Blog

Wise words on IE6’s (hopefully) imminent demise

Posted on July 17th, 2009

Stolen from Digg this morning. I truly hope some vastly paradigm shifting event like Youtube or even Google dropping IE6 support happens really soon. I gave up developing for IE6 last year (hell, sometimes I can’t even be bothered to get IE7 bugs fully ironed out), but until support for it is severely cut, high end commercial web ventures will always be hampered by this dinosaur. It’s a huge waste of time and money and it’s setting back the huge advances that are being made in the web.


Brunelsailing.com goes live

Posted on May 26th, 2009

The redesign of Brunel University Sailing Club’s website has gone live at brunelsailing.com. Built on Wordpress, this is the most content-intensive site I have built to date. To find out more, click here.

Brunel Sailing


Bare bones blogging

Posted on March 28th, 2009

There seems to be a strange obsession at the moment amongst designers with cramming as many social networking doo-dads onto their portfolio site as possible. I’ve always found it a strange marketing strategy to use a portfolio for bombarding potential employers with every aspect of your social life. Personally, I feel it is more prudent to hold back a bit on the plug-ins and feeds. Do you really think your latest Twitter post will reflect favourably on you as a professional? Do you honestly expect someone to hire you based on your top 10 Last.fm tracks?

In putting together the blog section of this site I made a lot of decisions as to how it would be used, who would be reading it, and how it tied in with the rest of the website. I too was tempted by the shiny plug-ins and widgets, but ultimately I decided they were just unnecessary. I even disabled standard Wordpress features like comments (though that was more through a fear that I’d get spammed or worse – get no comments whatsoever!).

I can of course understand why people choose to display all of these seemingly extraneous details alongside their work, many employers like to see that someone is not just a machine for churning out work, and does actually have other interests. At the end of the day though, I think it takes all the fun out of having a web presence if you know that every tweet, every Facebook status update could in some way affect your employability in the future. That, and the fact that somebody could find out about my crack addiction.