
Image used under a Creative Commons Public Domain licence via http://www.clker.com/ http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/deed.en
My blog has lived with the WordPress people for a little over two years now, and while we we have got on well and I have got used to how they like to keep their place neat and tidy, I have recently started to yearn for a place of my own – somewhere with a little more freedom and space.
So, with fond memories and a tear in my eye, it’s time to fly the nest and settle down under an address of my own.
From now on, you can find me over at teachertrainingunplugged.com – not a big change of address, but it means a lot to me.
Please make sure to update your bookmarks and re-subscribe of you need to – I don’t want to lose touch with any of you!
Apologies for any inconvenience caused by the move, but I felt it was time to stand on my own two feet.
Hope to see you over at teachertrainingunplugged.com very soon!
Anthony
PS: my next blog post – The Classroom As Crucible – will be going live over on teachertrainingunplugged.com at midday CET tomorrow.
Good luck with the change Anthony, Hope no one loses you in the cross over.
Thanks, Chris – my readership is quite überschaubar, as they say in Germany, so I hope no one will get lost for too long!
Congrats on grabbing your own online real estate. I know the trepidation. I’ve had my own domain for awhile but am moving to self-hosted in the next month.
One step at a time, eh?
It took longer than I expected to find my way around the new place, but I’m settling in nicely now
Yup, baby steps. Now I won’t have to faff about with YouTube my next project is to make more use of video clips.
Congratulations on moving to your own home.
‘My cap is far better than the crown that Alexander wears’.
This is what an old Turkish shepherd told a general of Alexander the great who asked the shepherd to accept the post of a minister under the rule of Alexander and surrender his vast meadows.
Thank you, Kalim, and thank you for that story. Reminds me of the old saying that an Englishman’s home is his castle!