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Webmaster 101 - Part 1 What is a webmaster? Back in the mid 1990's a webmaster was usually a technically minded person who was responsible for the creation, content and design of a web site. Most webmasters were people who either...

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Lesson 3 - File Paths and Operating Systems One of the common issues that new webmasters face is when images and links to other pages either disappear or don't work once the website is uploaded to a web server. This is usually for one of three reasons: The...

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Zip And FTP Upload In this brief tutorial we're going to zip up some files in a folder, configure an FTP program and then upload the files to a web server. You can use your own ZIP and FTP programs if you like, but for...

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Lesson 2 - More Basic HTML In Lesson 1 we looked at the struture of a very basic web page as well as a couple of essentials such as line breaks, paragraphs, coloured and bold text. In this lesson we'll be looking at the rest of...

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Lesson 1 - Basic HTML In this first video we use notepad to create a very basic HTML page. You need to crawl before you walk, so if you've never created a HTML page then this is a good starting point. We also look at the...

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About

My interest in computers goes back to the late 1970’s. I was a teenager back then with an intense interest in electronics. An australian company called ‘Microbee’ manufactured a range of fairly ‘low end’ computers. I think I bought mine for around $399 which was quite a lot of money back then I guess, but comparatively cheap for a computer. I think other computers that were available in the early 80’s such as the Commodore, Peach and Lisa were around the $1000-$1500 range. The Microbee had a whopping 4k of ram and all data had to be saved and loaded via cassette tape. I started programming straight away in ‘Microworld Basic’ which was similar to Microsoft BASIC though it was around several years before the MS language.

Over the next 15 years (until 1995) I continued programming though I learned several other programming languages such as Pascal, C and C++. In the early 90’s I did a university course and that was where I first learned about the internet. I also became interested in the Linux kernel and would regularly download and compile the latest version and then mess about with Unix. The whole thing could fit on a 360k floppy disk in those days. The PERL programming language was also around then as well as PHP/FI which later became just PHP. I spent countless hours creating web pages with vi (the unix text editor) and notepad (the Windows 3.1 version).

In 1995 I’d saved up a little money and decided to quit my factory job and start up an internet service. At that stage I had been running a 2 line bulletin board system. Bulletin boards were a  dialup service where you could download files, play online games and participate in group forums as well as personal messages. There was a network called FidoNET that we were part of. Each FidoNET system would transfer messages and mail to a regional hub which would then transfer to a central hub and/or overseas. So it could take a few days to get personal messages back and forth but it was still way faster than the postal mail service.

The bulletin board was the platform I used initially. For the technical minded … we eventually ran 32 lines (with 2 8 port and one 16 port serial card) using the Maximus BBS software on an OS/2 server. Members would dial up and use Trumpet Winsock to create a connection via a SLIP program called ’slurp’ that ran on a unix user account that was created for each BBS member.

After running that system for a couple of years, two other business partners invested some cash into the business and we replaced the old server with an Ascend MAX access server and the dialup lines were replaced with fibre and several ISDN services. The internet service is called CAS Netlink and is still running today at www.cbl.com.au. A year or so after I started the Internet service I started another business to provide internet and network consulting to local businesses. There were several other partners in that business and it is also still running today at www.computersballarat.com.au. I still do all of the technical maintenance etc for the ISP service and I’m kind of a silent partner in the consulting business.

In the late 90’s I co-wrote a software program called Dialup Constructor. It was a program that any ISP could use to automatically set up the dialup settings for their internet customers. It was very successful for a few years and was sold to some very large companies and universities including HP, Motorola, Fujitsu, UC Berkeley, Stanford University and Qwest Communications. That software also lead to projects for Telstra (AU), Optus and HP. I also wrote a hit counter script in the late 90’s and configured the 6 servers that it ran on. At its peak it was taking 6-8 million hits every day.

In 2004 I decided that I wanted to concentrate on internet marketing and programming and that was when I moved my office back home. I spent a lot of time and money on various internet marketing programs and whilst I learned a lot about online marketing I found that I was spending most of my time programming. That wasn’t a problem though as programming is one of the things I’m most passionate about. In May of 2005 I started a traffic exchange service (www.whirlwindtraffic.com) and still operate that service today. I also co-own two other traffic exchanges – newway2surf.net and clickinpeople.com.

In 2006 I started working on a project for Robert Puddy. It was to be a membership script that he could use on some of his websites. Part way through the development he suggested that it instead be a script that anyone could use and proposed a partnership to develop and market it. That was the birth of launchformulamarketing.com (LFM) which has gone on to spawn several variations and has been responsible for a huge amount of success and income for many people. I am still involved in the development of the LFM script.

So that brings us up to today. I also should mention that I am a single parent with one daughter who currently lives here with me. She will be starting university next year and hopes to be a criminal profiler. We also have 2 cats (Crystal and Lottie).