Thursday 27 November 2008

#26 Widgets

This lesson is on widgets the little gadgets that allow or open often used programs on your desktop eg little calendars, weather forecast info. This lesson features "yourminis", but in October 2008, "yourminis" decided to no longer support their startpage., making the Discovery Exercise obsolete, so I went to myAOL and iGoogle to check out their Startpage, and played with creating a page with widgets at myAOL.

I created a page and added a Word of the Day, Calendar and Clock widgets. I'm still to see if I can change colours and remove the adverts.

Thursday 20 November 2008

#25 LetterPop

LetterPop is a collection of templates for newsletters, etc. that allows you to add your own headings and text, and photos - either from your own files or flickr. This is the free version but for serious users there's an increasing scale allowing more issues and more recipients.
While there's about 170 templates to choose from, I'd like a bit more chance to move the elements around, enlarge or decrease some. However for people who just want to produce a regular, similarly styled newsletter quickly to email to a selected list, this would be great.
My page is at
http://letterpop.com/newsletters/?id=104495-247145

Tuesday 18 November 2008

#24 Explore.Discover.Play

Having finished my study for the year, I can now devote some time to "Learning 2.1" which is the follow-up to "Learning 2.0 - 23 things", which prompted this blog in the first place.

Learning 2.1's motto is explore...discover...play, it now has 37 things (I should have done this when I first checked as they've added 13 more things since!) or web 2.0 technologies to learn about.

The first is "Zamar" a free file conversion service. I really needed this last week when I had to convert a word file to pdf, and I like the idea of trialling converting YouTube videos to moving picture experts group file, useful for including video in PowerPoint presentations when you don't have access to the Internet, or as a Plan B if the connection won't work.



This Chaser file still looks a lot like an embedded YouTube file, but I can incorporate it in more applications.

Saturday 1 November 2008

Serviceton Railway


The town of Serviceton (named after former Victorian Premier - Sir James Service) was gazetted on 1st January 1887. In the early years in had general stores, bakery, butcher, blacksmith, boarding houses and livery stables, temperance hotel, coffee palace and wine bar.



It became a major border crossing and an important customs station for goods passing between the colonies of South Australia and Victoria.



A Late Victorian railway station was built in 1887 of red bricks transported from Horsham. The building opened in 1889.











From the front, it had a central two storey symmetrical neo-Classical polychromatic brick station building accommodating former residential functions with flanking office wings.






The ground floor level consists of 15 main rooms, and accommodated toilets, waiting rooms, dining and sitting room, bar and kitchen, offices, lobby and customs office.




The Refreshment Room is 52 feet long with high ceilings, it is still used today for functions.













Upstairs Refreshment Manager's Bedroom

The extensive underground storage and service area was equipped with a mortuary for bodies being shipped across the border and there is a dungeon lock-up furnished with iron rings fastened to the walls, which was used for criminals captured in the disputed area or to be held over until the next train and prisoners who were being transported interstate.


The Cellar


The enormous 70-metre platform with cast iron posted verandah of standard design faces the running lines and is the largest example of its type, the platform was the longest in the State, until a portion was removed in the late 1980s.



The outbuilding/staff hostel, van goods shed, lamp room signal box goods shed and platform have all been removed.
There were two engine sheds but, with the lack of local water, the original water reservoir for the trains was constructed astride the boundary line.


The Guards Rooms

The customs office set up shop in the railway station to ensure duty was paid for goods taken interstate but the law was difficult to enforce as the town was in the 'Disputed Territory', a strip of land 4.5 km in width which stretched along the length of the state border.

The station was closed in 1986.

The Customs Store Rooms