
If you ask 10 people what a World Wide Web page is, chances are you'll get a different response from each person, based on their own experiences. The Web is a vast place with many different ways of achieving the same thing: communication with others.
How this communication takes place depends on the Web designer, the browser used to view the site, and the web server delivering the page. Just as television uses words, sounds and images to tell a story, educate, or persuade, the World Wide Web is used the same way.
What many people forget is that not everyone has the same capabilities. Have you ever watched television with a deaf person that made use of closed-caption abilities? If so, you'll know how much the extra effort is appreciated. The same could be said for subtitled foreign movies. It's no fun when you can't tell what's being said.
Although many Web designers assume "everyone" has graphic browsing capabilities, this simply isn't true. Some people turn off graphics to make faster use of the web - and there's a large group of people that don't see Web graphics at all for a number of reasons.
Since the idea is to communicate with others, doesn't it make sense to ensure *EVERYONE* viewing your Web pages can receive your message? Graphics are nice, and they do serve a purpose on a web page, but wouldn't it be silly to have the entire content of your web page only accessible to those with the "latest and greatest" hardware and software? Those accessing your page with text-only browsers might see:
![View of [images] links as a graphic.](http://videocam.net.au/images/images-example.gif)
It doesn't have to be this way. If you take a look at our pages using both a graphical and a text browser, you can see that although we do use extras (graphics, animation, movies sound, etc.), we don't alienate those who can't access them... and isn't that what communication is all about?
When we design a website, we use special web server scripting in areas requiring an extra touch for text browsers, allowing everyone to access the same information, but displayed in a suitable format for all types of Web access. This doesn't involve extra web pages, as our server does the work of determining what browser is being used and sends the web page formatted accordingly. All of our sites are designed using this format.
If you're looking for someone to help you promote your business or ideas in a friendly, well presented format, you're in the right place.
In the game of getting more people to visit their Web sites, some Web "marketers" use false or misleading keywords when adding their sites to Web Search indexes and databases, or add the misleading keywords to the web pages they design. We wouldn't want to do business with someone that would mislead the general public about our Web site, and we're sure you wouldn't either.
No Junk EmailWe don't bombard people with advertising Email. We don't like junk mail any more than you do.
Responsibility To Our CustomersOur Web Package includes sending monthly statistics of the number of visits their page has received during the previous month, as well as online daily web stats from four different web log analysis programs.
We also send an invoice for the package and any requested additional work is detailed. Unless further work is requested and completed, invoices are only sent once per year for web hosting fees. If further work is requested, invoices are mailed (or Emailed) as required.
| Showcase - Our Web Design & Host Showcase |
| Resume - An overview of our design and programming capabilities |
| Packages - We offer several design packages that come with Web Hosting on our servers |



