Creating Your Digital Portfolio

In retrospect, I have spent more than a decade building my online portfolio. Visualgui.com has evolved over the years, but the primary goal remains the same: to showcase my work. This site played an important role in my career and landed 95% of my client projects. For web designers, an online portfolio is a requirement. For beginners, creating an online presence could be a daunting task. If you’re in that situation and don’t know where to begin, Ian Clazie’s Creating Your Digital Portfolio is for you. With practical tips and professional examples, this book is an invaluable guide for creating an effective online portfolio. In addition to the book’s advice on the visual design, I strongly recommend that you pay attention to the codes as well. Particularly for web designers, clean, well-structured markups under the hood are as important as the striking display.

U.S. Is Not Leading the War

In “Gaddafi’s Endgame: How Will the U.S. Get Out of Libya?,” Fareed Zakaria points out that Obama is not willing to let the U.S. lead the War in Libya. He writes:

The Obama Administration made clear that other countries had to be invested in the Libyan operation, which meant they had to offer public support and military or economic assistance, before the U.S. would get involved.

Good strategy, Mr. President!

Smashing CSS

Any CSS book written by Eric Meyer is worth a read. Smashing CSS is no exception. Meyer’s expertise in CSS and clear explanation help clear up technical obscure of CSS selectors like specificity, the order of multiple classes, ID vs. class, outline vs. borders and substring attribute selection. Smashing CSS is not for beginners. Most of the tips assumed that readers are already familiar with CSS and HTML.

With the growing popularity of CSS3, I am a bit surprised that Meyer still covers techniques like CSS Sprites, Sliding Doors, Complexspiral, Pre-CSS3 Rounded Corners, Faux Columns and One True Layout. I was hoping that he would delve more into the new CSS3 techniques. Nevertheless, I have learned things that I haven’t realized before like ideas for using attribute selectors to style types of links.

“Right”

This morning, I had to carry Dao on my right and his lunchbox and umbrella with my left. When we stopped at the daycare door, I had to put him down so I could get my member card out of my pocket. He whined and wanted me to pick him up. (This is partly my faulty because I always carry him in instead of let him walk in himself. I need to get in and out quickly to get to work. Sometimes I have to run with him in my lap and he loves it.)

The security lady who Dao greets every morning, said to him, “I know the drill. You want daddy to carry you all the way to class, right?” Dao nodded and replied, “Right.” Me and the security lady both laughed our head off.

Since we were a bit late this morning, Dao’s class had already gone to the romper room. He stood outside the door and didn’t want to come in after I took off his jacket and his shoes. Eden, the cute girl in his class, came to the door and put out her arms. Dao ran right in and gave her a hug. It was so cute.

Old School

This photo takes me down to memory lane. I can still recall the architecture of the school.

Truong Trung Hoc Nguyen Dinh Chieu is located between my house and my elementary school. To get back home, the fastest route was to cut through Nguyen Dinh Chieu. In order to do so, I had to either go through the dog hole (lo cho) or climb the fence. In first and second grade, I did the former. In third to fifth, I did the latter. Sometimes I was chased my security guards, but I don’t recall getting caught. If I did, all I had to say was, “sorry, I won’t do it again.”

In the summertime, a bunch of us from the neighborhood would walk together to the school to play soccer at these courts. That photo really reminds me of the good old days. I can still remember vividly the yellow plastic all I used to carry around.

Just like that and 20 years of my life have already gone by. Damn, time sure has flown by. Life sure is way too short.

Quick Takes

If you haven’t already, head over Mozilla to download Firefox 4 to take advantage of its full HTML5 and CSS3 support.

If you haven’t already, check out hilarious video clips of Dao dances to “If You Happy and You Know It” and rocks to Thanh Ha’s tunes.

I really like the news addition of LinkedIn. It targets articles that are related to your profession. I joined a bunch of web-design related groups and reconnecting with people I have worked with in the past. LinkedIn is definitely a great social network for professionals, especially now that “LinkedIn Surpasses 100 Million Users.”

Blossom Kite Festival is this weekend. We’ll take Dao to the Monument. I am in the process of making a kite for him. Making a kite not only brings back my childhood memory, but it is also the only thing that I still remember how to do from my childhood. This should be fun.

In “The Science of Happiness and Potential,” Shawn Achor pointed out that if you write for three minutes about your positive experience once a day for thirty days, you’ll see 50% drops in doctor visits. Speaking of doctor visits, I have not visited a doctor for more than three years. I better find me a physician soon. In any rate, I will try to focus on positive experience when I blog rather than negative ones.

Weekend Recap

Another weekend went by. Didn’t do much, but was not relaxing either. Spent time with Duke and Dana and worked on a client project. Also did some work for GWSB. When I figure out something, I just can’t wait until Monday to do it. I might forget about it.

Yesterday, we went to Nordstrom and the real mannequins freaked me out. I was like, “damn they looked real” and one of them winked. What got me was that the real models was standing right next to the mannequins. Getting paid for standing still must be hard. I don’t think I can do it. I’ll either get itchy or I’ll begin to fart. But hey, that’s just me.

I am also reading a very good book by Jeremy Keith titled DOM Scripting. Man, he is such a great writer. Very clear and easy to understand. Speaking of books, the ones that I really want to read are mostly from George Mason, not from GW. The nice thing is that I can check out these books through the loan program. So if you’re a student or a staff member of any of the schools around the Metro area, you get access to books to all the colleges around here including Georgetown, American and Marymount. So big up to George Mason.

“Ba Oi!” Oh that’s Duke calling me to go upstairs to sleep with him. So peace out y’all. Hope you all had a nice, relaxing weekend.

Jaimee Paul – Melancholy Baby

Melancholy Baby shows that Jaimee Paul has got the blues. “I want a little sugar in my bowl / I want a little sweetness down in my soul,” Ms Paul whips out her bluesy pipes, intoxicating phrasing and turns Nina Simon’s classic into her own. Her version of Cy Coleman and Dorothy Fields’s “Big Spender” puts the Pussycat Dolls to shame with her sultry, shouting blues. She also puts her own spin on Bill Wither’s “Ain’t No Sunshine” and reinvigorated U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” with a hypnotizing, bossa-nova flavor. With Beegie Adair’s tender, delicate touch on the piano, Ms gives me melancholy too on the title track.

Introducing HTML5

With deep knowledge and a light sense of humor, Bruce Lawson and Remy Sharp have done an excellent job of Introducing HTML5. To help readers understand how to apply the new structures, the authors use real case studies such as The Guardian newspaper and a WordPress comment form. In addition, the book delves into web development including data storage, offline web applications, drag and drop and geolocation API. Introducing HTML5 is a solid guide for making intelligent, accessible web sites using the new language.

The Web Designer’s Guide to iOS Apps

Kristofer Layon’s The Web Designer’s Guide to iOS Apps is an informative intro to create an app with HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript using NimbleKit, the Objective-C framework. From installing the iOS SDK to creating contents to marketing and distributing your app, Layon demonstrates how web designers could pull together an app without knowing how to program. While the book helps readers get started, it doesn’t take them further than creating a simple web page for an app. I was expecting something more dynamic like how to pull in an RSS feed or hook up an API.