Gurbanguly Aşyrow

Gurbanguly Myratgulyyevich Ashirov (Turkmen: Gurbanguly Muratgulyewiç Aşyrow; born 20 February 1993) is a Turkmen footballer who plays for Turkmen club FC Ahal. He was part of the Turkmenistan national team from 2017.

Gurbanguly Ashirov
Personal information
Full name Gurbanguly Muratgulyewiç Aşyrow
Date of birth (1993-02-20) 20 February 1993
Place of birth

Akbugdaý, Akbugdaý District,

Ahal Region, Turkmenistan[1]
Playing position(s) Defender
Club information
Current team
FC Ahal
Number 3
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2017– Ahal ? (?)
National team
2017– Turkmenistan 1 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 25 December 2019
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 25 Decemberr 2019

Club career

In recent years he has been playing for the FC Ahal.

International career

He played for Turkmenistan futsal team at 2013 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games and 2016 AFC Futsal Championship qualification[2].

Ashirov made his senior national team debut on 28 August 2017, in a friendly match against Qatar.[3]

gollark: There are some other !!FUN!! issues here which I think organizations like the FSF have spent some time considering. Consider something like Android. Android is in fact open source, and the GPL obligates companies to release the source code to modified kernels and such; in theory, you can download the Android repos and device-specific ones, compile it, and flash it to your device. How cool and good™!Unfortunately, it doesn't actually work this way. Not only is Android a horrible multiple-tens-of-gigabytes monolith which takes ages to compile (due to the monolithic system image design), but for "security" some devices won't actually let you unlock the bootloader and flash your image.
gollark: The big one *now* is SaaS, where you don't get the software *at all* but remote access to some on their servers.
gollark: I think this is a reasonable way to do copyright in general; some (much shorter than now!) length where you get exclusivity, which can be extended somewhat if you give the copyright office the source to release at the end of this perioid.
gollark: This isn't really "repair"y, inasmuch as you can't fix it if it breaks unless you happen to be really good at reverse engineering.
gollark: Maybe what you mean is banning DRM-ish things, so you can definitely copy the program and run it elsewhere and such?

References


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