View allAll Photos Tagged webdev
NEW: ::WebDev:: Set Amaris
Compatible
Maitreya Lara + petit
Legacy + Perky - Reborn + Juicy
Belleza Genx classic + Curvy
Mainstore Web Dev
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S-CLUB KELLY FATPACK
Exclusive Access
Mainstore Hair Style S-Club
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Body Maitreya 5.3
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Head Raven 3.1
::WD:: Officer Luna
Compatible
♥ Maitreya
♥ Legacy/Perky
♥ Kupra Kups
♥ Reborn
♥ Erika
Mainstore Web Dev
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Body Maitreya 5.3
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Head Raven 3.1
🎭 Cosplayer : links pending
📷 Photographer : Facebook Page | Instagram
🔗 Thank you for linking back when sharing!
#science #technology #essentials #entrepreneur #positive#innovation #digital #values #businessmodel #design #business #developer #new #brandnew #web #webdesign #webdev #webdevelopment #WordPress #design #SEO #Marketing #Google #blogging #mobileapp #mobile #ios #apps #happy
www.phenomweb.co.uk/our-greatest-glory-is-not-in-never-fa...
Church of All Saints, Sawtry Huntingdonshire / Cambridgeshire
The area has been inhabited since the Romans and there were at one time 3 churches All Saints, St Andrews and St Marys (demolished in 1573)
Old St Andrew's church stood on the east side of the old Great North Road. This and the original All Saints church were both demolished in 1879 and the present All Saints Church was built on its namesake's site to the same design , using the best material from the original buildings. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/Pq1g78
The village is first mentioned in an Anglo Saxon Charter of 1055-1066 as Saltretha, when land was left to Ramsey Abbey by Thurgunt wife of Turkil the Dane. .A manor of Sawtry Moyne (at one time called Sawtry Bellers) was one of its earliest endowments . In the 1086 Domesday Book it is called Saltrede = old english meaning "saltern’s stream" - an area used for salt making. It had a church and priest.
Judith, niece to William the Conqueror, wife of the saxon Earl Waltheof of Huntingdon and Northampton, lived at Sawtry. Local names in the area - St Judith’s Lane and St Judith’s Field remember her good works
In 1147 Simon De Senlis began to build a Cistercian Abbey here, however it took 98 years to build and was never very rich . A William of Sawtry, one of the monks who began preaching his own brand of religion was taken to London and executed in 1359
In 1536 the body of Queen Catherine of Aragon, divorced wife of Henry VIII, was laid overnight in the abbey on her way to her burial at Peterborough Cathedral. By 1540 during the reformation it was a ruin. Its stones are believed to have been used in the 19c to build the local Greystones pub and parts of the present church.
The bellcote has 1 bell cast in London c1320, one of two from the old church of All Saints, the other now ringing in a school in Peterborough. The single bell of old St Peters went to Ludlow.
Now on the south wall are brass effigies of lord of the manor Sir William Moyne 1404 and wife Mary who once lay on an altar tomb in the chancel of the old church. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/TwQA95 Mary born in Hainault, served Queen Phillippa wife of Edward lll until her death.
www.robschurches.moonfruit.com/sawtry-all-saints/4523744579
My current library of web development and graphic design-related books. There are a few good gems in here.
Church of All Saints, Sawtry Huntingdonshire / Cambridgeshire
The area has been inhabited since the Romans and there were at one time 3 churches All Saints, St Andrews and St Marys (demolished in 1573)
Old St Andrew's church stood on the east side of the old Great North Road. This and the original All Saints church were both demolished in 1879 and the present All Saints Church was built on its namesake's site to the same design , using the best material from the original buildings. (shown above)
The village is first mentioned in an Anglo Saxon Charter of 1055-1066 as Saltretha, when land was left to Ramsey Abbey by Thurgunt wife of Turkil the Dane. .A manor of Sawtry Moyne (at one time called Sawtry Bellers) was one of its earliest endowments . In the 1086 Domesday Book it is called Saltrede = old english meaning "saltern’s stream" - an area used for salt making. It had a church and priest.
