|
Opening Doors to the World |
| Network
Data Center UPDATE |
||||||||||||||
| On a single weekend, our I.T. department volunteered to move the entire data center from the VTU to the South-West ground floor wing of the old building. The room was previously utilized for donor and newsletter mailings. It became the storage area for the heavy old office equipment used by the former mailing crew, tasks that have been efficiently out-sourced, tasks no longer performed by the blind in a building that was converted from a simple old house to serve the blind with the help of Dolly Gamble, Helen Keller and the Lions Club. | ||||||||||||||
| Several donated computers in need of TLC are temporarily stored in the room and will be donated to Sr. Padre Alejandro, a Catholic Priest, who is coordinating a wonderful project to transport donated computers to South American technical schools for young people to learn a worthy trade. Padre Alejandro's team will make good use of the recycled computers that might otherwise be destined to add toxic material to our South Florida land fills and drinking water. The actual storage room and shelving for the new Data Center are across the hall and currently "off limits" during the Retail Store inventory. The shelving will become available in March of 2003, after the Retail Store is relocated to a more spacious area on the second floor, pending a complete architectural study of the "client traffic flow". | ||||||||||||||
| The Florida Division of Blind Services (DBS) will provide a "talking cash register" for the Retail Store interfaced with the current network and the BlackBaud RE-7 database software which is already interfaced with BlackBaud's Financial Edge accounting software. In addition to a new physical (brick and mortar) retail store, we will add an online-web-store to accept purchase orders world wide, twenty four hours a day, seven days a week, which may require upgrading our currently donated DSL to a full T-1 Internet connection to be used by the entire facility as the DSL broadband connection is now. | ||||||||||||||
| Early in 2002, once again current Vocational Training Unit (VTU) staff were invited to attend the yearly five day ATIA conference in Orlando, Florida, in order to help keep their Assistive Technology skills up-to-date. All seven participants were transported by van to Orlando and lodged in a beach home near Daytona Beach at no cost to the agency by a generous Presbyterian Minister / Social Worker in Flagler Beach, Florida. "Rest and relaxation" included walks on the beach in the Atlantic surf and seafood dinner atop nearby seaside restaurants. Previous continuing education trips to the ATIA included a visit to one of the founders of educational centers for the blind, Bill Ferrel. Our IT department repaired, donated and delivered a computer to this great gentleman who dedicated his entire career to advancing the lives of people who are visually impaired. | ||||||||||||||
| During the Children's Summer Program, twelve computers were repaired and networked including the donation of twelve timed JAWS licenses for educational and recreational use by children with visual impairments. Our "Just For Kids" Internet website and LAN intranet web pages were updated with educational and recreational resources for children, including AFB's début "Braille Bug" educational software for children to enjoy learning Braille on-line. | ||||||||||||||
| Inservice trainings and conferences have been provided for the continuing education of our staff and the Miami-Dade County community, including participants and providers from the Florida West Coast, Tallahassee and Daytona Beach. Educational and informative presentations have been provided by GW-Micro for Window Eyes, Freedom Scientific for JAWS and the Pac-Mate portable note-taker, Lesa Kretchmer and Marlaina Liedberg for the Braille-Note, as well as by Mike Calvo and his innovative FreedomBox voice activated computer and Internet access system. | ||||||||||||||
| Our VTU Coordinator contacted Freedom Scientific and AFB West in May of 2002 to request their "Train-the-Trainer" and advanced JAWS courses for our Vocational Unit Training staff. The "Train-the-Trainer" course was donated by AFB West and scheduled for April of 2003 for all to attend. | ||||||||||||||
| Microsoft Power Point presentations were streamed through the intranet to a donated large screen projector system for the following events: | ||||||||||||||
| 1) Florida Families of Children with Visual Impairments (FFCVI) Meeting Oct 26, 27, 2002, Topics: Medical and Recreational, Saturday - Medical areas - the morning will feature several Power Point presentations by members of a panel of Ophthalmologists and in the afternoon, a developmental therapist to address the needs of our families whose children are visually impaired in addition to having emotional, cognitive and developmental issues. Entertaining and educational children's software was installed on the VTU computers for the children to enjoy. The children were able to go sailing on Sunday in beautiful Biscayne Bay with the phenomenal Shake-A-Leg-Miami sailing center in Coconut Grove. | ||||||||||||||
| 2) World Blind Sailing Championship presentation by three members of the blind sailing team, using Microsoft Power Point, presented in the 2nd floor staff development room to guests of the American Council of the Blind. | ||||||||||||||
| 3) BlackBaud's RE-7 software training for our development staff on 5 computers networked over the weekend for this week long training. We installed both the 'network' and a 'sample' training database as well as the latest version of the Financial Edge software, with zero problems encountered. After the BlackBaud training, the Retail Store DELL computer was assigned to the new Children's Program coordinator, since she will need access to BlackBaud's RE-7 in the near future. | ||||||||||||||
