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Sudbury » Advertising And Marketing » Cd And Dvd Authoring
Sudbury Cd And Dvd Authoring
Advertising and marketing is an essential feature within any business so the Ufindus directory is divided into subcategories so you are able to navigate the options as easily as possible. If you require information or advice on CD Authoring the Ufindus provides you with a range of listings with suitable resources. Technology is continually advancing therefore the directory provides you with companies supplying CDs and DVD?s, vital for information resources and displays in businesses. People seem to forget about CDs when contemplating Authoring and publishing but the CD is a valuable piece of technology suitable for training resources, design portfolios, slide shows and much more. For more information on the benefits and uses of CD Authoring please browse the directory where specialists can guide you through the processes and provide you with the equipment needed to Author your very own CD.
About Sudbury - show infohide info
Sudbury is a small market town in the county of Suffolk, with a population of approximately 11,800 inhabitants. The town is mentioned as early as 799AD, when it was a Saxon settlement. By the time of the domesday book in 1086, the town is mentioned as a market town serving the local area, where people came to barter their goods. Sudbury later became a centre for weaving and silk, and the town prospered. A number of great houses and churches were built, leaving the town with a great historical legacy. As a result of the towns association with the silk and weaving, an inland river port was built in the town, though as rail and road became more practical and profitable, the river port fell into disuse. Today, the last building from the port is the successful Quay Theatre. During the eighteenth century Sudbury became famous for its local artists. Constable and Gainsborough painted in the area. Gainsborough's birthplace, Gainsborough House, is now a museum to his work and is open to the public. It houses many valuable pictures, and some of his family possessions. In 1847 the railway arrived in Sudbury. Originally, the railway connected more of the villages in the stour valley, however Sudbury is now the terminus of the line to London thanks to the Beeching cull in the 1960's. Services are operated by 'One', to Marks Tey, from where connections to London Liverpool Street can be made. Towns close by Sudbury include Cambridge, Bury St Edmunds, Stowmarket, Newmarket, Haverhill, Saffron Walden, Colchester, Braintree, Hadleigh and Ipswich.
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