A website for Sony’s upscale boutique brand of home electronics.
A website for Sony’s upscale boutique brand of home electronics.
Link to archived site here.
+ Flash development
This entry was posted on Saturday, December 27th, 2003 at 21:28. It is filed under TBWA\Chiat\Day, Work and tagged with AS2, Flash, Qualia, Sony, TBWA\Chiat\Day, website. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Dynamic display advertising campaign created for (the online) Nike Store. Applied concepts of polymorphism and runtime compositing to create a lightweight shell which pulled in the proper visual and text assets depending on the configuration received from the server.
Created a concise mobile site for Methodist Health System using the Javascript mobile framework jQTouch. Having looked at the analytics for the client’s site, I determined that the current mobile […]
Javascript framework for creating scroll-based, programatic tweens. More information to follow, once it’s formally released.
Microsite created for Lexar SD card products. Utilized Flash’s 3D capabilities and runtime asset loading. Link to archived site here. + Flash development + System architecture
Pushdown HTML5 unit for Blue Diamond Almonds & NBC.
Provided Full Stack Development services for Republic Project. Day-to-day technologies used were Flash, HTML5, Javascript, and PHP/MySQL. Republic Project was a startup that was later bought by DG | Mediamind, […]
Using Sencha Touch paired with PhoneGap, Phenomblue created a hybrid iPad app for Bellevue University. Prior to this app, Bellevue University recruiters – as they travelled from trade show to […]
The successor to 58hours. Where 58hours was devoted solely to Radiohead (and coded according to the single-band premise), randomhours is able to handle data for countless bands. I basically took everything that I’d learned about data-organization
A dynamic display ad that took data from the eBay Motors API and displayed said data using the Yahoo Maps API. Geotargeting was used in ad trafficking, allowing the map […]
Combine Adobe AIR with Bluetooth with BlueCove (a lightweight server capable of relaying said Bluetooth data) and you get the, (maybe) cleverly-named “Hello There”. When running, it constantly scaned for Bluetooth devices in-range & made note of their device ID.