| American Airline Frequent Flier online donation forms were added to our web site early in 2002. A Microsoft Access database and an Excel database were requested and created for the new Children's Program coordinator to keep track of her client's in the new Children's Program. This Microsoft Access database software can be expanded and networked for all staff to use the database through our LAN to collect data in a central server location, including web access, to the current central BlackBaud SQL database. | ||||||||||||||
| The BlackBaud RE-7 database will become integrated with the online web store and interfaced with the new "talking cash" register. The Vocational Training Unit has been using an electronic database since 1998. Now the social workers will be joining us by going "paper-less". This is a major transition since for many years, people have become so accustomed to reading information on paper, they refer to the "look and feel" of paper, when all the while, the exact same information is available and far more accessible for the blind, when it is "on-line" in a database, preferably, (obviously only when appropriate), put the information on the web, to share with everyone. | ||||||||||||||
| The Vocational Training Unit has been using a networked Microsoft Excel paper-less system, starting with the Novell server in 1998 to collect client statistics electronically instead of non accessible paper. This electronic information is 100% accessible for a blind computer operator. We plan to expand this system and donate it to other agencies for the blind. | ||||||||||||||
| Our VTU Coordinator created, networked and maintained an agency wide, Microsoft database, with 100+ linked data tables, organized by department, for electronic accounting of the staff's daily "Units of Service". This paper-less system is 100% accessible to our staff members who are blind, enabling each staff member to accomplish these accounting tasks 100% independently, allowing staff who are familiar with fundamental Excel functions to easily collect the statistics of each day's service to generate the statistics for the end of year reports. The inaccessible "paper" system in use prior to 1998, was a real nightmare for our partially sighted staff, using CCTV's, to read the hundreds of tiny columns and rows on paper and then manually adding thousands of numbers. Now the staff members actually report "enjoying" entering their data into the computer at the end of each day, with a feeling of "completion". | ||||||||||||||
| After networking several more workstations, the Social Workers are able to use the computer network to maintain the client's information a database instead of on paper. The diabetes management department is also networked, however the nurses were laid off due to a lack of funding from the generous Deering Trust which was apparently not carried into this year to support the Diabetes Management Program. If funding is restored, the nurses were promised they would be able to return to the work they love to perform, since they also live with diabetes, vision loss and the one nurse who is most responsible for developing the current diabetes management program, is alive today, thanks to transplanted organs, the miracles of modern medicine, and a very kind Spirit. | ||||||||||||||
| Several of the old VTU Windows-98 workstation have been updated and donated to the Educational Services department in order to expand the availability of accessible computers with JAWS and Zoom-Text and to help meet the growing client demand for computer familiarization. Prior to this upgrade, the Educational Services department taught "touch typing" on computers with no speech access software. The Computer Familiarization classroom was re-located and re-networked three times this year, at their request. It is currently located in an area previously utilized by VTU students to comply with the DBS minimum requirement of 20 hours per week in order to reinforce the student's computer skills. The students are using the APH Talking-Typer, Math-Flash software and the long awaited, finally approved for purchasing, Tec-So Tutorial software designed for students who are blind, as well as the hundreds of educational resources provided for students in the VTU training area via the Local Area Network. The Tec-So software is based on five years of R&D funded by the Canadian government. Unfortunately, the TecSo project (Technology for Society), was not able to survive financially after the Canadian government's funding ended and they were forced to end further development of this wonderful educational software development for the blind. | ||||||||||||||
| A generous Able-Trust grant has been awarded for the purchase of portable Mirage computers that will be "loaned" to the students while they are enrolled in the VTU. Independent bids were requested in order to purchase the Mirage computers at the best price. Magnifying America came in with the lowest bid. The purchase order was immediately rushed to the administration and business offices both by e-mail and on paper, to await the final authorizing signature, required before the equipment could be "ordered" and delivered. | ||||||||||||||
| To say that the Internet is a phenomenal tool does not even begin to describe this incredible resource and medium for a person with a visual impairment. At first you might think... now wait a moment... just how can a person who is blind use the Internet. Well these days, Windows and Linux can talk! Computers can "speak" every word of text on a web page, every word in an e-mail, every word in a word processor or even the text names of the icons on the desktop or menu item. The Internet provides a superb communication medium for anyone, with or without a visual impairment. | ||||||||||||||
