Training: Build a Website in a Day

Hatua will be holding its first ‘Build a Website in a Day’ Training session.  This is a full day training program and all participants will receive:

  • A domain name and web hosting for a year
  • A fully functioning website
  • Knowledge in web content management and design
  • A PDF version of Hatua’s WordPress Manual
  • Tea and coffee

Training Event details:

Date: Friday 16th November 2012

Time: 9:30 am – 4:30 pm

Venue: Room C335, Lancaster and Morecambe College.

To book a place please visit our event registration page

To find out more about the course visit our ‘Website in a Day Training’ page

Click here to download a flyer

Please note:  

The training place will take place in a computer room so there is no need to bring a laptop

Lunch is not included however there are places to buy food at the college.

Look forward to seeing you there.

Tickets sale and registration is now open. All VCFs and Lancaster ESTA members get discounted rate (45% off course cost).  As this is ‘learn by doing’ session the class sizes are small so only a limited number of places are available. Book your place here 

Introducing Tech in Plain English

Once, while facilitating a WordPress training session I asked the participants to ‘open a browser‘.  In my mind this was a fairly standard phrase so I was shocked when a person called me over to their computer and asked, while pointing to icons on their desktop, ‘where do I find my Google?‘  I showed them the Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox icons and told them if they opened up one these they would  find ‘their Google’.  To which the person replied,

‘well I never knew it was called a browser, at home I just get someone to open up Google for me’.

That day, we both learned something new.  For me it was the realisation that words and phrases that we geeks use so often can in fact sound like a foreign language to so many people.

One of Hatua’s guiding principles is to make tech accessible to all and to empower our services users to use technology confidently.   Ensuring that the people we work with understand the language of tech is a fundamental part of this.  So, every Tuesday, starting from next week, we will be translating some commonly used tech terms into plain english. We won’t just be providing one line definitions; we will be writing full blog posts on each term, using everyday analogies because like with all new languages, it is not learning individual words  that matters but rather  how these words fit in with the rest of the language.

We already have 3 topics prepared and we would love to add to this list, so if you have any tech related jargon that you want decoding, leave us a comment or drop us an email.