I’m back!

Sep 22
That was one crazy vacation! Check out the website. Since I’ve come back, I was asked to teach at Camosun College. That’s right! You are looking at the screen output of Camosun’s newest Photoshop, Illustrator, Interface Design and Graphic Design for the web instructor! A big thanks to Camosun for trusting me enough to take on this large course load.

UVic’s new webpage

Apr 25

Congratulations go out to the small web team here at UVic on the launch of UVic.ca!

For the last 7 months or so I have been heavily involved in the creation of the University of Victoria’s website Redesign. This site is the culmination of months or research and many months of development.

Our small team did a fantastic job tying it all together and creating something dynamic and energizing for external audiences, and something that’s fresh and organized for internal staff, faculty and students.

Working on the site was a small agile team of one information architect, one graphic designer, several content writers, a couple back end developers, one front end developer (me), one guy trying to organize it and an entire university of 25,000 staff students and faculty suggesting how it could be improved.

Working on the project allowed me to focus on polishing the “save the president” style of site structure (modular and recursive horizontal pancake divs and one center div inside each of those) and I was able to better develop a cohesive CSS system that allows for a more plug-and-play style of recursive site structure - this was inspired the the modular system that was created for uni-form and adapted, scaled up and expanded upon to include everything a web developer could need, including uni-form. I’ll get into this one later when my head isn’t filled with sleep.

Anyhow. Big congratulations on a successful launch!

Test Pattern Reworked

Apr 9
testpattern.jpg

The SMPTE test pattern was reworked last night. It’s lost a couple lines of code and works in every browser known to man!

Previously, I had each row sliced into bars equally, I had to shave off a tiny bit so IE could render the page, if i had them all equal 100% IE would try to make the last one wrap. This left a tiny white line at the right side of the screen. That always annoyed me.

Last night I realized that I didn’t need the last slice, and I could just colour the row behind the bars, and float the bars left. So simple! It even removes a couple lines of code.

The white bar is gone, and the page renders perfectly in the 44 browsers I tested it in. Take a look! If only i could find a way to reproduce the 1000khx tone…

Feel free to steal the test pattern and use it on your own site, Just credit me in the code.

All You Could Eat launched

Apr 6
all you could eat

I’ve launched a new site, All You Could Eat!

This is the best place to go to for reviews on all you can eat restaurants in Vancouver. My friends and I have always LOVED all you can eat, and we all hope to share this joy with everyone. We’ve got a highly scientific algorithm that will allow us to find the best all you can eat places for your money. A big map so you can find the ones closest to your house and a rating system.

I’ve done some neat stuff with the typical wordpress installation and added a great Google maps plugin that will allow you to see all the posts at once on a single screen.

If you love all-you-can-eat restaurants and have any suggestions on hoe the site can be improved, send me an email.

New Design!

Mar 30
Welcome to joelf.com’s brand new design and brand new style! I’ve organized the information in the other stuff section to be a little easier to take in. I’ve done a lot of neat things and I want to make it easy to browse. I’ve updated the resume and added a few new items to the portfolio. Stay tuned for more updates!