| We utilize this marvelous resource daily and even feel cut off from the world if our Internet connection goes down for a minute. We have upgraded our ISP (Internet Service Provider) from donated AOL dial-up to donated DSL (Digital Subscriber Line). Now with up to 70 computers surfing the Information Highways at speeds equivalent to expensive fractional T-1 Internet connections. Gone are the days of waiting in line to use a computer with a modem. All of our computers are networked and 100 percent accessible for anyone with any visual impairment. | ||||||||||||||
| This year all of the older 10-Base network hubs have been
upgraded to DELL 24 port, 100-Base
ethernet
switches giving us much more that adequate bandwidth ( 10 x faster) for
our entire network. Compared to a "wireless" system, this gives us 33 x faster and more reliable throughput of 100,000,000 bps (100 Mbps), compared to a typical 3,000,000 bps (3 Mbps) if we converted to a less secure wireless network. Just to compare some typical throughput numbers vs' cost in $ USD
Our Local Area Network (LAN) runs at 100,000,000 bps or 100
Mega-bps, making the our LAN, 100 X faster than the fastest DSL. |
||||||||||||||
| The new DELL workstations and DELL servers came with the Windows 2000 pre-installed. Soon after, Microsoft graciously ( just in time :-) donated a site license for Office 2000 and XP. Several large software companies made generous donations to our software library, including Lap-Link Gold and PC-AnyWhere, which enables our staff to support a client's computer at any distance through the Internet, including allowing our staff to 'log-in' to the Network from their home computer or while traveling in the field. | ||||||||||||||
| Zone-Alarm donated an entire site-license to help protect our computers and network from world wide intruders, trojans, and web attacks. | ||||||||||||||
| A V G donated an entire site-license for their wonderful anti-virus software to keep the virus bugs away. | ||||||||||||||
| To enhance staff use of e-mail communication, in 1999 our VTU coordinator created numerous e-mail list serves and freely available, JAWS accessible, web based calendars: | ||||||||||||||
| Most of the staff are already on board at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Miami_Lighthouse
The most frequent call to the help desk is due to the network user not recalling or entering a password correctly, or entering the password with the CAPS LOCK key on, or miss-typing the email address they wished for. Appropriate axiom, ...computers don't do what you "want them to do", computers do what you tell them to do. |
||||||||||||||
| Communication listserv links: http://opendoorworld.com/list-center.shtml | ||||||||||||||
| Shake-A-Leg-Miami Sailing School listserv started in 1998:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ShakeALegMiami
Trevor Jones, Global Inventure: |
||||||||||||||
| A C B Miami:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/acb-miami
N F B Miami: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nfb-miami |
||||||||||||||
| E-Reports for an accessible and paper-less office so that
the agency can do our fair share in working to reduce the needless destruction
of our trees! E-Works for people with visual impairments to seek employment. |
||||||||||||||
| The PRC project arrived at an impasse when the custom JAWS scripts were unable to make the PRC software accessible for prospective employees who are blind. After extensively testing the resulting software with JAWS, the staff determined that the current PRC employment testing software is not reasonably accessible for a blind computer operator and the suggestion was made to DBS that the entire program be re-written in an accessible HTML or PHP web based format. Our staff would be happy to take on this challenge, when approved by the management. | ||||||||||||||
| Shake-A-Leg Miami, the Lighthouse for the Blind and the Florida Division of Blind Services sponsored the Miami Blind Sailing Team in the September 2002, 5th World Blind Sailing Championships, this time in Lake Garda, Italy. With a laptop computer and video camera, our VTU Coordinator became the photographer and video editor, creating Internet web pages for the event and personally provided the ground transportation for the Miami Sailing Team during their stay in Lake Garda, Italy. After each day of "filming", our VTU Coordinator logged onto the Miami network via the Internet while in Europe in order to answer staff network support questions and maintain the staff's 'Units-of-Service' located on the Miami server, (from Italy!), thanks to the daily updates being e-mailed from the Miami staff to Italy. Great adventure and memorable experiences were had by the entire blind sailing team. The video is still available on the web | ||||||||||||||
| The MIDI Music Keyboard and Cake-Walk music editing software, personally provided by the VTU coordinator, have served many blind musicians and staff well. An update for the Cake-Walk software was not approved for this year, therefore we will try again next year for an update to the music editing software for the professional blind musician's Vocational Training Unit MIDI project. | ||||||||||||||
| Our I.T. department continues to expand
our LAN to provide reliable and affordable (donated)
broadband Internet
access for the entire agency, with approximately 70 computers networked
while the children's computers are online. With all our technological advances,
now we are serving more clients than ever. There was a time when the "EarthPeople
philosophy" was the rule of the day. Those days are gone. I knew
there would be changes ahead on the day I was told to "forget about the
EarthPeople." By EarthPeople philosophy, I mean that just about
anyone with a true visual impairment, who has a vocational or educational
goal and demonstrates the determination to learn to use a computer for an
educational or vocational purpose, was happily allowed into the program.
