Mokokchung, 18 June (MTNews): The students and teachers of Government Middle School Imrong, Ungma, under Mokokchung district, participated in a series of Janbhagidari activities from 1-15 June. These activities were organized and initiated by the Ministry of Education as part of a nationwide effort to create awareness and foster a sense of pride among various stakeholders regarding G-20, NEP, and FEN.

 

Ungma

 

GMS Imrong, Ungma hosted a variety of events throughout the Janbhagidari program aimed to educate and engage participants on various important topics.

 

The events held at GMB Imrong, Ungma included: Awareness talk on G-20 and sensitization on LiFE; Talk on NIPUN Bharat and NEP 2020; Painting competition on the theme “One family, one Earth, One Future”; Choreography on the theme song NIPUN Bharat (Nagaland); Quiz on G-20, NIPUN Bharat, and NEP 2020; Essay writing competition on G-20, NIPUN Bharat, and NEP 2020; Poster-making competition on G-20, NIPUN Bharat, and NEP 2020; Walkathon; and Sensitization and meeting with SMC, parents, and teachers on G-20, NIPUN Bharat, and NEP 2020

One thought on “GMS Imrong, Ungma participate in Janbhagidari activities”
  1. You know that your ISP should give you one a /56 IPv6 net for you to divide into /64 IPv6 LANs All public addresses So you can run as few or many public servers as you want No, NAT doesn’t have anything to do with security, it is just an ugly hack because public IPv4 address has run outAnd because you then have 256 public IPv6 LAN, you can just reserve one or two for your IoT, and lock those down to only be accessed by the IPv6 LAN you want to be able to access them Making secure Firewall much easierThen you just add your media and gaming machines to one LAN One to your devices, and one for each of your family members And one or two LAN for your experimenting and hacking And it is easy to set up machines in IPv6You just give those machines you want to be accessed from outside in a LAN, and then give then a pre set IPv6 address that is added to DNS and only used to access from outside (or from your network) Then open the firewall to give other access to those servers They can be static or given by DHCPv6 You can also see to it that some machines are given an address from DHCPv6, based on MAC address Or you can just let some machines in some LAN get their own public addressesSo with IPv6, you don’t need to restrict yourself because you only have one public IPv4 address, in best case You just give the routers fire wall some proper settings, and you have control over traffic between your IPv6 LANs, all 256 of them

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