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Barcamp Cape Coast 2014

22 Aug

Barcamp Cape Coast 2014 is a free networking forum bringing people together for a day of discussion, demos and dialogue on Cape Coast, Ghana and beyond. It will take place on September 13, 2014 at the University of Cape Coast. The theme for this year is Enhancing development  through Corporate and Personal Branding. This Barcamp hopes to assemble stakeholders to network, build a supportive enterprising community and partner to build together.

The GhanaThink Foundation has successfully organized 32 BarCamps in Ghana. BarCamp Cape Coast 2014 will focus on how Ghana’s youth can brand themselve as well as their corporate image. There might be a shortage of jobs, but there’s no shortage of work. It will be an insightful, informational and inspirational event that young people in and around Cape Coast should not miss.

The Barcamp will feature multiple user-generated breakout sessions about business, social entrepreneurship, technology and development, alongside topics relevant to the Central Region and beyond. There will be a speed mentoring session where mentors will give insights and answers to questions from attendees.

Register/RSVP at the BarCamp Cape Coast eventbrite website (barcampcapecoast14.eventbrite.com) or text “Barcamp Cape Coast [name] [email address] to 1945 through any mobile network. You may also contact the BarCamp Cape Coast team through the eventbrite page for sponsorship opportunities. If you are interested in organizing a breakout session, let us know, especially if you have special needs.

BarCamp Cape Coast 2014 is sponsored by GhanaThink Foundation, Nandimobile, etc. Our media partners are the Spy Ghana and ATL FM. Join us to move the Central Region and Ghana forward.

Stay tuned via our social media.

Some Tags for You to Meet

10 May

Here’s the list of tags that I have research
  • <div>The HTML <div> element (or HTML Document Division Element) is the generic container for flow content, which does not inherently represent anything.
  • <blockquote> The HTML <blockquote> Element (or HTML Block Quotation Element) indicates that the enclosed text is an extended quotation. Usually, this is rendered visually by indentation (see Notes for how to change it). A URL for the source of the quotation may be given using the cite attribute, while a text representation of the source can be given using the <cite> element.
  • <p> The HTML <p> element (or HTML Paragraph Element) represents a paragraph of text.
  • <ol> The HTML <ol> Element (or HTML Ordered List Element) represents an ordered list of items. Typically, ordered-list items are displayed with a preceding numbering, which can be of any form, like numerals, letters or Romans numerals or even simple bullets
  • <ul> The HTML unordered list element (<ul>) represents an unordered list of items, namely a collection of items that do not have a numerical ordering, and their order in the list is meaningless. Typically, unordered-list items are displayed with a bullet, which can be of several forms, like a dot, a circle or a squared.
  • <li> The HTML List item element (<li>) is used to represent a list item. It should be contained in an ordered list (<ol>), an unordered list (<ul>) or a menu (<menu>), where it represents a single entity in that list.
  • <nav> The HTML Navigation Element (<nav>) represents a section of a page that links to other pages or to parts within the page: a section with navigation links.
  • <menu> The HTML <menu> element represents an unordered list of menu choices, or commands. There is no limitation to the depth and nesting of lists defined with the <menu><ol> and <ul> elements.
  • <span> The HTML <span> element is a generic inline container for phrasing content, which does not inherently represent anything. It can be used to group elements for styling purposes (using the class or id attributes), or because they share attribute values, such as lang.
  • <time> The HTML time element (<time>) represents either time on a 24-hour clock or a precise date in the Gregorian calendar (with optional time and timezone information).
  • <q> The HTML <q> Element (or HTML Quote Element) indicates that the enclosed text is a short inline quotation. This element is intended for short quotations that don’t require paragraph breaks, for long quotations use <blockquote> element.
  • <img> The HTML <img> Element (or HTML Image Element) represents an image of the document.

Source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/