We did not rule out those who were not among the creme de la creme in their
educational class. We glady accepted people who had suffered traumatic
head injuries, strokes, comas, and dyslexia, hearing impairments, as
well as blindness, who would never be able to learn in the fast-track HMO
style computer training sessions sweeping many other facilities. We
glady accepted clients who had never been able to attend a "regular school"
in their lives. Little by little, poco ah poco, in time, they all
progressed. Many went back to school to get their GED's, several went
on to college and many become employed. And I can say with absolute
pride, many were "successful" simply because they were no longer just sitting
at home alone, they were getting out into the world, participating in life,
socializing and learning to use todays tools for living life as independently
as they aspire to be. I honestly thank God, we never turned them away. Obviously you can improve the statistics of success for a building when you are highly selective about letting in only the elite, creme de la creme, but do you ever think about where the many, many EarthPeople will go after you turn them away and lock that door. The National Accreditation Council for the Blind recommends that a person who is blind learn computer skills in a one on one teaching environment. That way the agency hires more teachers who are visually impaired themselves, the student learns more, the teacher is not totally exhausted at the end of the day, they are not teaching more hours than the guidelines prescribe, and more students will want to come into your program, evidenced by a waiting list. It may not be the most financially profitable method, but then again, it is a non-profit agency, to serve people, not numbers. |
||||||||||||||
| Our I.T. department maintains the donated anti-virus and firewall software running on DELL Opti-Plex computers running Windows 2000 Pro. Several of the Development and Business Office computers are also DELL workstations with Windows 2000 Pro, as is required by the latest version(s) of BlackBaud's Raiser's Edge. During this year, BlackBaud's Financial Edge, requiring Windows 2000, has been installed in the business office and on the three Administrative Secretaries DELL computer, since March of 2002. Updates are installed as they are delivered from BlackBaud. | ||||||||||||||
| We expanded our networked "Help-Desk", "Bulletin-Board" and user friendly (easy to use) "A1A" icons created in order for folks with little or no computer experience to easily navigate through our Local Area Network. If you can handle the alphabet, you can handle the "A1A" folder. To clarify, the "A1A" folder is simply a folder on the server containing "shortcuts" to all essential and frequently used network resources, with exactly the same function as your "start menu" on your Windows desktop. The "A1A" shortcut folder is the equivalent of a "start menu" for the network, 100% accessible with JAWS and at zero cost for the software. | ||||||||||||||
| Thanks to our Local Area Network and donated DSL broadband access, we are able to provide fast and reliable Internet and E-mail access to our entire staff and client population, that is... when the staff can recall their passwords, don't BLOCK e-mail in their personal MS Outlook settings, and don't send 10 Megabyte attachments... yes it all really does happen... then, of course, they blame "the system", but of course! rahrrr! :-) | ||||||||||||||
| Since a new decision was made to no longer "moderate" incoming e-mail traffic sent to the general delivery e-mail inbox (posted on the world wide web since 1998), our I.T. department scrambled to custom write and implement more than 600 filters for our e-mail server to help reduce the deluge of unwanted SPAM that is occurring world wide, now reaching 51 % of all e-mail sent on the web. While the 600+ filters made a serious dent in the spam deluge, our I.T. department also requested a WatchGuard-700 (or similar) network protection hardware. Please listen to the following Anti-Virus-101 audio webcast to become familiar with the current world virus/spam status. | ||||||||||||||
| When
the
WatchGuard-700
network protection hardware was deemed
to be too expensive for this years budget, we began configuring and
testing a donated server running the
LINUX operating
system for network filtering, virus and
SPAM
protection.
