|
Terence has over 15 years experience in web development. He expertly
creates server-side solutions via PHP and MySQL; page layouts and
client-side solutions via hand-coded HTML, CSS, and JavaScript (aka
"DHTML"); and offers image processing services via PhotoShop, Javascript
animation, and GIF animation.
By hand coding (not relying upon HTML editors), Terence can ensure
compatibility with all major browsers, reliably weave together static and
dynamic content, and fine-tune layout and design elements to meet
your requirements with ultimate precision and grace.
Terence is an excellent communicator, both verbally and in writing.
It is rare to find a web professional who is adept at both engineering
and aesthetic design because these skills require dominance on opposite
sides of the brain; so web developers often work in teams of two for
this reason. Terence, however, has developed the rare ability to allow
dominance of both houses of the brain (not necessarily
at the same time), and therefore excel at both engineering and aesthetic
design as a project may require. He responds to
client needs effectively, quickly, and professionally; outlining
possible solutions for your approval clearly and concisely without
unnecessary technical language.
Terence will respect your right and responsibility as co-creator of your
web project, providing feedback and status reports so you can make
informed decisions, helping clarify specifications before and during
project development. He will guide you through specifying
your own design preferences or identifying a favorite existing design,
then help you customize it to represent your unique image.
With an excellent proofreading eye and business management
experience, he can not only provide you
with reliable technical functionality and meet the "look and feel"
requirements of the perfectionist in you, but also catch inadvertent
content errors and suggest easy Web 2.0 automation, smoothing your
business operation and enhancing the
professional impression you will make on your target audience by means
of your web project.
Why settle for "Web 1.0" when "Web 2.0" is this easy?