Font Smoothing in Google Chrome
Thomas Shields Portfolio
I've been struggling with font-smoothing in Google Chrome. On larger (40px+) fonts, a noticeable jaggedness can be seen on the edges of the more curve...
Atlanta, GA, United States
I got started with computers when I was around ten or eleven - I tagged along as my dad went through church computers and tried to get them working properly. This exposure to computer failure subconsciously planted a seed of stubbornness: the computer should always do what I want. When I learned I could actually tell the computer what to do, I was ecstatic.
I grabbed the first book off the library shelf, installed QBasic off an old Windows 2000 CD, and started drawing smiley faces and battleship boards.
Eventually I graduated to Visual Basic.NET, and became exposed to Object Oriented Programming. It took me a while to grasp it, but once I did, I switched over to C# and began implementing it.
Because I picked up coding and OOP from experience, I developed an inverted-classroom learning mechanism: I can approach a problem with no clue how to fix it, research it, find a solution, and keep improving the solution until it's as efficient as possible. I didn't have textbooks telling me that Cat inherits Animal - I had to read documentation, blog posts, articles - whatever it took to understand OO and put it into practice.
It was relatively easy, then, to pick up HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, and I involved myself in the Stack Overflow community, where I quickly developed a passion for well written, efficient, purposeful code.
Thus far my learning curve has been largely experience, and now it is being reinforced by a solid education from Georgia Tech's College of Computing.
August 2011 - Current
Developed VCS Douglasville site
Responsible for both front-end and back-end coding and front-end graphic design. Front end is valid HTML5 and CSS3; back-end is ASP.NET MVC 3 with C# and Razor, implementing Entity Framework 4.1 with MySql.
Currently developing a teacher/student authenticated portal for grade and assignment access that will heavily utilize the above technologies.
Additional: General IT Concerns Web/Database Administrator
2012 - 2016
Highschool: 3.9 GPA and Valedictorian at Veritas Press Scholars Academy
SAT: Reading: 710; Math: 700; Writing: 660;
ACT: 30 (Science 31, Math 28)
Tested out of first-semester CS at Georgia Tech.
GitHub, Mar 2012 - Sep 2012; followed by 3 people
My attempt to work through Project Euler
Sole Contributor
GitHub, Jun 2011
Evenly mixes any amount of colors in JS and returns mixed value
Developer
CodePlex, Nov 2010; followed by 2 people
Ch@tr is (another) chat application for XMPP that connects to Google Talk. The vision for ch@tr is that it will be a hub for email, calendar, and chat, and help focus a user's work - freeing him from distraction and unwanted im's or emails.
Developer
GitHub, Jun 2011 - Feb 2012
My Portfolio of Articles and Design - the Code
Developer/Designer/Everything - (hey, it is my blog, right? :)
CodePlex
Binary Converter is a small Windows Forms Application that converts between ASCII text, binary, Hexadecimal, Octal, Decimal, and many other positional numeral systems, like ternary, pentadecimal, and septemary. Written in VB.NET. Also includes class for inclusion in your project.
Creator/Sole Developer
Thomas Shields Portfolio
I've been struggling with font-smoothing in Google Chrome. On larger (40px+) fonts, a noticeable jaggedness can be seen on the edges of the more curve...
An introduction to web design, written a couple years back for some friends. Take with a grain of salt, I had some bad practices and wasn't 100% right about everything I talked about.
I recently had a discussion about semantics and the role of markup and scripting and where their paths meet and where they don't. Apparently it's rather a touchy matter. Obviously some web developers couldn't care less about what their markup, styling, and scripts look like as long as the finished product looks good. (See Sites, Commercial) But smart coding is important for a few reasons...
Phil Feldman, Tom Rugg
This, other than a limited exposure to HTML through some friends, was my first encounter with telling a computer what to do. It set the foundation for my understanding of code blocks, statements, variables - the basics of computer programming. Plus, it was heckishly cool to be able to draw on the screen by inputing coordinates. Way cooler than Paint.
HP Pavillion Notebook. It blew up.
Visual Studio, vi, Sublime Text