Spam is
not as easy to stop as we might like to think. Our I.T. Department posted
the
"Spammer's
Map" on the electronic "bulletin board" for all our staff to
begin to
grasp the situation we WWW neophytes are in.
Spam
and viruses are a horrible waste
of valuable human time and energy and perhaps even someone's trust and
professional
reputation if anyone asserts that an
individual
person is responsible for a
spam or
virus
attachment
transmission. I S P Spam Problem Insoluble and Costly, Technology Analyst Says By Keith Ferrell, TechWeb News Our I.T. Department worked day and night to implement a domain wide filtering system and to educate staff to avoid opening e-mail attachments possibly containing a virus which are the number one threat to our network's reliable function, network security and loss of valuable rest. |
||||||||||||||
| Folks, e-mail attachments are getting dangerous... Just in case you don't know... a virus usually travels as an "attachment". A "text only" email, with no HTML code can not carry a virus. For the last five years, and for some very sound reasons, I have selected the "filter" option to remove attachments from all emails sent to all of the listservs that I formed and currently moderate. If folks want to use "attachments" in their own personal email accounts, enjoy, but in order to keep everyone safe on a listserv, the "attachments" will be removed at the server. With no exaggerating, I have literally blocked thousands of spams and virus attachments this way over the years. By removing the attachment it is not possible for a "virus" to go through a list server to the email recipients. | ||||||||||||||
| For some reason, this seems to be a tuff topic for folks to grasp. There will always one in every group who thinks it's some form of censorship. Again, this is the best currently known method to protect the hundreds of members on a listserv. If you don't keep your anti-virus software up-to-date, and you think you might have a virus from a friend's email attachment, here is an easy way to "scan" your computer online, at no cost. No need to throw stones and tomatoes at your neighbors, just go to: security.symantec.com/ssc/ then click on the "Scan for Viruses" link and accept the agreements in order for the AV software to function. The following link is to the best anti-virus software, according to the ratings received on C-NET: www.GRIsoft.com | ||||||||||||||
| Do you currently use a firewall? These days.. to really stay safe on the web, you do need a firewall, especially if you use DSL and your connection is "always on". Personally I use the LinkSys (Cisco) hardware firewall and the Kerio software firewall. Both are up-to-date, firmware and software. They work great together and I would highly recommend them to anyone. I would be happy to help anyone install a firewall if you don't currently use one, at no charge, as part of my non-profit work. I seem to be getting better at not making a profit! :-) If I can help you to protect your computer, that very action will help to protect my computer from your computer, a bit altruistic, but since there is only one web, we are becoming one with the web... :-) Please take a look at: www.kerio.com | ||||||||||||||
| If you want to "test" your system for open ports now, just go to: "Shields Up" at Gibson Research: www.grc.com My LAN servers are running Linux, XP Pro and Windows 2000 Advanced Server, all patches are up-to-date. The servers are up 24/7, and as the network administrator, I do not take chances with attachments. | ||||||||||||||
| Learn to use a website or an FTP server for files / attachments. Most of the modern listserv's, like Yahoo and SmartGroups offer this service, for free. No one is going to put a virus on an FTP server and then announce it to the world and get away with it, at least not for very long. | ||||||||||||||
| Whenever you can, use e-mail for text, only. Write your email in your e-mail software, not in a major league word processor, and then sending the "text" as an attachment. If you do use a major league word processor, just select the text from the body and paste only the text into your email software. You won't loose any essential steam without the bold and italics characters. And you will be helping to keep the rest of us safe. Text only emails were the "norm" when the Internet began. MIME encoding and large file attachments were scorned by the UNIX network admins. Now the web is flooded with ms neophytes who act as if they have reached some technical plateau when they can send an attachment, so... many are filling up email servers and causing unimaginable havoc around the world for all of us, not just us folks who have to "fix it, when it is broke", while the big cheeses, who energetically send and receive email attachments, wait with fingers tapping the table, asking just how long this is going to take to fix, then, of course, they blame "the system", but of course! rahrrr! :-) | ||||||||||||||
