Besides the obvious example of this site, I've also coded a couple of other pages as part of internships and for commercial clients. Because several of these pages aren't public, or are password-protected, I've shown sample screen-shots from each to convey the look and feel of each site. Where possible I have linked to publicly visible sites so that you can explore their full depth.
| As a young program, the Stanford Men's Club Volleyball Team is still trying to get the word out about the team to both current and prospective students. The website was developed to help students find the club, and to help us follow up our recruiting efforts after the club fair and other campus events. | |
| The Princebury Development, LLC. site was developed for a luxury home builder in Wellesley, MA. It represents the first fully CSS based commercial site that I have done. Like past sites, it was coded from the ground up to meet the specific needs of the client. As a new business in the area and a key tool for converting clients targeted via direct mail campaigns, the site's success was critical to the successful launch of the company, which has since prospered. Notable features of the site include the use of CSS rollover menu effects, a print format specific style sheet, and scalable site and image width designed to accomodate high resolution screens. In addition to the design and implementation I was also responsible for managing image acquisition and licensing. The site's text was developed by a professional writer contracted by Princebury Development to perform this work in conjunction with the copy for their printed media. |
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| I wrote the Bolton Engineering Site entirely from hand with the exception of the java-script pull-down menus. In the final stages of development the firm's owner became involved in other projects and the site was never launched. Noteworthy features include full vertical and horizontal scalability of the website and the use of javascript drop-down menus. The site is the last that I designed using table-based layouts | |
| This site was undertaken as part of my 2004 summer internship at the US Army Soldier Systems Center to fulfill our program's need for a password-protected website on which those with only minor training could readily post documents and information relating to their engineering activites, and collaborate with contractors and governmental oversight personnel. The website was needed to prevent versioning issues with critical engineering and contract documents, and has cut down on the volume of program-related email. The visual aesthetic of this site was subordinate to rapid implementation and functionality. Many features of the site, such as the collection of logos on the sidebar, were also dictated by political and financial necessity. The site is still in use as of 2006. | |
| This website, which is again password-protected, was also written during the summer of 2004 to distribute information and streamline the registration process for a NATO technology demonstration being organized by the Airdrop/Aerial Delivery Directorate at the US Army Soldier Systems Center, in Natick, MA. The implementation of a generic web form is the only novel feature of this website. |