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FileMaker Go is a free app available on the App Store that runs your FileMaker solutions on iPad and iPhone. Create solutions with FileMaker Pro then use FileMaker Go to easily share information with your team while on the go. These mobile solutions have the full power and capability of a FileMaker desktop solution. Use FileMaker Go to check inventory in the warehouse, create invoices during client visits, perform inspections onsite, and more.
Learn more here: www.filemaker.com/products/filemaker-go/
Special Keynote Speaker: John Geleynse, Director of Technology Evangelism & User Experience Evangelist talks design at FileMaker DevCon.
Special Keynote Speaker: John Geleynse, Director of Technology Evangelism & User Experience Evangelist talks design at FileMaker DevCon.
FileMaker Go is a free app available on the App Store that runs your FileMaker solutions on iPad and iPhone. Create solutions with FileMaker Pro then use FileMaker Go to easily share information with your team while on the go. These mobile solutions have the full power and capability of a FileMaker desktop solution. Use FileMaker Go to check inventory in the warehouse, create invoices during client visits, perform inspections onsite, and more.
Learn more here: www.filemaker.com/products/filemaker-go/
Exhibitors Showcase, FileMaker Developer Conference 2018, Gaylord Texan Resort, Grapevine (Dallas), Texas
Troi booth at the Exhibitors Showcase of the FileMaker DevCon 2018, Dallas; FileMaker Developer Conference 2018, Gaylord Texan Resort, Grapevine (Dallas), Texas
One dense patch of this plant appeared in our back lawn in spring 2008. The largest plants were flowering by mid-December. This is the first time I've seen this species on our property. I expect the seeds came in on the root masses of old silver beets and sunflowers from either our friend Felix Collins (Samuel Street, Hoon Hay) or my parents (Monowai Crescent, North Beach). These were put on the lawn late autumn and winter for our chickens to eat.
Note that the chickens did a good job of keeping down the lawn over winter and early spring, so this patch was mowed very infrequently, until now.
The pressed plant was collected before I mowed the lawns on Christmas Eve. I left it in water on our kitchen window sil until it flowered, three days later.
3 Gainsborough Street
Hoon Hay
Christchurch
Canterbury
New Zealand
The Black Country Living Museum (formerly The Black Country Museum) is an open-air museum of rebuilt historic buildings in Dudley in the West Midlands of England. It is located in the centre of the Black Country, 10 miles west of Birmingham. The museum occupies 105,000 square metres (26 acres) of former industrial land partly reclaimed from a former railway goods yard, disused lime kilns, canal arm and former coal pits.
The museum opened to the public in 1978, and has since added over 50 shops, houses and other industrial buildings from around the Metropolitan Boroughs of Dudley, Sandwell and Walsall and the City of Wolverhampton (collectively known as the Black Country); mainly in a specially built village. Most buildings were relocated from their original sites to form a base from where demonstrators portray life spanning 300 years of history, with a focus on 1850-1950.
The museum is constantly improving as new exhibits, especially buildings, are being added.
The museum is close to the site where Dud Dudley first mastered the technique of smelting iron with coal instead of wood charcoal and making iron enough for industrial use. Having a claim to be "the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution", the Black Country is famous for its wide range of midsteel-based products from nails to the anchor and anchor chain for the Titanic.
The site's coal mining heritage is shown by an underground drift and colliery surface buildings. The museum has a working replica of a Newcomen atmospheric engine which was first successfully put to use in Tipton in 1712. The museum's reconstruction was based on a print engraved by Thomas Barney, filemaker of Wolverhampton, in 1719.
Electric trams and trolleybuses transport visitors from the entrance to the village where thirty domestic and industrial buildings have been relocated close to the canal basin. The museum is one of three in the UK with working trolleybuses. The route to the village passes the Cast Iron Houses and a 1930s fairground. A narrowboat operated by Dudley Canal Trust makes trips on the Dudley Canal and into the Dudley Tunnel
On 16 February 2012, the museum's collection was awarded designated status by Arts Council England (ACE), a mark of distinction celebrating its unique national and international importance.
The museum is run by the Black Country Living Museum Trust, a registered charity under English law.
Group photo of the speakers of the FileMaker Developer Conference 2018; Dallas Texas (photo by Troi Plug-ins)
The Black Country Living Museum (formerly The Black Country Museum) is an open-air museum of rebuilt historic buildings in Dudley in the West Midlands of England. It is located in the centre of the Black Country, 10 miles west of Birmingham. The museum occupies 105,000 square metres (26 acres) of former industrial land partly reclaimed from a former railway goods yard, disused lime kilns, canal arm and former coal pits.
The museum opened to the public in 1978, and has since added over 50 shops, houses and other industrial buildings from around the Metropolitan Boroughs of Dudley, Sandwell and Walsall and the City of Wolverhampton (collectively known as the Black Country); mainly in a specially built village. Most buildings were relocated from their original sites to form a base from where demonstrators portray life spanning 300 years of history, with a focus on 1850-1950.
The museum is constantly improving as new exhibits, especially buildings, are being added.
The museum is close to the site where Dud Dudley first mastered the technique of smelting iron with coal instead of wood charcoal and making iron enough for industrial use. Having a claim to be "the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution", the Black Country is famous for its wide range of midsteel-based products from nails to the anchor and anchor chain for the Titanic.
The site's coal mining heritage is shown by an underground drift and colliery surface buildings. The museum has a working replica of a Newcomen atmospheric engine which was first successfully put to use in Tipton in 1712. The museum's reconstruction was based on a print engraved by Thomas Barney, filemaker of Wolverhampton, in 1719.
Electric trams and trolleybuses transport visitors from the entrance to the village where thirty domestic and industrial buildings have been relocated close to the canal basin. The museum is one of three in the UK with working trolleybuses. The route to the village passes the Cast Iron Houses and a 1930s fairground. A narrowboat operated by Dudley Canal Trust makes trips on the Dudley Canal and into the Dudley Tunnel
On 16 February 2012, the museum's collection was awarded designated status by Arts Council England (ACE), a mark of distinction celebrating its unique national and international importance.
The museum is run by the Black Country Living Museum Trust, a registered charity under English law.
Special Keynote Speaker: John Geleynse, Director of Technology Evangelism & User Experience Evangelist talks design at FileMaker DevCon.
FileMaker Go is a free app available on the App Store that runs your FileMaker solutions on iPad and iPhone. Create solutions with FileMaker Pro then use FileMaker Go to easily share information with your team while on the go. These mobile solutions have the full power and capability of a FileMaker desktop solution. Use FileMaker Go to check inventory in the warehouse, create invoices during client visits, perform inspections onsite, and more.
Learn more here: www.filemaker.com/products/filemaker-go/