| If you have a deep pocket budget, like the fortune 500's and the big insurance companys have, then spend the $2000 for a security appliance like the Watchguard 700 to protect networks with 50 or more workstations. If you have a small network with less than 50 users in the LAN, you can get by with a much less expensive security/vpn appliance. Check out: watchguard.com If you are really creative, set up a Linux box with DansGuardian or a Mandrake MNF firewall. They can filter out "anything". ManDrakeSoft.com/products/mnf It gets just a bit frustrating when you know the folks on the flybridge want you to share their enthusiasm for attachments, ignoring the icebergs, put the pedal to the metal in waters filled with hazards beneath the surface. These are the same folks who head south when you try to talk just a little bit of technical logic with them, while you are trying to keep a calm voice and explain things in their terms, even though you are just the messenger for the techy stuff they really don't really want to know about. | ||||||||||||||
| Not long ago, someone asked for help sending an email attachment. Through remote desktop assistance, I happily gave them the keyboard shortcuts to send their attachment... they paused for half a second... and said NO!, I want to "click" on the little paper clip to send my attachments. I was amazed, stunned and disappointed to realize so few people have awareness of the way a person who is blind uses a computer keyboard to accomplish exactly the same task and yet the sighted person insisted that it was somehow better to click on the little "paper clip icon" with a mouse than to use the menus and/or keyboard shortcuts. I think they actually thought that I don't know how to send an attachment. The irony is that I prefer to send emails without an attachment, but for network security/protection reasons, be it with Windows, Linux, Novell, DOS or CP/M. Sometimes it's just safer to get out of the water for a while, lest you say something true, but politically incorrect. | ||||||||||||||
| They say Linux is not very user friendly, well... maybe it is... it's just a little, agh hem.. more selective about it's friends. | ||||||||||||||
| Interested in an IBM supported alternative, check this out: www-3.ibm.com/e-business/doc | ||||||||||||||
| --Virus appears to computer users as
a 'Patch' from Microsoft By Mike Musgrove Sunday, September 21, 2003. It does not affect the Linux operating systems. -- Mike Musgrove www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles |
||||||||||||||
| --Virus Posing As Microsoft E-mail Spreads
Fast September 19, 2003 By Gregg Keizer, TechWeb News TechWeb.com/wire/story |
||||||||||||||
| --Advisory for W32 / Swen @ M M virus.
purports to be Microsoft alert, hits Europe hard vil.nai.com/vil |
||||||||||||||
| --Ad-Aware and Spybot Search and Destroy
to get rid of the spyware that arrived with all those "free" and charming downloads last year. LavaSoftusa.com Safer-networking.org DoxDesk.com/parasite |
||||||||||||||
| 3 Basic steps to help ensure your PC's
data is protected. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Microsoft wants to help ensure your PC is protected from the latest virus, as well as from future threats. Please go to MicroSoft.com/protect and follow these steps today. 1. Use an Internet Firewall 2. Update Your Computer 3. Use Up-to-Date Anti virus Software To get more information and resources about how to help protect your PC, go to MicroSoft.com/protect ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
||||||||||||||
| Secure SAL-Miami database http://www.opendoorworld.com/teamwork user name: guest password: password ..................................................................... New SAL-Miami Web Calendar online: http://www.opendoorworld.com/teamwork/pub/cal.php ..................................................................................... PowerPoint Slide-show "Intro" to SAL-Miami http://www.shakealegmiami.org/sal-miami-intro.htm ..................................................................................... Virtual Sailboat under construction: http://www.opendoorworld.org/sal_web_workshop_page_1.shtml ...................................................................................................... |
||||||||||||||
| New SAL-Miami web design examples: ShakeALegMiami.org/2 ............................................................. |
||||||||||||||
| ================= Larry Lawhorn, OT VTU Coordinator / Instructor Network Administrator Web Site Administrator RE-7 Database Administrator HelpDesk Administrator Network Cable/Computer Repair/Installer Miami Florida NOTE: I am taking some time to set up a new website, please contact me at: http://www.OpenDoorWorld.com ============================ Larry @ OpenDoorWorld dot com ============================ |
||||||||||||||
|
| Blind Sailing
|
||
| Guide Dog Schools |
||
| Key Training Survey |
||
| Manufacturers |
||
| Organizations |
Shake-A-Leg-Miami
|
Talking Books Library
Florida (305)-751-8687 National (202) 707-5100 |
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
![]() |
|||
font size tip
|
| Web
Stats 38.103.63.62 |
|||||
|
|||
| Random | |||
| SAL-MIAMI web_workshop | under construction | | ||