What's inside jQuery?
Graphical and table break-down analysis of precisely what's inside jQuery. A look at alternative and compatible tools.
I'm a passionate (and opinionated) web-developer, working since 1998 with PHP, JavaScript, jQuery, HTML5/CSS3/XML, MySQL/MSSQL, ASP.NET/MVC, C#, .NET and various other languages and tools.
April 1998 - January 2002
January 2002 - June 2003
June 2003 - February 2005
February 2005 - January 2006
January 2006 - August 2008
August 2008 - Current
1995 - 1998
1993 - 1995
Majored in Electronics.
1995
GitHub, Aug 2011 - Current; followed by 43 people; forked 7 times
industrial-strength annotations for PHP
Google Code, ; followed by 3 people
powerful but lightweight javascript / mootools tree control
Visually design and tweak grid and typography CSS.
I developed this tool in my spare time, after reading a book on grids and typography.
FontJazz is a tiny typographic engine written in JavaScript, enabling webdesigners and developers to use any typeface on a website.
I built this tool in my spare time. A number of heavy-weight solutions for embedding fonts on webpages had emerged at the time, and I wanted something lightweight, with no dependency on Flash or canvas.
LiveBook lets you publish a PDF to a Flash-based "flipping book"
I designed and built the application for Fynske Medier, from the back-end PDF conversion, to the front-end Flash app. Click on one of the book covers to demo the app.
Graphical and table break-down analysis of precisely what's inside jQuery. A look at alternative and compatible tools.
Gorges Blog
Given the diversity of packages that call themselves frameworks, the broadest description we can give, is that frameworks for web development are collections of reusable…
Gorges Blog
Working daily with jQuery, at GORGES I frequently need to construct little document snippets and forms on the fly. Today I came up with a quick little meta-programming…
Gorges Blog
Modern mobile operating systems are all the hype, and we’re feeling it here at GORGES – clients are becoming increasingly aware of the importance of mobile technology...
Michael O.Church
"the only thing that will bring peak performance out of programmers is to actually make them happy to go to work"
A series of 3 articles by Vaughn Vernon on domain-driven design. This is a valuable read for someone with a background in classical OO software design - it teaches some important differences to consider when building internet applications.
Google Clean Code Talk Series with speaker Misko Hevery.
Commodore 64
Php Storm
Born 1975, started school in '83 and owned my first computer, a Commodore 64, in '85 - started programming apps and games in assembler and BASIC, and making music with computers.
Graduated from school in '92 - at this point, I knew several programming languages, and was particularly fond of AMOS Basic on the Amiga 500, and Borland Turbo Pascal on the PC.
Finished 3 years of technical college in '95, and majored in electronics - since, at that time, this was the closest thing to a computer education. (as it turns out, understanding how computers work at the core, is not a bad thing.)
Completed a short course in Media & Communication that same year, before I was accepted at Tietgen Business College, from which I graduated as a Systems Engineer ("Datamatiker") in '98.
I took my first job that year, at an advertising bureau with in-house internet development, where I learned ASP. I built several systems in this job, including my first CMS and a number of server-side (COM) components for things like image manipulation and e-mail. In 2002, I took a different job closer to my home-town, doing more advanced ASP and building another CMS with in-line content management and image editing, which was rather novel at the time.
On the side, I had been running a web-server out of my kitchen cabinet and building a music software application with a friend - by 2003, the software was popular enough to provide a reasonable living for both of us, and we relocated our little venture to Spain.
At this point, the economy in Europe and US was starting to hurt, and the music software industry went bottom-up; every major company was bought and sold, and after about 6 months of limited sales, we decided to cut out before taking on personal debt.
In 2005, I took a job for another internet/marketing company, built another CMS, and several web-based business applications - including a logistics system for a transport company, featuring real-time GPS vehicle tracking on graphical maps. I also became more proficient in client-side work, doing complex interfaces in JavaScript, and Flash/ActionScript - including an arcade-style platform game.
In 2006, I was hired by a media corporation, and over the next couple of years worked mostly with PHP and MySQL. I contributed several major components, including document and image management services, and a compiler-based template engine. I also designed and built a SaaS that enabled publishers to publish a PDF document as a Flash-based "flipping book".
In 2007, I was married to my American wife, Vanessa - and in 2008, I immigrated with her to the US, where I've been working since, for a local internet/software shop here in Ithaca NY, where I have built many different solutions on various platforms, particularly the Yii framework for PHP.
I am currently working for the same employer in Ithaca.
From mid 2010 to late 2011, I developed a large business-application using ASP.NET MVC, programming in C# and using NHibernate and SQL Server. Coming full circle from my early days in ASP, I was rather underwhelmed by the status of ASP and IIS as such.
While I find that .NET and the CLR have incredible potential, and that C# is a very strong and enjoyable language, I did not find ASP or the development-cycle to be sufficiently productive, and I would prefer not to work with these technologies again.
After nearly 17 years or working with the internet, and with 14 years of professional experience, I have a pretty good idea about who I am, and what I'd like to do.
When it comes to programming-languages, I am fairly agnostic, and would be equally happy working with PHP, C#, Java, Ruby, and probably others.
When it comes to platforms, I am pretty open-minded as well - most languages are now available both for CLR (Mono+.NET) and for JVM, so the choice of language doesn't need to drive the choice of platform.
In my ideal job, I'm working in a relaxed corporate culture, with a team of enthusiastic and experienced developers who take the work seriously, and strive to help each other learn and grow.
My ideal employer is invested in technology - I myself spend a great deal of my spare time reading blogs, books and research papers, prototyping ideas and testing new approaches; I expect more from an employer than providing office space and retailing my hours to clients.
I want to work for an employer that has a long-term business strategy, a proven method, and who builds and maintains modules and components for continuous reuse. I do not believe in a "build and throw-away" business-model.
Most importantly, my employer must have some sort of technological focus: a specific language, or a specific platform, and most likely one or more targeted market-segments. I do not believe in the "jack of all trades" business-model.
I need to work reasonable hours, leaving time for my family - I need a decent paid vacation, and preferably a health plan.
I don't expect exorbitant pay. I prefer a reasonable base salary as opposed to profit sharing or large annual bonuses.