Longreach is not just a region, it’s a way of life and a bustling hub in winter for both locals and visitors find out more
Sade Olutola
wallacepolsom
Not today Justin
will byers stan first human second

tannertan36

Andulka
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izzy's playlists!

#extradirty
AnasAbdin
we're not kids anymore.
One Nice Bug Per Day

JBB: An Artblog!
Mike Driver
Three Goblin Art
noise dept.
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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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@ssofnosaj
Longreach is not just a region, it’s a way of life and a bustling hub in winter for both locals and visitors find out more
Live last month - new website for Longreach Tourism
http://www.almostanything.com.au/2016/04/new-website-longreach-tourism/?utm_content=bufferf5515&utm_medium=social&utm_source=tumblr.com&utm_campaign=buffer
Testing
Haven't posted here in ages, not sure if it cross-posts anywhere else.
Every week there seems to be a new tool to aid with responsive design for websites. A tool for this already exists. It's called a browser.
This article from 2009 changed the way we work, and I can't believe 4 years later the practise hasn't become more widely adopted.
Advertising on Google is like advertising in a shop. Advertising on Facebook is like advertising at a party. Understand the difference.
Twitter, somewhere.
Many organisations see the web as a marketing tool. However, the business model canvas shows us it is so much more.
I've seen the Business Model Canvas before - not not specifically adapted for the web like this.
Masters V Bunnings
Came to a realisation - you have 2 stores with much the same area. One of them has space taken up with whitegoods and the like. One does not.
So if it's actual hardware you need, it will likely be at Bunnings. Masters? Maybe, maybe not.
Cob loaf about to go in the oven (Taken with Instagram)
Here's a blast from the past: When I was 14, I wrote a game for my Tandy TRS-80 Color Computer II (Or CoCo for short) (Or Trash-80, if you prefer!)
I managed to find a copy of the magazine on Ebay recently, and so here it is in all its glory: Scans from the February 1985 edition of Australia CoCo magazine.
For those not old enough to remember, before the age of DVDs, and even before floppy disks were in common use, computer magazines printed listings of programs that you had to type in yourself and then save to a tape.
The monster I wrote this on had 16 kilobytes of RAM, no internal hard drive, a 320x240 pixel display and 8 colours.
I can't think of any computerised device available today that has smaller specs. A $10 calculator perhaps?
This is bound to come in handy!
If you're quick enough, and clever enough, you can turn almost anything into a marketing opportunity!
Great case study of a business that "seized the moment" when Westpac's EFTPOS facilities went offline recently.