webDEV

AVwebDev Antelope Valley web development and maintenance Reasonable pricing and quick turn around make us the choice!

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Understanding the needs of the local community while developing and maintaining web sites that will have staying power. We pride ourselves in providing reasonable rates with professional results.

Our Approach
Understanding the needs of the client, while respecting the busy schedule we all have. Anticipating your needs, and creating "out-of-the-box" solutions that sometimes come in a box. We find that many needs of small businesses are met through products readily available that have already been tested.

The key is finding the product (module) for the client's needs then implementing it into a cohesive website with "no seams".

Local

Mojave Desert extends from the Sierra Nevada range to the Colorado Plateau in the east; it abuts the San Gabriel-San Bernardino mountains in the southwest. Near the Great Basin-Mojave border lies Death Valley, the lowest point in North America and a national park. The Mojave's desert climate is characterized by extreme variation in daily temperature and an average annual precipitation of less than 5 inches. Almost all the precipitation arrives in winter. Freezing temperatures occur in winter, while summers are hot, dry and windy.

Client Relations

Our goal is building relationships that will provide the services you need at competitive costs. Our hope is that you'll be so happy with the service, attention to detail, timeliness, communication and low costs that you will refer others so we can continue to grow.

This is a full time passion. Support is provided 24/7 for everyone, and we are local so we can meet with you anytime.

Solutions

Having spent "another life" working in corporate America, we know what service is about....SOLUTIONS!. It's easier to say what can't be done, winners find solutions and knock down (climb over) walls.

 


"Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing in the world is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent..." 

Calvin Coolidge
30th President of the United States

 


The Indians of this region were great travelers. The Kawaiisu that lived in the Tehachapi Mountains to the north and west, almost certainly hunted in the area during certain seasons of the year. Other Indian groups lived in the San Gabriel Mountains south of the valley and were often to be found at Elizabeth Lake and other well-watered sites along the base of those mountains. Mining and stock raising ventures were attempted by American and European settlers after about 1850, but the overall impact of these activities on the Antelope Valley remained minimal until 1876, when the railroad was built through the valley. Shortly thereafter, the towns of Lancaster, Palmdale, Rosamond, and others that didn't survive, sprang up and land speculation became rampant. A succession of wet years brought luxuriant stands of grass and incredibly beautiful wildflower displays, and waves of settlements based on livestock grazing and agriculture. This was followed by a succession of dry years that shattered the dreams of the settlers, and wiped out all but the most determined or fortunate individuals.

After World War II the development of new well and irrigation technology made it possible to tap the valley's considerable ground water supplies and extended its agricultural possibilities. Water-hungry crops such as alfalfa and onions are now grown in many parts of the valley, even during dry years. Gold and silver, tungsten, and other mining ventures have been undertaken in many places around the Antelope Valley, and mining - especially for borax - still continues in the Boron area. During and after World War II, Antelope Valley's defense and aerospace industries grew leaps and bounds; today, they dominate the region.