"Timeout expired. The timeout period elapsed prior to obtaining a connection from the pool. This may have occurred because all pooled connections were in use and max pool size was reached." That was the retuned response.
@JAMBHQ I think you people should call the GSM companies to order pls..i have wasted so much airtime trying to check my daughter's UTMERESULT..each time service busy message is returned and yet 100 naira is debited each and everytime
@JAMBHQ 2/2The generator went off in the middle of the exam and they went about looking for good battery to re power the generator.. the second session could not start untill around 12pm . The Candidates were kept in the hall for more than 6hrs..JAMB shd look into this.
@JAMBHQ 1/2
I-Tree Model Academy CBT Center,Aleniboro, Ilorin has a very low rating in the just concluded JAMB Moch Exam. The Candidates went through hell there by their performance. The exam that was to end by 12pm extended till after 2Pm.
@JAMBHQ Dear Jamb,
Please I need a clarification on my UTME registration; I got admissions last to an institution, accepted it on JAMB portal but didn't go further to pursue it. I tried rejecting the offer now but it's not allowing me.
@U_Rochas@de_generalnoni You are a hypocrite worshipping the US because they are superpower...do more than ur strength cud carry in support of the US that does not make u a US citizen...never!
The next 72 hours are critical for the world.
If the United States succeeds in imposing control over Venezuela, and by extension over the world’s largest proven oil reserves, it will mark a major shift in global power.
Such a move would not be about restoring democracy or protecting human rights, but about reasserting strategic dominance over energy, trade routes, and regional alignments.
In that case, Iran would likely move to the forefront of Washington’s strategic priorities.
Securing control over Venezuelan oil would reduce U.S. vulnerability to energy disruptions in the Gulf and provide a buffer against supply shocks in the event of a confrontation with Iran.
With a reliable alternative source of heavy crude under its influence, Washington would be better positioned to absorb or offset the destruction or shutdown of energy infrastructure in the Persian Gulf during a war.
This would lower the economic cost of escalation and make military pressure against Iran more politically and economically manageable.
At the same time, such control would strengthen the United States’ ability to shape global oil flows and pricing, reinforcing the central role of the dollar in energy markets and helping preserve the petrodollar system that underpins U.S. financial power.
Venezuela would thus become more than a regional issue.
It would become a strategic precedent, a demonstration that economic pressure, political engineering, and, if necessary, force can be used to restructure sovereign states and realign the global balance of power.
However, if the United States becomes entangled in Venezuela and faces sustained resistance, the outcome shifts dramatically.
A prolonged crisis would drain political capital, stretch military and economic resources, and weaken Washington’s capacity to project power elsewhere, including in the Middle East.
That would also complicate Israeli strategic planning, which is closely tied to U.S. regional leverage.
What happens in Venezuela will not stay in Latin America.
It will shape the future of energy control, the limits of American power, and the direction of geopolitical confrontation far beyond Caracas.