Judith, niece to William the Conqueror, wife of the saxon Earl Waltheof of Huntingdon and Northampton, lived at Sawtry. Local names in the area - St Judith’s Lane and St Judith’s Field remember her good works
In 1147 Simon De Senlis began to build a Cistercian Abbey here, however it took 98 years to build and was never very rich . A William of Sawtry, one of the monks who began preaching his own brand of religion was taken to London and executed in 1359
In 1536 the body of Queen Catherine of Aragon, divorced wife of Henry VIII, was laid overnight in the abbey on her way to her burial at Peterborough Cathedral. By 1540 during the reformation it was a ruin. Its stones are believed to have been used in the 19c to build the local Greystones pub and parts of the present church.
The bellcote has 1 bell cast in London c1320, one of two from the old church of All Saints, the other now ringing in a school in Peterborough. The single bell of old St Peters went to Ludlow.
Now on the south wall are brass effigies of lord of the manor Sir William Moyne 1404 and wife Mary who once lay on an altar tomb in the chancel of the old church. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/TwQA95 Mary born in Hainault, served Queen Phillippa wife of Edward lll until her death.
www.robschurches.moonfruit.com/sawtry-all-saints/4523744579
Envato PhotoDune reviewer Jess Hooper took a photo-a-day of our Movember participants...this is what she came up with!
Music by- audiojungle.net/item/barn-dance/89693
Text by Jacob Zinman-Jeanes
Church of All Saints, Sawtry Huntingdonshire / Cambridgeshire
The area has been inhabited since the Romans and there were at one time 3 churches All Saints, St Andrews and St Marys (demolished in 1573)
Old St Andrew's church stood on the east side of the old Great North Road. This and the original All Saints church were both demolished in 1879 and the present All Saints Church was built on its namesake's site to the same design , using the best material from the original buildings.
The village is first mentioned in an Anglo Saxon Charter of 1055-1066 as Saltretha, when land was left to Ramsey Abbey by Thurgunt wife of Turkil the Dane. .A manor of Sawtry Moyne (at one time called Sawtry Bellers) was one of its earliest endowments . In the 1086 Domesday Book it is called Saltrede = old english meaning "saltern’s stream" - an area used for salt making. It had a church and priest.
Judith, niece to William the Conqueror, wife of the saxon Earl Waltheof of Huntingdon and Northampton, lived at Sawtry. Local names in the area - St Judith’s Lane and St Judith’s Field remember her good works
In 1147 Simon De Senlis began to build a Cistercian Abbey here, however it took 98 years to build and was never very rich . A William of Sawtry, one of the monks who began preaching his own brand of religion was taken to London and executed in 1359
In 1536 the body of Queen Catherine of Aragon, divorced wife of Henry VIII, was laid overnight in the abbey on her way to her burial at Peterborough Cathedral. By 1540 during the reformation it was a ruin. Its stones are believed to have been used in the 19c to build the local Greystones pub and parts of the present church.
The bellcote has 1 bell cast in London c1320, one of two from the old church of All Saints, the other now ringing in a school in Peterborough. The single bell of old St Peters went to Ludlow.
Now on the south wall are brass effigies of lord of the manor Sir William Moyne 1404 and wife Mary who once lay on an altar tomb in the chancel of the old church. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/TwQA95 Mary born in Hainault, served Queen Phillippa wife of Edward lll until her death.
www.robschurches.moonfruit.com/sawtry-all-saints/4523744579
www.sawtry.net/webdev/a-potted-history-of-sawtry/
www.roll-of-honour.com/Huntingdonshire/Sawtry.html
Picture with thanks - copyright Michael Trolove CCL commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:All_Saints,_Sawtry_-_geog...https://www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/Pq1g78
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
Church of All Saints, Sawtry Huntingdonshire / Cambridgeshire
The area has been inhabited since the Romans and there were at one time 3 churches All Saints, St Andrews and St Marys (demolished in 1573)
Old St Andrew's church stood on the east side of the old Great North Road. This and the original All Saints church were both demolished in 1879 and the present All Saints Church was built on its namesake's site to the same design , using the best material from the original buildings. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/Pq1g78
The village is first mentioned in an Anglo Saxon Charter of 1055-1066 as Saltretha, when land was left to Ramsey Abbey by Thurgunt wife of Turkil the Dane. .A manor of Sawtry Moyne (at one time called Sawtry Bellers) was one of its earliest endowments . In the 1086 Domesday Book it is called Saltrede = old english meaning "saltern’s stream" - an area used for salt making. It had a church and priest.
