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RE: 3 sbi shares contest: for contributing newbies

in #steembasicincome7 years ago

I've met the all the criteria stated above, there is not a single day I don't post on Steemit, my community engagement is also intact, but my post payout is very low, so I started searching for way to up my game, I resolved to getting a sbi shares, that's what brought me here.

I'll be happy if am selected. It's going to do a lot.
Am engaged in so many challenges, contest and many more, commenting on others post and upvoting in my little way.

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Do you already have some sbi shares? And are you familiar with the concept?

Van I be so curious to ask to whom you delegated a small amount of SP?

I delegate my 10sp as a contribution to @giving-girl handle, a community that help the less privileged.
I already have a 1 sbi share and am hunting 😔 😔 for more.

Do you have unlimited internet connection in Nigeria? I mean if course that you need to pay a monthly fee for it, but once you've done that can you use as much data as you like?

Yes, we do have unlimited internet connection, payed monthly or bimonthly.

Can I also be so curious to ask what you need to pay for the internet connection on a monthly basis?

In the Netherlands we pay something like $60 per month for internet+television.

In Nigeria, Internet and television is paid differently. You can browse mtn.ng site to see the data rates, it's sold in gigs Gigabytes,
1 GB - N600 - ~$2
For a heavy user like me I use 4gb in month, so thats $8-10
For television here, it varies too, we have different subscribers, DSTV, GOTV, MITV, etc all with there rates, it can go as low as $2.2 to as high as $25 per months, most homes go for the lower and they get most of there channels there to keep them entertained, for those with higher pay, it's for premium services with the most expensive of them belonging to Dstv.

Talking of Nertherland, I'll like to be there one day to work and study.

I'm not sure how serious you are to come to the Netherlands. I mean our country is probably very expensive. You need like at least $1,000 per month to rent a home, but food, insurance, etc. And I think you need more likely $1,500 or even $2,000 if you study here.

If you manage to get a job it's of course a different kind of story.