the right capabilities, when they need them. That’s the essence of Device as a Service.