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It's all in the eyes for A Practice for Everyday Life's identity for the 59th Venice Biennale

Creative Boom

Crafted by A Practice for Everyday Life , the London studio founded by Kirsty Carter and Emma Thomas in 2003, it's inspired by Surrealism and represented by eyes, which can be seen dotted around the Venetian city. It matches themes running throughout the entire exhibition of dreams, identity, the body, and reflection.

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5 Common WordPress Myths Debunked

Speckyboy Design Magazine

And because anyone can publish whatever they like, it can be difficult to tell fiction from the truth. For starters, third-party plugins and themes are a huge part of the experience. For instance, equip your website with a bloated theme or buggy plugin and you open yourself up to potential issues. Shocking, right?

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How to Start a Design Blog (and Make Money) in 2021 – Ultimate Guide

Just Creative

You see, a blog is a website that is regularly updated with new content written in a conversational or informal style, published frequently that typically has the end goal of attracting new readers and making money online. This protects your personal information and keeps it from being published online. What is a blog? What is that?

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Out Now: Azure’s 300th Issue!

Azure Magazine

We published pieces on the floating communities of Lagos, Nigeria (Sept 2007); Frank Gehry’s just-completed Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles (Nov/Dec 2003); and Nelda Rodger’s experience of “the Last Salone in Milan” (Jul/Aug 2005). For that reason, we decided that “Civic Impact” should be the theme of this issue.

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Exploring Web Development History with Richard MacManus

SpeckyBoy

I went on to be a “Web Manager” for a couple of New Zealand companies in the early 2000s, before starting up my tech blog ReadWriteWeb (RWW) in 2003. You mentioned that the ultimate goal for this project is to publish a book. Plus, it’ll also depend on what is attractive to book agents and publishers.

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History of WordPress – a 20-Year Journey

Template Monster

How the History of WordPress Started The story of WordPress started in 2003 when the young American blogger Matt Mullenweg posted in his blog the article “The Blogging Software Dilemma”, where he submitted the idea to use b2/cafelog code to fork the software. In May 2003, the first version 0.7 It had XHTML 1.1-compliant

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Jamstack CMS: The Past, The Present and The Future

Smashing Magazine Graphics

In the 2000s we had a showdown of two popular blog publishing platforms — MovableType in 2001 and WordPress in 2003. In addition, they introduced a hosted version of MovableType in 2003 called TypePad to compete with other popular cloud platforms. In 2012, Dave Cole published a post on How we build CMS free websites.