Online Portfolio Applications

Posted February 28th, 2010 in Web apps

Either you work in creative or multimedia industry, you probably want to showcase your work online. If not, then I suggest you to. You usually get discouraged when you need to set up the website for it, you would feel that you need to spend a lot of money to have someone to build or design it for you. That is if you are not familiar with web development.

Luckily many free or premium applications are now available for you to choose to quickly create your online portfolio and resume, with easy-to-use interface to manage and regularly update them. Here is a shortlist of ones that I found to be really nice and are packed with features that you will mostly need:

Carbonmade

Carbonmade is one of the most popular online portfolio services with many features. You can create a free account for up to 5 projects with 35 images. Whoo! pro plan is available for $12/month, where you get 50 projects with up to 500 hi-res images and 10 high quality videos.

Carbonmade website

Coroflot

Coroflot is focused for creative industry with a very active job board. Based on their About page, it is hosting portfolios of over 150,000 creative professionals and students.

Coroflot website

Raveal

Raveal is another one that you can consider. It is oriented on the social media and search engines parts to make your names easily heard by the rest of the world. Its Free plan gives 100MB of storage, while the Professional plan provides 1GB storage with some additional features.

Raveal website

Need more functions or different look? Then installing WordPress with a theme optimized for portfolio might be the best and easiest solution. I will save that for different post.

Choosing The Right Web Hosting

Posted February 24th, 2010 in Web development, Web tools

I decided to write this post to remember my early years as a web developer when I only wanted to offer the best price for the client, including to suggest the cheapest web hosting provider without having a slightest clue how to qualify it as a ‘good’ or ‘better’ service. It might be just me back then, but web server was probably the last thing I would decide or search in the whole development process. They are just servers that are contantly connected to the Internet and host your websites so they are all pretty much the same, right?

Wrong. If you have the principle that a web project does not end after you launch a website and get the final payment, you should realize the extra work you need to do if you chose or suggested wrong hosting provider. You want your client to be happy with the website you built, not to get frustrated because it goes down every now and then while you can do nothing about it.

So, what makes the differences between the right providers with the rest? To me it would be quality, support and transparency. Put prices in consideration after you are confident with those three first. Remember, web hosting is a very competitive business. It is rarely a company is trying to overcharge you unless it has much better quality than the rest.

Now to the most important question: what type of server that you need?

Shared Hosting

Most companies and developers usually put this as the first option for a very reasonable reason: price. Nowadays, you can get the good shared hosting plans from $5-20/month. Are there differences between one with another that costs 4-5 times more? Most of the time, yes. Usually providers that offer more economical plans gain the profit by trying to sell more with the same server resources, this might mean they put more restrictions for the account like outgoing email and databases limitations.

When you are researching for a shared hosting plan, be sure to check on the limits for those. The next thing you might also want to know is SSH support.

The good things

  • Economical
  • Best money for disk capacity offered
  • Can be set with minimal web server knowledge
  • Easy to upgrade, although mostly only for space and bandwidth

What you might miss

  • Limited resources
  • Limited access

Things to check

  • Disk space capacity
  • Email, database, etc limitations
  • SSH access support

Ideal for…

  • Websites with minimal or no plan of expansion
  • Static websites
  • Companies or clients that plan to host many email accounts so require a big disk space

Recommendation

*Note: recently MT has been having stability and security issues on their gs (shared) plans, but I cannot overlook the fact that it has the nicest interface. This is important because it encourages the clients to browse through their control panel and do not get overwhelmed by it.

Virtual Private Server

This is the next upgrade for regular hosting, above this then it means you are developing a website in a very huge scale. Virtual Private Server gives you much more flexibility when it comes to resources and access. You can practically install anything that you can do on your local computer/server. It can easily be an overkill you opt for this if you only plan to host a simple company profile without any server-side processes.

When do you need to upgrade to dedicated virtual? When your blog is listed as the top 10 blogs to follow by Smashing Magazine, kidding. You should start considering it if you are developing a web project or installing a web app that requires more than average resources, like a newsletter system with thousands of subscribers or e-commerce system with many customers.

The good things

  • Better flexibility
  • Installable with almost any type of web based applications
  • Can be reselled
  • Guaranteed resources

What you might miss

  • Cost more than shared hosting, usually with less disk space
  • Simple access, more knowledge is needed

Things to check

  • Type of server: unmanaged/semi-managed/managed
  • Control Panel system: CPanel/Plesk/etc
  • Disk space, actual memory, server processor

Ideal for…

  • Websites with few applications installed
  • Dynamic websites and blogs with very high daily traffic
  • Companies or clients who are planning to expand the website with new sections and features
  • If you want to host the projects from your clients yourself

Recommendation

At the end, when comes the time to choose one, look for direct references and do your research to find the most suitable plan for. It is worth to mention about WebHostingTalk as one of the best source to find web hosting reviews and coupon codes and promotion!

I am sure you have your own opinions and suggestions about this, please feel free to post your comments.

Top Five jQuery Plugins For Any Project

Posted February 19th, 2010 in Web development, jQuery

I am probably the ten billionth person who says this, but jQuery this just GREAT! By spending a few extra minutes you can add so much interaction to your website. It is so easy to understand and use, you do not even need to be able to create your own. So many plugins out there that can make life so much easier. Here are five plugins that are not only nice, but also easy to implement:

Fancybox

FancyBox is a tool for displaying images, html content and multi-media in a Mac-style “lightbox” that floats overtop of web page.

Fancybox sample

Jqtransform

This plugin is a jQuery styling plugin wich allows you to skin form elements.

Jqtransform sample

Supersized

Supersized resizes images to fill browser while maintaining image dimension ratio, cycles Images/backgrounds via slideshow with transitions and preloading.

Supersized image

Scrollable

The purpose of this library is to make it extremely easy to add scrolling functionality to a website. Whenever you wish to scroll HTML elements in a visually-appealing manner, this is the only library you need. The main design goals of this library are to provide visual customization functionality and programmability.

Scrollable screenshot

TipTip

TipTip is a very lightweight and intelligent custom tooltip jQuery plugin. It uses ZERO images and is completely customizable via CSS. It’s also only 3.5kb minified!

TipTip image

Kudos for the programmers who developed these great plugins!

Three Hundred Seventy Nine Days

Posted February 12th, 2010 in Uncategorized

Yes, it has been that long since the last time I posted anything on my blog. What has happened between then? Well I changed my entire main website into SweetCron, a sweet lifestream software which sadly no longer actively being developed. I loved it because I only needed to tweet and bookmark interesting sites and it would automatically update my site. Nothing is more convenient than that, right?

Anyway, I have been wanting to blog again since the start of the year. After being postponed for many self-created reasons, I found the exact theme I need from Smashing Magazine. This website theme is called SimpleFolio and designed by Omar E. Corrales. So many thanks to Omar and SM for sharing this amazing theme for FREE.

The dream feature is of course the Portfolio functions, I have been wanting to be able to maintain my work portfolio in a better way. Please make sure to check out my portfolio page.

Time to take a break. Cheers!

Aloi Sunti

Posted February 12th, 2010 in (x)HTML/CSS, JavaScript (jQuery), PHP/MySQL, Portfolio

This website was developed by maximizing the amazing functionality of JQuery for auto-resize background image and animated thumbnails.

Built with: (x)HTML / CSS / JavaScript (jQuery) / PHP / MySQL

Website: www.aloisunti.com