Website Portfolio

     Over the years that I've been doing web development, I've worked on quite a few sites. Unfortunately, my way of profiting was to sell them almost immediately after development. After selling, the new owners can change the site, or even take it down completely. Because of this, a lot of my work is no longer my work. However, I've put up mirrors of these sites just for demonstration purposes. The following sites are just a few of what I've done. More will come as I get permission to list them.

Team61.com
   Team61.com is a website that I made for the school's robotics team. I went above and beyond what the site called for, with integrated team management systems, email and text message alerts, a dynamic gallery, Google Calendar integration, and tons of other goodies - all controllable by user accounts.

Visit Team61.com
QuizPals.com
   To this day, this is one of my favorite example sites. It's a seamless, AJAX-rich, polling site. QuizPals wasn't really the appropriate name, as it only covers 30% of the sites functions, but it's what I had to work with at the time.

Visit QuizPals
YouTubeRipper.com
   In the summer of 2006, before YouTube had caught on as a phenomenon, I created a site to allow you to download videos from it. It also allowed downloads from Google Video, and several other video sites. Unfortunately, the guy I sold it to took down the site after a few months and put up a Digg.com clone script. I have recently discovered, though, that my code for YouTubeRipper is the base of the popular site Ripzor.com.

Visit YouTubeRipper's mirror
BeTheBot.com
   There were always sites that, depending on what your browser was, would let you see more or less of their content. In 2007, I decided that I would take advantage of those who wanted to show just Google their content, and make others pay for it. BeTheBot.com allowed you to become the bot, by sending the same header that google sends to websites. This site was even featured on the front page of Digg.com

Visit BeTheBot.com
MD5Database.net
   MD5 is a type of encryption, commonly used throughout the internet in web applications. It currently can't be cracked, so I decided to do the next best thing. The site created millions and millions of md5 "hashes", and added them to a well-optimized database. When a user pasted their hash in, it would check the database. Fortunately for the security of the internet, there were less than 600 million - which is just scratching the surface. There is no mirror of this site because of size restrictions, but I'm working on a reincarnation - UnEncode.com