Screenshots
www.flickr.comClient Projects
MexRetire and Livtopia
In a 2006 partnership with Raincity Studios, I developed the Livtopia network of sites. MexRetire, an informational resource for people interested in retiring to Mexico; MexLiving, a Mexican property listing site; and Livtopia, a full blown real estate information site for latin america. Again, I did all of the development, planning and architecture for all three websites.
Kidzworld
In 2006 I designed and developed a kids social networking site to replace their 500,000 member online magazine. I did all of the development and planning by myself. It was huge. Looking back on it, doing it by myself was stupid.
Digifonica
In late 2005, Digifonica was getting ready to launch their white-labeled VOIP system. I developed a white labeled reseller website system that let other companies have their own VOIP website. The core of the app was developed over the course of a single weekend.
Australian Bulk SMS Server
In 2002 I moved to Australia to build a bulk SMS server and web application to manage it all. I was the sole developer, designer and architect. It was sending a few thousand messages per day by the time I left just 2 months later.
Clubvibes
In 2000 I became a core part of Clubvibes.com, one of the largest nightlife communities in the world. I handled web development, community strategy and business development.
Personal Projects
Illanti Cart - 2007
When I finally got frustrated by the so called "easy to implement" shopping cart systems, I sat down for two days and wrote my own. From concept to processing live transactions in less than 48 hours. It includes an admin panel, full payment services support and is quotes as being "the most customizable cart [they've] ever used." I have now sold a few copies of the cart, one of which can be seen here: http://www.sunsportsstore.com
Illanti Job Board - 2007
After a playful challenge from a friend, I sat down and wrote job board application in 48 minutes flat. It included RSS feeds, Paypal payment support and an admin panel. It has since been packaged and sold off as a product. It's currently the software behind http://market.mashable.com
Hoomai.com - 2007
A personalized version of Spillr. I consider it a third person personality test. Users sign up and then are provided with an encrypted link that they can give to friends. The friends who follow the link are then asked 40 questions about the user. Some of the questions are marked as being personality based and those answers help determine the users' "projected personality." Apart from that, it's also just been fun finding out what percentage of your friends would lend you $100.
Spillr.com - 2006
A silly idea though up by a friend and I one day. Spillr is an anonymous question system where people can ask ANY question they want and other people can answer yes or no. We collect age, gender, city, state, country and hesitation time for each answer and then use the data for fun little statistics. The code base for the question engine ended up being purchased by a company that has used it to power their facebook app.
MatchTag.com - 2005
As an experiment in mapping and social networking, I created an activity based site that could tell where you are and help you connect with other people in the area who were interested in doing the same thing. Time constraints prevented me from turning it into a completed project, but within the first 4 days we had over 1500 members and ended up getting mentioned on TechCrunch.
TypicalInvoice - 2002
After breaking my neck in 2002, I was left with some free time. In some of that time, I developed a web-based invoice application for contractors. From concept to functional application took me less than 24 hours. I ended up releasing both a basic and professional version in the next few months, before the "company" was purchased in early 2004. I still get people e-mailing me telling me how much they love the software.