Judith, niece to William the Conqueror, wife of the saxon Earl Waltheof of Huntingdon and Northampton, lived at Sawtry. Local names in the area - St Judith’s Lane and St Judith’s Field remember her good works
In 1147 Simon De Senlis began to build a Cistercian Abbey here, however it took 98 years to build and was never very rich . A William of Sawtry, one of the monks who began preaching his own brand of religion was taken to London and executed in 1359
In 1536 the body of Queen Catherine of Aragon, divorced wife of Henry VIII, was laid overnight in the abbey on her way to her burial at Peterborough Cathedral. By 1540 during the reformation it was a ruin. Its stones are believed to have been used in the 19c to build the local Greystones pub and parts of the present church.
The bellcote has 1 bell cast in London c1320, one of two from the old church of All Saints, the other now ringing in a school in Peterborough. The single bell of old St Peters went to Ludlow.
Now on the south wall are brass effigies of lord of the manor Sir William Moyne 1404 and wife Mary who once lay on an altar tomb in the chancel of the old church. www.flickr.com/gp/52219527@N00/TwQA95 Mary born in Hainault, served Queen Phillippa wife of Edward lll until her death.
www.robschurches.moonfruit.com/sawtry-all-saints/4523744579
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
I love this spot. I love this shirt. And I really love my expression here.
that's all I've got. I spend the day buried elbow-deep in webdev and there's no end in sight. Boring!
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
Created with the LolCat Builder. Not my photo, just a photo that I love. Why kitty have so much hate?
The original caption was "I'm in ur akount, shardin' ur purplez."
Anup Shah used this pic in a blog post, thanks!
www.onenaught.com/posts/44/microsofts-internet-explorer-s...
Hand washing poster from Yale University, for H1N1 flu prevention campaigns. Concept and design by Patrick Lynch. These posters are available as Adobe Illustrators files, free for non-commercial uses.
Site Address: www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/bangladeshboat/
This post is blogged at: dharmafly.com/blog/bangladeshboat
Phew! Dharmafly has been busy these last three weeks! From commission to launch in just 12 working days (and nights)...
The Bangladesh River Journey is a mashup of posts from a BBC World Service trip to track the effects of climate change in Bangladesh. The trip lasts a month, with photos being posted to Flickr, messages sent to Twitter and journal entries made on the World Service site. The mashup puts all these posts on to a map, letting you navigate around and follow the trip.
The journalists are equipped with a GPS navigation device. Each time they visit a new location, they post their co-ordinates to the Twitter stream (e.g. this post). Our system then logs the coordinates and applies them to every photo, tweet and diary entry until the next location.
In addition to what you see in the browser, there are a number of gems hidden under the hood... (Non-techie folk may happily skip this :)
Microformats
Microformats are new, developing standards for adding extra meaning to the HTML of a web page. They create all sorts of possibilities for software (from search engines to browsers) to interact with the content in new and useful ways.
The HTML for each Twitter, Flickr and diary post in the Bangladesh River Journey is written using the hAtom microformat. This means, for example, that an RSS feed can be generated directly from the HTML on the page.
If you use the Firefox browser, you can explore other microformats on the Bangladesh Boat site, with the excellent Operator extension. You'll find xFolk bookmarks, geo locations, hCard contacts and tagged links.
GeoRSS
The site's RSS feed allows users to stay up-to-date with new posts, without needing to re-visit the site (we talked about using RSS in a previous post).
The feed is encoded with the geo coordinates of each post (this is called GeoRSS). Some interesting things can then be done with the feed, such as plotting it straight on to Google Maps.
API
Part of the task was to build an API - a way for web developers to access the data in the system, to create their own mashup applications. This will be promoted through BBC Backstage - the BBC's hub for exploring new media technology.
More info: dharmafly.com/blog/bangladeshboat