This is an online product development application I wrote for Concentric Software and is targeted at small to mid-sized jewelry design studios. The front end is a fairly large one page application written in ExtJS 3. The back end is written with ColdFusion 9 components and a MySQL database. Some of the features include: auto-updating trees to manage color and material choice combinations, tabbed navigation, slide out menus and re-arrangeable filtered grids. I'm especially proud of the tree and the complicated piece of SQL code that makes it work (adjacent list method anyone?).
slu.sh is a resource/tutorial sharing site originally developed by Jay Marks (Artist) and I to share our tutorials, videos and other learning resources with each other. It began to grow into a social site and our intent was to launch it publicly but we've been pulled into other projects. The front end makes heavy use of ExtJS and CSS. You can drag and drop "slushes" from the list up to the search bar or over to one of the 3 resource boxes on the left. The back end is written using ColdFusion 9 components with a MySQL DB. We had a lot of fun writing this and will definitely be back to it at some point.
We developed an online EDI transaction service that turns spreadsheet invoices delivered by email into EDI 810 transactions for CVS, Target and 7-Eleven. This is an internal facing application with email as its only public interface. The server side is a combination of ColdFusion 9 components, Liason WebECS EDI and a Microsoft SQL DB. The front end is written with ColdFusion 9 and ExtJS. It currently processes over 6000 invoices per week.
This is actually a mainframe (IBM i - AS/400) application that automates load source switching and disaster recovery for the IBM i. It makes heavy use of IBM machine level APIs to automatically reconfigure hardware resources in case of an IT center disaster. It was written primarily in RPGIV and CL and is currently installed and running at Harley Davidson, The United Nations, The Army National Bank of Mexico (Banjercito), Caterpillar and several other Fortune 100 companies.
COVERsmART is a website focused on album cover art quizzes. The management site for COVERsmART is a one page application written with the ExtJS framework and ColdFusion 9 components. It provides some excellent tools for the site staff to create and maintain all of their quizzes. If you're an audiophile you should check these quizzes out. Remember, Google image search is cheating !
Last year (2011) I was asked to develop an HTML5-based interactive beer menu for a local pub in Rhode Island (Dohertys Irish pub). I created a drink menu using Sencha Touch and a back end system for the management with ExtJs 3. Although the budget and timeframe we're both limited, I'm still pleased with the results. The menu is served from inside the bar by iPad's loaded with KioskPro. Although its not meant to be viewed externally from a desktop, you can still use Chrome to check out the external link at dohertys.info.
This was a fun little "learn as you go" Ext JS 4.0 Project. Someone asked me if you could display a list of photos from an external API source using Ext. Well of course you can ! I hadn't played with the new 4.0 version of Ext. So, I thought I knock off 2 birds with one stone. Seattle pushes most of theiir data to the web via the Socrata API. This app grabs the latest calls and auto-magically checks for new ones every 2 minutes. Since Socrata doesnt support JSONP, I made a simple ColdFusion proxy to fetch the data. You can check it out here.
QUANTIFYou will be a mobile app for tracking time, activities and habits. We have some unique ideas on statistical analysis that will really help this app stand out. One of targeted demographics for this will be people who are trying to quit a habit. On a personal level, I'm really hoping this will help my artist (Jay) quit smoking.
I was a Sergeant in the U.S. Army and was deployed to Iraq and Kuwait as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom. There, I managed several Combat Heavy Engineering projects on the Iraqi border where we wired 5 miles of utility cables, 30 light poles, generators and main panels for a convoy inspection station at the end of the "Highway of Death".