by Tim Colby | Août 4, 2018 | Blog
Is Gutenberg the right way forward for WordPress? In this post, Iain takes a look at the Gutenberg editor & its inevitable impact on users.
Source: Is Gutenberg the End or a New Beginning for WordPress?
by Tim Colby | Fév 7, 2018 | Blog
If you are in need of better home wireless and have considered or tried ’boosters’ already, this is a much better alternative. Multiple access points linked together to make one network. Not enterprise-grade, but probably the next best thing.

Google Wi-Fi lets you stream in the living room or game in the playroom, without a battle for bandwidth.
Source: Google Wifi – Home Mesh Wi-Fi Router – Google Store
by Tim Colby | Fév 5, 2018 | Blog, Graphisme
Read our guide to the best 3D printer filament types, with handy comparison charts! Learn about PLA, ABS, PETG, metal, wood and 20 more.
Source: 25 Best 3D Printer Filament Types & Comparison Charts | All3DP
by Tim Colby | Nov 17, 2017 | Blog

The themes outlined for WordPress 4.9 are “editing code, managing plugins and themes, a user-centric way to customize a site, and polishing some recently added features over this last year.”
Source: Code Editing Improvements in WordPress 4.9 – Make WordPress Core
by WordPress Admin | Août 14, 2017 | Blog, Graphisme

The trade-off of an affordable 3D printer is that they’re usually small and can only produce small objects. To make something big, you have to break it down into smaller parts first. But Autodesk has come up with a better approach: a 3D printer with multiple heads that all work together to churn out massive creations.
Source: Giant Multi-Headed 3D Printer Can Create Massive Objects in One Pass
by Tim Colby | Avr 2, 2017 | Blog
Please don’t ever change my milk bags — or my snippit!

When it comes to the dairy case’s ‘It bag,’ cutting corners is essential, particularly for the industrial design accessories it has inspired. As Nathalie Atkinson finds, they are as ingenious as they are iconic
Source : As other countries catch on, bagged milk’s roots remain uniquely Canadian – The Globe and Mail