Monday, April 28, 2008
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Cert1 in IT @ IAD blogging oath and agreement
I Rosemary Miller understand that blogs are documents on the web that any internet user can read but not alter.
I understand that it is wise not to put personal info in my blog such as my passwords, phone number, address etc.
my oath
I Rosa maria will not knowingly publish information on my blog that is:
1 obscene
2 racist
3 violent
4 pornographic
If i do publish any of the above I am Responsible for this Information.
My teacher and IAD are not Responsible for any content I publish.
Bottom line, as they say for the Google Motto: "Don't be Evil"
I understand that it is wise not to put personal info in my blog such as my passwords, phone number, address etc.
my oath
I Rosa maria will not knowingly publish information on my blog that is:
1 obscene
2 racist
3 violent
4 pornographic
If i do publish any of the above I am Responsible for this Information.
My teacher and IAD are not Responsible for any content I publish.
Bottom line, as they say for the Google Motto: "Don't be Evil"
Monday, April 14, 2008
This is what I meme 15/4/08

I really love this photo it has seven Maybe I should make the pic bigger, to give you a better chance of finding them!
1
1

1The colour in this picture is so magnificent, I
can really see the horses now.
It looks like a big storm is brewing.
Dust storm brewing.

Sunday, April 13, 2008
holidays are over for the time being.
seems like there is some good jobs going at the Telegraph station for indigenous adults.
OVERVIEW
The Alice Springs Telegraph Station Historical Reserve marks the original site of the first European settlement in Alice Springs.
Established in 1872 to relay messages between Darwin and Adelaide, it is the best preserved of the 12 stations along the Overland Telegraph Line.
This Telegraph Station operated for 60 years, and then served as a school for Aboriginal chil
The Alice Springs Telegraph Station is set in a National Park of 445 hectares, beside a natural spring in the Todd River, some 3 kilometres north of the town. The spring was named after Alice Todd, wife of the then Superintendent of Telegraphs for South Australia, Charles Todd, after whom the River is named.
In October 1870 the South Australian government allocated $250,000 for the construction of an Overland Telegraph Line from Port Augusta in South Australia, to Palmerston (now Darwin), along a route closely following that of explorer John McDouall Stuart, who successfully traversed the continent at his third attempt on July 24th 1862. Construction of the 3,000 kilometre line was in three sections. Private tenders were called for two sections of 800 km. each. Messrs. R.R. Knuckey, G.R. McMinn, H. Harvey, A.T. Woods and W. Mills, divided up the remaining 1400 km., to be built through the little known central area. A Scotsman, John Ross, assisted by Alfred Giles, was appointed to find a shorter route through this central mountainous region, however, it was surveyor Mills who discovered Heavitree Gap, at the southern entrance to Alice Springs, and who found and named Alice Springs, the site for the telegraph station.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)