Posts Tagged ‘CSS’
A collaborative work with up and coming California design firm, enHaus studios, a new CSS/Flash hybrid portfolio site was developed to progress the enHaus brand.
Utilizing provided vector branding, this simple and clean company site expands on the enHaus (the un-agency) renegade brand with a data-driven expandable client portfolio.
Cheers, enHaus!
My client, Mortgage Training Institute recently launched our latest collaboration: a new pure CSS site marketing their new product LivePresenter, a top-of-line yet inexpensive product that streamlines online video presentations.

MTI: LivePresenter
Designed and developed by yours truly, the LivePresenter site was built for marketing and search engine efficiency. Along with creating a series of hand-crafted logos and icons, I also developed a media player in Silverlight 2.0 to showcase customer testimonials. I also designed layouts for their nifty back-end toolset that allows users to manage their online presentations.
Great product + great collaboration = great results! Congrats, guys.
I am very upset with Internet Explorer 6 today. Given, I’m often angry at Internet Explorer products, but today I’m especially perturbed. I’ve become increasingly dissatisfied with the fact that its one of the final remaining browsers I still need to design completely separate. More against its case: while it still covers around 16-20% of the market* (!!), Microsoft no longer distributes or updates it (in fact, it doesn’t even run on Vista).
Browser compatibility had always been an issue for web developers, causing me great pain (or more likely annoyance), over the numerous years I’ve been dealing with it. We’ve come into a great new period of layout in CSS with working coverage around 80% of browsers meaning very little work is needed to make more modern sites compatible, but its very discouraging to keep dealing with the stragglers like IE even after Microsoft has all but dumped it!
*I get my stats from W3C Schools and Wikipedia.

