He Has Done Things, Right?
A Glimpse of My Work
This is a page to demonstrate some of my abilities as a designer. You can see it in my active pages like phantomdata.com and summerlitdev.com, but I wanted you to be able to see a bit more of what I've done and get a broader sense of my design sense.
You can see from my design demonstrations below, that I like clean and simple designs. I like the focus of a web site or application to be on usability and aiding the user interaction with the site; instead of simply trying to make things busy and "look cool". Don't get me wrong though, as you can see below - I am a firm believer that aesthetics not only improve the user experience but it also improves the user's ability to use a site.
Summerlitdev
My personal freelancing site
This site is meant to provide a homebase for my freelancing on the Internet. I wanted something that would demonstrate the clean design sense as well as ability to write copy.
I've been doing freelance off and on for several years now for both supplemental income and personal growth. It is an amazing opportunity for a developer to grow and learn new things that they might not ordinarily get to learn in their ordinary 9-5 careers.
Listforge.net
A quick and intuitive way to manage stuff you want
I used to be heavily into personal finance. Of course, as a software developer I wanted to scratch my own itch and decided to construct listforge. This Ruby on Rails application allowed me to easily have a central capture point for all the stuff I thought I wanted. I could then rank these items by importance vs. price vs. expected value; giving me a rough idea of the most bang for my buck.
Phantomdata.com
My personal online business card
Business cards are great, right? You can quickly give people your contact information a short synopsis of what you do. I wanted something that would provide a more detailed look into what I can do professionally, to help explain myself a little bit better.
This site used to be home to my blog, but over the years it has gotten pretty neglected. I wanted to use this space for something at least a little more constructive than a collection of old outdated articles on gaming and development. So, here we are.


